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The document provides an overview of poetic form and technique. It discusses various poetic elements such as meter, rhyme, imagery, and figurative language. It also covers different types of poetry like sonnets, epics, ballads, elegies, and more. The document examines features of individual poems like rhythm, melody, language, and message. It notes that a poet's beliefs, time period, subject matter, and creativity will influence their work. The goal is to describe poetry and analyze its key components.

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nphilpot96
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views

Scan Doc0006

The document provides an overview of poetic form and technique. It discusses various poetic elements such as meter, rhyme, imagery, and figurative language. It also covers different types of poetry like sonnets, epics, ballads, elegies, and more. The document examines features of individual poems like rhythm, melody, language, and message. It notes that a poet's beliefs, time period, subject matter, and creativity will influence their work. The goal is to describe poetry and analyze its key components.

Uploaded by

nphilpot96
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

"

tl

tr 1
<3

... wor-ds arranged in

ltI-lYTHN\lC pattern with regular ACCEI"TS


(1ike BEATS
in mU5ic)

(f~orn opening lines of

.~

. . ~on9fe/lOW'5 I/Evange/iY)e"j

... wOyds c~reftJlly 5elec,ted . -for sound, oCceh+ ~Yld' . meaning .. ;. +0 express '~' '.

IMAGINATIVE,~Y' ",: . idea$ "and ernoJl~~jiY;ii;.


"i:"<,",~:"
". -t,,,,.

}\::"
~.' .~.

'.A_" ..'.. .0.-, ,.""

..

'-';",

_ ~:.

-l.

':,

"~'

(I\J f. COME

To

tHE END OF
u~e6

poetry when

MY

ROPE
IN CON"E~SATlof'J...

. he. speaks or write~lNjth words th-a-t- create

5,such as

A
i~. a per~6Y\ Yhore endowed vvithi\'Y''d9 in-ation who tries to e"-pres5 -an ided with words fh-at. .
give it FO~N\ "and

BEAUT'f---

~
1

Each poem h~s (t)RHYTHM, (7.:MELOD~(3)/MAGERY,OVld And POETRY h-as"a"L.ANGUAGE" allir$owh ...

(4)

FoRi

--

ACeNS-'of the sy IrM;I~;s;-:i~ +hi: Wb~(


fJll -otre9vlo.~:"

1b~t(~i~f"~t~~~ .:

\'I\I\ETP-IC .PATTE~"W
(e;>-<cepi in ''free verse ")

called a

*"

f8iZ ijl. XY..\f.

intervals, like'the

BrAT of JVlUSIC

-tecf.iNlcAL
NAfY\E.

-ACCENTEO: / DUMM" UNACCtJTEO: u IIde II

2-

---3- TR0GIA8C.1 OuMM de I' C~M ~;g ul -3' ANAPESTIC Iude de OUMM I-V\)/ f~E l~~ -3 .DACriLIC IDtMM de de 1-.t~ :, ;~im
~~Vl
-

I"Mt C f1 pi

IV ~ I de DUMM

-a WAY 1 WILL

NOTE:
C:;ometil'Y1e5

"PAu5E
~d~

(CAESU- .'
Cln

t;,ke. the

place of S"I-~
~

urJAcctNTED

LESS {~PONOEe(DUMMoU~M)j P)1_ItRAlG(d e detTP-IBACH (d~ d'e de) USED AM""'IBAACH ( d~ DU~M de) j AAPH.MACE(t (OlJ(~rt dS D/V~A J

~~Q!-~

I
I

t~
r I

--the \\BEAT" of POETRY llFEE-T" is called

''METE~

I FOOT

4
'Ih
1\

tl II It

FREE VE5E,1
is
Y\J

ihere
0\"\

h'etricol

5
6

pottern -- it- ~15 based


the notoi'"'3/
C'ddenC8~

of ~eec.h.
--EACH

poeM ~L<;O liAS f\MELoOylf~-

~.

t-ll<.E MU~IC, I;ACHPOeM ",AS.


", .: -:, ." '. I. ' "'0 ~

~.'\ \.1/
",-

..:~.

