The Elements of PoetryThe Elements of Poetry
Poetry is hard to define. Even poets argue among themselves about what makes a poem a poem. There are some common characteristics, however, that we can use to help us differentiate between poetry and prose. (1) It should look like a poem, meaning that lines don’t run to the margins. Some lines are not even sentences. (2) There are usually some musical devices that give the poem a song-like, lyrical quality. (3) Images are conveyed through sensory details and figurative language. (4) The poem has some form to hold it together. Some poems actually have a prescribed form like haikus and sonnets. (5) The poem has some meaning, image or emotion it wants to share with the reader. That makes a poem!
To critically analyze a poem, we must look at its elements and see what they are doing to the poem. Then we can infer a meaning to it.
The following slides will take us through the elements so that we can recognize them, and then we will try to put it all together and analyze the meaning of the poem.
ImageryImagery
• Imagery is the senses the poem evokes in the reader. Imagery puts the reader in the poem. It helps the reader to “see” the poem.
• The tools of imagery are– Senses : sound, sight, touch, smell, taste, and
emotion.– Figurative language : metaphor, simile,
personification, hyperbole, etc.
Sensory detailsSensory details
Sensory details touch the five senses. They make the poem vivid to the reader.
Let’s look at the sensory details in the poem “Those Winter Sundays.”
Those Winter SundaysSundays too my father got up early
and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,
then with cracked hands that ached
from labor in the weekday weather made
banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.
I’d wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.
When the rooms were warm, he’d call,
and slowly I would rise and dress,
fearing the chronic angers of that house,
Speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the cold
and polished my good shoes as well.
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?
Robert Hayden
In “Those Winter Sundays” Hayden has caused us to experience several senses. “…[B]lueblack cold” certainly makes us feel how cold it was. When the father’s hands are described as “cracked hands that ached” we can feel the roughness. He describes the cold “splintering and breaking.” We can hear the trees and ice crack. And then the rooms “were warm” when the boy got up. We know how that feels on a cold day. When the boy fears “the chronic angers of that house” and when he speaks “indifferently to him” we know what emotions the boy is feeling.
Hayden has caused us to feel cold, cracked hands and warm rooms. We hear splintering and breaking and feel anger and indifference.
These sensory details make the poem come alive to us and help us to feel what the boy felt on those winter Sundays.
Figurative LanguageFigurative Language
• Figurative language is words not meant to be taken literally. The words are symbolic. We know these images as metaphor, simile, personification, hyperbole, and others. Because the poet is comparing a less familiar object to a common one, the comparison makes the familiar image stronger.
• The next slides will give examples of each type of image.
MetaphorMetaphor is a figure of speech
that makes a comparison between two unlike things, in which one
thing becomes another without the use of the words like, as, than,
or resembles.
Example:
Love is a rose.
SimileSimile is a figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things, using words
such as like, as, than, or resembles.
Example:My love is like a red, red rose.
- Robert Burns
Metaphor/SimileMetaphor/Simile
Metaphors and similes compare something in the poem to something familiar outside the poem. Making the connection requires background knowledge for the metaphor/simile to be meaningful to the reader.
Look at the metaphors in the poem, “Frost.”
FrostHow does
The plain
Transparency
Of water
Sprout these
Lacy fronds
And plumes
And tendrils?
And where,
Before window-
Panes, did
They root
Their lush forests,
Their cold
Silver jungles?
The author of this poem compared the frost on a window to the lacy fronds, plumes, and tendrils of a fern. In the last stanza she has expanded the comparison to “crystal forests” and “silver jungles.” Let us picture that in our minds. Can we “see” the frost on the window?
PersonificationPersonification is a special kind
of metaphor in which a nonhuman thing is talked about as if it was human (given human
characteristics).
Example:
This poetry gets bored of being alone,
It wants to go outdoors to chew on the wings,
To fill its commas with the keels of rowboats….
-Hugo Margenat, from”Living Poetry”
PersonificationPersonification
When an author uses personification, he gives human characteristics to a non-human object.
Look at the human characteristics used by Howard Nemerov in his poem “The Vacuum.” Also notice how personification reveals the speaker’s attitude toward housekeeping.
