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Poetry Day 5 The Ode and Pantoum Poems. CARL SANDBURG Poet Focus.

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Presentation on theme: "Poetry Day 5 The Ode and Pantoum Poems. CARL SANDBURG Poet Focus."— Presentation transcript:

1 Poetry Day 5 The Ode and Pantoum Poems

2 CARL SANDBURG Poet Focus

3 Ode Ode comes from the Greek word aeidein (“to sing”) An ode – Is a song or lyric poem that addresses a thing or person not present – Thrives on meter and rhyme and was originally intended to be performed The Irregular Ode: – An ode in which the distinct metrical and stanzain regulations of Pindarian and Horatian odes are disgarded for more freedom – Pablo Neruda: Chilean poet that took the irregular ode one step further and wrote with high diction about everyday objects

4 From Ode to Aphrodite Sappho (c. 630-570 B.C.) Deathless Aphrodite, throned in flowers, Daughter of Zeus, O terrible enchantress, With this sorrow, with this anguish, break my spirit Lady, not longer! Hear anew the voice! O hear and listen! Come, as in that island dawn thou camest, Billowing in thy yoked car to Sappho Forth from thy father's Golden house in pity!... I remember: Fleet and fair thy sparrows drew thee, beating Fast their wings above the dusky harvests, Down the pale heavens, Lightning anon! And thou, O blest and brightest, Smiling with immortal eyelids, asked me: "Maiden, what betideth thee? Or wherefore Callest upon me? "What is here the longing more than other, Here in this mad heart? And who the lovely One beloved that wouldst lure to loving? Sappho, who wrongs thee? From Ode to the Watermelon Pablo Neruda The tree of intense summer, hard, is all blue sky, yellow sun, fatigue in drops, a sword above the highways, a scorched shoe in the cities: the brightness and the world weigh us down, hit us in the eyes with clouds of dust, with sudden golden blows, they torture our feet with tiny thorns, with hot stones, and the mouth Suffers more than all the toes: the throat becomes thirsty, the teeth, the lips, the tongue: we want to drink waterfalls, the dark blue night, the South Pole, and then the coolest of all the planets crosses the sky, the round, magnificent, star-filled watermelon. It's a fruit from the thirst-tree. It's the green whale of the summer.

5 DIANE WAKOSKI Poet Focus

6 Pantoum Poems First appeared in 15 th century Malayan literature Made up of 4 line stanzas with lines repeated in a pattern – Each line of the poem is used twice as Line 1 and Line 3 are used for the 2 nd and 4 th line in the final stanza _________ (Line 1) _________ (Line 2) _________ (Line 3) _________ (Line 4) _________ (Line 5 – same as 2) _________ (Line 6) _________ (Line 7 – same as 4) _________ (Line 8) _________ (Line 9 – same as 6) _________ (Line 10) _________ (Line 11 – same as 8) _________ (Line 12) and so on…

7 “PANTOUM” BY JOHN ASHBERY Pantoum Example

8 For the rest of class: Practice with the poetic forms we’ve learned thus far or meet with a partner to discuss your collaboration Look at our eight poets to this point and see if one is a poet you’d like to focus on for your analyses


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