5'~GlE.} Jove ~J-l'/ME. dove


r-:

OOUBLE L

~HYMe J
~'1ME.

nappin9
t~ppih9

oTttE6t I<H'/MIHG I~

IlmM5

AN \'.MPERFEC.Y" RHYME
two words look alike. but don't sound alike, such as "LOVE" and "JOVE"

lttlPlE }

~corYlful Iy

mouvnfvHy

SOMETIMES too MANY rhymes detract from poem -- sound too _jingly.

IN AN "IHTEItNAL!' RH'IME.
the rhyme occurs inside a line such as -- "Let's beatthe heat"

'1I\tA~UUf4E"2
,,""YME

-.5

where last syll abl e accented such as "rake," "stake" more than one syllable rhymed -- accent not on last syllable such as "weather" "heather"

'IFEMUUNE }
;tHYME..

AND EACHPOEM--. -AL~OHAS

(I)

SUCH AS "The man paced

like a hungry lion."

(2)
(3)

two unlike things directly compared (without using "like" SUCH AS "The river is a snake which coils on itself."

or "as")

-= giving

human qualities to things SUCH AS "The trees danced in the breeze."

PHe =
~

addressing some abstract object SUCH AS "0 world! Tell me thy pain."

(I

= referring metaphorically to persons, from history or previous literature.

places,

and things

-and by
(OHVPSlBC1E
such as

saying more thon is true

(4) A~TITHESIS USing

Conirast5 for effect


are wet. "

"He wore his fingers to the bone. '',

such as . "Deserts are dry; oceans

.(2.)-utJDe~STATfMEt&T 5'8yir.g/ess th-aY) is true


such as "Losing his [ob meant he could sleep late. '~ such as "All hands on deck. "

(3) I~MY. saying Eposite to wh'3r j~ -true


such as "War is kind."

(6) f/l1fJNYMY ~ub~+jtotiOt"of one word


for dt"other closelv ve''OteJ
: such as "The pot's boiling."

\N'ovd

Never

MIX metaphors, such as "He threw in the sponge before

he hit the [ockpot, " 7

Avoid comparisons

thcit are too obvious or far-fetched.

~'!:' ;

'"

\'

",

AI'!D:~\' ....
fll'l~l.l)'.

-- --~r-,a-rj :J.'a ...


If you
A love
I

are
u";

compaSSionate!

You. wi I! walk with

thi';1ear: ....
Who are here

We -face a glaciol dis,tance -HuddJ'd At your feet. ...

(Burford) . . " -':


Dr. William Burford, "A Christmas Tree" . from the book "Man Now" (,Dallas; Southern . Methodist University Pres's, 1954).