The VacuumThe house is quiet now
The vacuum cleaner sulks in the corner closet,
Its bag limp as a stopped lung, its mouth
Grinning into the floor, maybe at my
Slovenly life, my dog-dead youth.
I’ve lived this way long enough,
But when my old woman died her soul
Went into that vacuum cleaner, and I can’t bear
To see the bag swell like a belly, eating the dust
And the woolen mice, and begin to howl
Because there is old filth everywhere
She used to crawl, in corner and under the stair.
I know now how life is cheap as dirt,
And still the hungry, angry heart
Hangs on and howls, biting at air.
Hyperbole/ ExaggerationHyperbole/ Exaggeration
The poet uses hyperbole to overstate something to reveal the truth.
In a poem called “Sow” Sylvia Plath describes how much the sow eats. She writes, “Of kitchen slops and, stomaching no constraint,/ Proceeded to swill/ The seven seas and every earthquaking continent.”
How much did the sow eat?
OnomatopoeiaOnomatopoeia is the use of
a word or words whose sound imitates its meaning.
Examples:crackle, pop, fizz, click, chirp
OnomatopoeiaOnomatopoeia
We are familiar with onomatopoeia even if we don’t understand the word. When two cars collide, what sound do they make? Crash! That is onomatopoeia – words that make the sound they are imitating.
Here is a poem by Eve Merriam appropriately titled “Onomatopoeia.” See how many sounds are heard.
OnomatopoeiaThe rusty spigot
sputter,
utters
a sputter,
spatters a smattering of drops,
gashes wider;
slash,
splatters,
scatters,
spurts,
finally stops sputtering
and plash!
gushes rushes splashes
clear water dashes.
SymbolismSymbolism is when a person, place, thing or idea stands for itself and for something else.
Example: Use of the bald eagle to represent
the United States.
Understatement
• Understatement - basically the opposite of hyperbole. Often it is ironic.
• Ex. Calling a slow moving person “Speedy”
• Ex. Yao Ming is slightly taller than Ms. Marinucci.
Idiom
• An expression where the literal meaning of the words is not the meaning of the expression. It means something other than what it actually says.
• Ex. It’s raining cats and dogs.
Allusion
• Allusion comes from the verb “allude” which means “to refer to”
• An allusion is a reference to something famous.
A tunnel walled and overlaid
With dazzling crystal: we had read
Of rare Aladdin’s wondrous cave,
And to our own his name we gave.
From “Snowbound”
John Greenleaf Whittier
Alliteration
Alliteration is the use of similar sounds at the beginning of a word.
MusicMusic
The poet uses musical devices to make the poem song-like. In fact, some poems are/were songs.
The musical devices we will discuss, and be responsible for, are assonance (which is similar to alliteration), onomatopoeia, rhythm, rhyme, repetition, and pause.
Assonance -
Assonance is the use of similar vowel
sounds within a word.
Rhythm
Rhythm is the beat of a poem. It is the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. There are several rhythm patterns in poetry which we will not go into in this presentation which will be shown later.
Let’s look at the following poem and see if we can identify the pattern of stressed and unstressed beats.
Counting-Out Rhyme
Silver bark of beech , and sallow
Bark of yellow birch and yellow
Twig of willow.
Stripe of green in moosewood maple,
Colour seen in leaf of apples,
Bark of popple.
Wood of popple pale as moonbeam,
Wood of oak for yoke and bran-beam,
Wood of hornbeam.
Silver bark of beech, and hollow
Stem of elder, tall and yellow
Twig of willow.
-Edna St. Vincent Millay
Rhyme
Exact rhyme are words that have the exact same-sounding ending, like cat and hat
A rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhyming words.
Look at the following poem and identify the rhyme scheme.
Reapers
Jean Toomer
Black reapers with the sound of steel on stones
Are sharpening scythes. I see them place the hones
In their hip-pockets as a thing that’s done,
And start their silent swinging, one by one.
Black horses drive a mower through the weeds,
And there, a field rat, startled, squealing bleeds,
His belly close to ground, I see the blade,
Blood-stained, continue cutting weeds and shade.
END RHYME
• A word at the end of one line rhymes with a word at the end of another line
Hector the Collector Collected bits of string.
Collected dolls with broken heads And rusty bells that would not ring.
