Poetry Unit 4

Published on Apr 26, 2017

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Poetry Unit 4

Photo by Swamibu

Poetic Structure

Photo by KaurFlicks

Structure of Poetry

  • Structure of a poem is the way words lines, and groups of lines are arranged.
  • ­Most poetry is arranged in lines or groupings of words.
Photo by Jocey K

Stanzas are logical sections of ideas

  • ­A two­ line stanza is a couplet.
  • ­Three lines is a tercet
  • ­Four lines is a quatrain.

­Rhyme Scheme is pattern of rhymes at the end of lines

  • abab
  • The path of least resistance, a is short, but it’s boring. b Choose the tougher distance a for soaring. b

­Poetic Forms

Photo by Sprengben

­Formal verse

  • follows fixed traditional patterns that may include a specific rhyme scheme, meter, line length, or stanza structure.

­Free verse

  • uses poetic language but does not follow a specific pattern.

­Lyric poetry

  • expresses the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker, often in a musical verse.
Photo by minnepixel

Haiku

  • a short, unrhymed poem, often about nature. Has one three line stanza that follows a 5­7­5 syllabic pattern.
Photo by Sudhamshu

Elegy

  • a formal poem reflecting on death or other serious theme.
  • Structure and rhyme scheme can vary.

Ode

  • a formal poem of honor or celebration.
  • Often has a regular meter and end rhyme but the number and length of the lines and stanzas can vary.

Sonnet ­

  • 14 line poem of praise with a specific rhyme scheme.

­Narrative poetry

  • tells a story.
  • Includes ballads and epic poetry.
  • Follows a formal structure with set stanzas, strong rhythms, and regular rhyme

­Dramatic poetry

  • presents drama in verse.
  • Action is told through the words the characters speech.
Photo by kevin dooley

­Concrete poetry­-visual

  • appearance matches the topic of the poem.
Photo by trevor.patt

Poetic language

Photo by Shawn Econo

Examples of Poetic Language

  • Figurative language
  • idiom
  • imagery
  • allusion
  • personification
  • oxymoron
  • hyperbole
  • symbol
  • pun
  • understatement

Poetic Sound Devices

Photo by Fey Ilyas

Examples

  • Alliteration, onomatopoeia, repetition

Speaker

  • person or character who communicates the words of the poem.
  • (Don’t assume the voice in the poem is the poet's!)
Photo by somegeekintn

Connotation

  • Words that are associated with feelings.
  • Negative and positive.

Tone

  • The attitude the writer has toward their subject showed through word choice.
  • respectful, admiring, sorrowful, pity
Photo by delete08

Word choice:

  • rare, exquisite, inspire
  • isolated, loneliness
Photo by Darwin Bell

THE END!

Photo by naturalturn

Cassandra Wallace

Haiku Deck Pro User