. =-

'"'.

~~~~oMe
No.of
LINES

' tSPEC'AL NAMES foy STANZAS '"""""""'~~


with diffevent number of line~
WHAT 111S CALLED
\t'Il-4P.T IS-IT
2 lines with identical RHYMES. RHYMES. '

2.

~tiYMED
'~EROIC

COUPLE.

COUPLE, TRIPLET

2 IAMBIC PENTAMETER LINES with identical 3 lines -- any rhyme scheme or meter 4 lines -- any rhyme scheme Rhyme scheme -- a b c b lst and 3rd Iines"'-IAMBIC TETRAMETER; 5 lines -- rare 6 Iines (often 3 sets of couplets). 7 line IAMBIC PENTAMETER stanza Rhyme scheme -- a b a b b c c 8 line stanza 8 lines -- IAMBIC PENTAMETER Rhyme scheme -- a b a b a b c c 8 lines --'- IAMBIC PENTAMETER 1 line -- IAMBIC HEXAMETER Rhyme scheme -- a b a b b c b c c abab abba abcb

-3

I Te.1lCET,

'4 ,4
,5
,6

QUATRAIN

any length and meter.

BALl~O
qUATRA'N

2nd and 4th Iines-IAMBIC TRIMETER

Qu,NTE.T

(CINquAIN)

SESTET
~IME. fl,OYAL. oCTAVE

7 8

used from Chaucer to Masefield

OTTAVA RIMA

See Keats' " Isabella" See Spenser's "Faerie Queen

II

" 14

SoNNE" -.:.
complete poem of 14 lines of IAMBIC PENTAMETER

ONE FORM -ANOTHER Usually

3 quatrciins plus couplet rhyme scheme--a b a b c d c d e f e f 9 9 8 lines rhyming -- a b b a, a b b a, 6 lines rhyming -- c d e c d e (or) c d c d e e See Shakespeare's Plays See Walt Whitman

BLANK VE~SE

IAMBIC PENTAMETER but no rhyme rhythmic pattern or use of rhyme

No regular

MOST'_P~IM'.,FI%,~L--,~:r;,oTtf-6se
'~, >.:'." "';""::.. -. ,~' .:, .:: -,".':.:',',-., . ,;;:.'
_"

;-/ "

e~6"'1~ tzOflt~f4(E.
G) ~~ CS4
VIRGil' DANTE'S MilTON'S 5 "Aeneid" "Divine Comedy" lost" "SONG "KING OF ROLAND" ARTHUR" "Faerie "lady Queen"

~ J'

"Paradise

SPENSER'S SCOTT'S'

of the lake" "Idylls of the King"

Or -- about a GROUP of PEOPLE (a folk epic) SUCH AS HOMER'S GERMAN "Iliad" and "Odyssey"

TENNYSON'S

'and MET~ICAL TALE5 (short stories)


SUCH AS'

"Niebelungenlied" "Beowulf"

WH ITTIER' S "Barbara BROWNING'S

Frietchie" of the French Cam "

EARLY ENGLISH

"Incident

@BALLAD
A
very ,f,ort

LE
usuolly <3bout ohim'dls-- \ with d f')10V"d I THOSE BY .
sucH At;

e;tory
~LlCH AS

Ijjj? ) t!fj
~
-"Wreck of

A short story--

R~ ~ G\.

v~~y

IOY'l9s+ory-+ic...-tion iV1 poe-.try fen')"\

COLERIDGE -- "Rime of the Ancient Mariner"


LONGFELLOW

~fI

SUCH AS

10

the Hesperus" AND MUCH .FOlK MUSIC ancient and contemporary

WALTER DE lA MARE ARTHUR GU !TERMAN G. K. CHESTERSON

OLIVER lAFARGE .',- "Each to the Other"

...

~
-

...

..

"l\@eLEGY

! .fl. . ~0 r~~
\

l 't

.
in

A lomeni"'
0\1"

@ SONNE"
A popl.llorform of
lyric poetry havi~g

me.mory

of Someone

14 \ines

u---\ L
~ ~

(j) EPITAPH

tfJ
.
.

PAAMATfC LYf2JC.
0'

short elegy to

inscribe ana MonuMent

An

emO+ion-a1 monologue di<3logue.

---

j!ro . n .'";:J !L,-~ I

DIDACTiC Foy purpo~e6 of ihstruction


. h ()

/\.'1r /., 0

I
) 02~ ~
~.l

"? / t~- /.
/"
.

M r7
~
/( /

]]:
.

.ltl L
I

SuCH ,.,5
HORACE -- IIArt of Poetry" VIRGIL -- "Georgics"

70') ~ ~ --I I 'wf""""--'

10 -att-ack -Folly via riJjcu/e


S'lJCH

AS
.

POPE -- "Rape of the l.ock " LOWELL -- "Biqlow Papers'"

ATIC
" . felling 5tory throu9h speeche5
of c.haracters
<;;vCH A5 FROST -- "Death of Hired Man T. S. ELIOT -- "Cocktail Party"
ll

ErCQI incJudiVlg
VERS DE SOCIETE1 (light a~d witty) PARODY (imitations) HUMOROUS (dialect, limerick, jingle) OGDEN NASH SUCH AS T. A. DALY { F. P. ADAMS 11

\ v-J 1
~

Ci7~cJ\ '

L"
Poetry that is very~1 in treatment -Imaginative dealing Love, etc., strict metrical . by such poets as
'1

II
but in patterns _ with Nature,

by such poets as PERCY BYSSHE SHELL