INTERNAL RHYME
• A word inside a line rhymes with another word on the same line.
Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary.
From “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe
NEAR RHYME
• a.k.a imperfect rhyme, close rhyme
• The words share EITHER the same vowel or consonant sound BUT NOT BOTH
ROSE LOSE
Different vowel sounds (long “o” and
“oo” sound)Share the same
consonant sound
Rhyme SchemeRhyme Scheme
• Having a certain rhyme scheme also is a way to give structure to poetry.
• Look at the example first and letter it
• Look at the rhyme scheme in the poem “Cross” by Langston Hughes. See how it holds the poem together. Also notice the use of stanzas. Why did Hughes put these words in the stanza?
SAMPLE RHYME SCHEME
The Germ by Ogden Nash
A mighty creature is the germ, Though smaller than the pachyderm.
His customary dwelling place Is deep within the human race.
His childish pride he often pleases By giving people strange diseases.
Do you, my poppet, feel infirm? You probably contain a germ.
a
a
b
b
c
c
a
a
CrossLangston Hughes
My old man’s a white old manAnd my old mother’s black.If ever I cursed my white old manI take my curses back.
If ever I cursed my black old motherAnd wished she were in hell,I’m sorry for that evil wishAnd now I wish her well.
My old man died in a fine big house.My ma died in a shack.I wonder where I’m gonna dieBeing neither white or black?
LettersLetters
Repetitive initial consonant sounds in a poem are called alliteration.
Repetition of other consonant sounds is called consonance.
Repetitive vowel sounds are called assonance.
The following poem has many examples of each. See how many you can find. Also notice what other element of poetry you can find.
Fueled by Marcie Hans
Fueledby a millionman-madewings of fire –the rocket tore a tunnelthrough the sky –and everybody cheered,Fueled only by a thought from God –the seedlingurged its waythrough the thickness of black – and as it pierced the ceiling of the soil – and launched itself up into outer space –no oneevenclapped.
RepetitionRepetition• Poems also create music through the
repetition of words and lines.
• Look at the poem “One Perfect Rose” by Dorothy Parker. One line is repeated three times. Notice how the meaning of the line changes by the third repetition.
One Perfect Roseby Dorothy Parker
A single flow’r he sent me, since we met.All tenderly his messenger he chose;
Deep-hearted, pure with scented dew still wet –One perfect rose.
I knew the language of the flowerlet;“My fragile leaves,” it said, “his heart enclose.”
Love long has taken for his amuletOne perfect rose.
Why is it no one ever sent me yetOne perfect limousine, do you suppose?
Ah no, it’s always just my luck to getOne perfect rose.
FormForm
• Form is the structure of the poem. Any type of writing must have something to hold it together.
The structure can be created through many means: meter, stanza, rhyme scheme, or set patterns of poetry like sonnet, haiku , concrete, and others.
Iambic Foot
An iambic foot is an unstressed syllable
followed by a stressed syllable .
Example:
We could write the rhythm like this:
da DUM
Meter
Meter is the pattern of rhythm established for a
verse.
Rhythm
Rhythm is the actual sound that results from
a line of poetry.
Iambic Pentameter
Iambic Pentameter is a line of poetry with five
iambic feet in a row This is the most common
meter in English poetry.
Example:We could write the rhythm like this:
da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM
We can notate this with a ˘ mark representing an unstressed syllable and a '/' mark representing a stressed syllable
Example Continued:The following line from John Keats' Ode to
Autumn is a straightforward example:
˘ / ˘ / ˘ / ˘ / ˘
To swell the gourd, and plump the ha - zel
/shells
StanzaStanza
• A stanza in poetry is like a paragraph in prose. The author divides the poem by grouping words into stanzas. We can often see the structure of the poem by the author’s use of stanza.
StanzaStanzas are groups of lines in a poem
which are named by the number of lines included.
• Two lines is a couplet. • Three lines is a triplet or tercet.• Four lines is a quatrain. • Five lines is a quintain or cinquain. • Six lines is a sestet.• Eight lines is an octet.
PatternPattern
• Some poems are written in a set form like sonnets, haikus, limericks, concrete, etc.
These patterns sometimes require a regular rhyme scheme or meter; or number of syllables or lines.
