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Tools of the poetic trade…

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Presentation on theme: "Tools of the poetic trade…"— Presentation transcript:

1 Tools of the poetic trade…

2 Tools a poet might employ to create an effect, an idea, a feeling…
Poetry: the art of expressing one’s thoughts in verse. Prose: the ordinary language people speak and write. Free Verse: an open form of poetry. Does not follow a rhythm or rhyme scheme. When spoken aloud, it can sound like prose. Meter—the rhythmic pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem—basically, the measured beats Iamb (foot): basic unit of meter; unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable equals 1 iamb. Iambic Pentameter— 5 iambs (beats); one line of 10 stressed and unstressed syllables

3 Sonnet—a poem of fourteen lines of iambic pentameter that follows a prescribed rhyme pattern
Italian/Petrarchan Sonnet—consists of an octave and sestet; the octave is an 8 line introduction that usually rhymes abba abba. The sestet is a 6 line response or contrast from the first 8 lines, and may rhyme cdecde, cdcdcd, or something similar. The change from one rhyme group to another signifies the change of subject matter. English/Shakespearean Sonnet—consists of three quatrains (a stanza of 4 lines) and a concluding couplet; the rhyme scheme is usually abab cdcd efef gg *Most common sonnet form* Spenserian Sonnet—related to the English sonnet, consists of three quatrains of interlinking rhyme and a concluding couplet rhyming abab bcbc cdcd ee

4 Blank Verse: a poem written in iambic pentameter, but has no fixed number of lines and does not rhyme. End-stopped: poetic device in which a pause occurs at the end of a line and is expressed with punctuation (comma, period, dash, etc.) Caesura: (siz – yoor- a) a break inside a line of verse, usually made by any type of punctuation. Enjambment: the continuation of a sentence or clause over a line break with no terminating punctuation at the end of the line. (opposite of end-stopped)

5 Simile: a comparison between two unlike things using “like” or “as.”
Metaphor: an implied comparison between two relatively unlike things NOT using the words “like” or “as.” Personification: giving human characteristics to non-human things. Alliteration: repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of words. Assonance: repetition of vowel sounds in stressed words or syllables Onomatopoeia: the use of words whose sounds suggest their meaning or use—they sound like what they are!

6 Theme: overall main observation the author is trying to make about life or human nature: a complete sentence, not just one word. Persona: a “second self” created by author through whom the poem is related; sometimes called the speaker, or narrator, of the poem—this is not necessarily the author’s voice speaking to us. Imagery: descriptive & concrete details that appeal to the senses: sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste, or internal feelings; creates a picture in the mind. Symbol: concrete object that is used to represent an idea. Allusion: a reference to something historical or literary—background knowledge is necessary to understand the reference.


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