SAMUEL JOHNSON JOHN MILTON

\'

E LI
Candid of every

II
presentation Realistic concerned

ICALf
poetry with man's life -INNER THOUGHTS by such poets as ROBERT FROST T. S. ELIOT

s!y

by such poets as
:)

WALT WHITMAN

STEPHEN CRANE

GT'I
Highly symbolic. Poet's interpretation extremely personal -including such terms as by such poets as GINSBERG and the "BEATNIK"
12

"
IIIMPRESSIONISTIC" "FUTURISTIC" "NON-OBJECTIVE" "SYMBOLIC" POETS "NEO-CLASSIC l' "PRIMITIVE" I "EXISTENTIAL" IISURREALISTIC II

which are often also used in ART and MUSIC

\J'JHAT'5 THE

MESSAGE <>

,"'

1)i-fferentpoetsmay';
"I THINK OF THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND TO WAIT!

~ove quite dlffere~

.
"WAR IS A DREADFUL WASTE OF PEOPLE AND RESOURCES"

ATilTuDES toward
11

theS,AME- subject .
SUCH AS

"$URELYr THE ENEMY MUST BE AS BRAVE AS WE !"

"AS A SOLDIER, I DO NOT SEE THE WAR, BUT ONLY MY OWN MISERY"
.. ' ~.,~~'f~~:~-

"WAR MAKES MIGHTY MEN AND ELIMINATES THE WEAK"

~.

~.)

"WHAT AMAZING HEROISM AND COURAGE WAR BRINGS OUT INMEN"

eve

POET IS INFLUENCED

y--in

(1) his SELIEFS~~ve u~u81(y reflected

hj~THEMES
of hi~

(1) thePEIlIOI)--7' u~u8l1y affect5 the SlYLE

poems

(3)theSU8JeCf~often affec+s the M~I(ZICAL PAllelZN (4) hi5 C~ 'V'TY~wiJl -affect hi5 u~e of IMAGERY
1

cr'.tlcq~hp~~l~:d:i~ :9!:it~.ftb-1:'e;H:<;1!Wf.l~'l -a"Rge,tyllsgood .~:'-r. lOt V

".

. ,,;~~~f(([?~,5'j~'~~r)~dt~iP~'~~~'~~,:r,'f ...'......
$8rne.

QUESII~:PJcS;zto
iV)

(35k your5elf

-- is it

ORIGINAL?
That is -- is its theme fresh and not tri te?

.-->~.''':~';-,

-:,;..~.:.;,~,s...;t:<:''''-~''':'W.::I'.::~~-e.-':~f..~~l~~''''''''-''-'

'.

1
l

-- does it have

g
z:
!.
.~

;:

i ~

i
~

Are the form, style, imagery and metrical pattern . consistent throughout the poem?

'"

-- does it have

~t4YTHM1
Do the words and' lines seem to flow?

__

4lI.

,
r=;

-- does it produce

~ee? iinii~

J
-- does it have

That is -- are the figures of speech used both reasonab Ie and yet stimulating?

'/~
-- does it produce

.~

. That is --would it have meaning for most people, in most countries, in any age?

PUP FeeLING?
s.

That is -- an emoti ona I response, not just sentimental?

14

Why not discover your own favo~ite ~ ETS"'~. I andp EMS? ./

1~1~
, '

Browse in libraries -and bookstufS

'\

'~ ,,'

'\'"fo get dcq0~int~dwith "as


poef5d5 possible.

\IYl'dny

for sU99stioY'S.
SE A '~ITlC

~k)rne' ou'll y n~e more that" others:~ge+to kl'1ow them. A'~o'asK your fibt"dri3n
\. .,'

XflJ!
to get fu II flavor of rhythms and sounds. Ask yourself -- why do I like (or dislike) this poem? Analyze its meaning -- its technique. in your pocket or handbag to read in <, ' spare moments during\_ the day. Many cntho'loqi es '~ or collections are now available in paper backed editions.

Get to know the leodiV\9

A~T~OLtJ etS

LISTetJ TO poets~EADlfJG their oWt\PoEM~--

~j;;;jl .- '--~ ~. ~

(collec,tjO~5 of f'Oe~5) ,

'--'--......

~UCH

AS

----the "ALBUM of MODERN POETRY" (Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. 20540) presents 46 English and American poets reading their own poems on 3 LP (33-1/3 RPM) records.

"NEW MODERN AMERICAN & BRITISH POETRY" ed. by Louis Untermeyer "TREASURY of GREAT POEMS", 2 vol , ed. by Louis Untermeyer "OXFORD BOOK of AMERICAN VERSE" ed. by F. U. Matthiessen "AN ANTHOLOGY of FAMOUS ENGLISH and AMERICAN POETRY" by Benet and Aiken -- and there are many other good anthologies.

15

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