Look at the following examples:
Acrostic poetryAcrostic poems use letter patterns to create multiple messages
Example: When the first letters of lines
read downward form a separate phrase or word.
ExampleEnergetic
Rowdy
Impressive
Creative
SonnetSonnet
• The sonnet is the requirement of every experienced poet.
• It is fourteen lines of rhymed iambic pentameter.
• The first 12 lines pose a problem, ask a question, or set up a situation.
• The couplet at the end solves the problem, answers the question or settles the situation.
Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s
Day? – William ShakespeareShall I compare thee to a summer’s day? aThou art more lovely and more temperate: bRough winds do shake the darling buds of May, aAnd summer’s lease hath all too short a date: bSometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines, cAnd often is his gold complexion dimmed: dAnd every fair from fair sometime declines, cBy chance or nature’s changing course untrimmed; dBut thy eternal summer shall not fade, eNor lose possession of that fair thou owest; fNor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade, eWhen in eternal lines to time thou grow’st: f
So long as men can breathe, or eye can see, gSo long lives this, and this gives life to thee. g
The previous sonnet is a famous one by William Shakespeare. It follows exactly the sonnet pattern. Iambic pentameter means that it has five feet of iamb meter (U/). The rhyme scheme is called Shakespearen because Shakespeare used it in all his sonnets.
Look back at the poem and notice the rhyme and meter. Then see what the first four lines are talking about and how the couplet at the end completes it.
HaikuHaiku is a popular form of traditional Japanese poetry consists of 17-syllables comprising three metrical lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables.
Example(5) Tree grow-ing old-er(7) An-cient el-der shad-ing me(5) Calm, cool, peace-ful day
- Mrs. Chi, 2/08
HaikuHaiku
Haiku is an ancient Japanese pattern. It is three lines of seventeen syllables separated into 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second, and 5 in the last. But a haiku is much more than that. Look at the following haiku written by Mike Reiss.
HaikuAny moron can
Write haikus. Just stop at theSeventeenth syllab
I think he was trying to be funny. Did you laugh?
Real haiku also have other characteristics besides syllables.
1. Haiku depend on imagery.
2. Haiku are condensed; the poet leaves out all unnecessary words.
3. Haiku are concerned with emotions; nature reflects these emotions.
4. Haiku rely heavily on the power of suggestion or connotation.
Here is a real Japanese haiku written by Japanese writer Kobayashi Issa.
A gentle spring rainLook, a rat is lapping
Sumida River.
Here is one by American author Richard Wright.
Over spring mountains
A star ends the paragraph
Of a thunderstorm.
Finally, one by a former student, Jonathan Martin.
Praying like a priest
Then snapping with God’s power,
The mantis chews love.
LimerickLimerick
• The limerick has a strict pattern of five lines in an anapestic meter with a rhyme scheme of aa, bb, a. The limerick is almost always a light, humorous poem. Here is an example:
I sat next the Duchess at tea.
It was just as I feared it would be:
Her rumblings abdominal
Were simply abominable
And everyone thought they were me!
-Anonymous
Concrete poetryConcrete poetrySome poetry takes the shape of what the poem is about. Here is one called Poem by Philip G. Tannenbaum:
Ido Can you figure out what this is about?
Ntl
Ike
Tel
Eph
One
Boo
ths
Example
From Wright Flyer Online
Putting it all Together or how to analyze a poemPutting it all Together or how to analyze a poem
• Now that we have discussed the poetic tools, let’s apply them in the discussion of a poem. The main tools the poet uses are imagery, music and form. Look for these elements in the last poem of the presentation. Discuss how the poet creates and effect by the use of these tools.
BarterSara Teasdale
Life has loveliness to sell, Spend all you have for loveliness,
All beautiful and splendid things, Buy it and never count the cost;
Blue waves whitened on a cliff, For one white singing hour of peace
Soaring fire that sways and sings, Count many a year of strife well lost,
And children’s faces looking up And for a breath of ecstasy
Holding wonder like a cup. Give all you have been, or could be.
Life has loveliness to sell,
Music like a curve of gold,
Scent of pine trees in the rain,
Eyes that love you, arms that hold,
And for your spirit’s still delight,
Holy thought that star the night.
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