English 9 Notes
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Transcript English 9 Notes
Poetry
English 9
Objectives:
To
identify and interpret various literary
elements used in poetry
To analyze the effect that poetic elements
have upon the reader
To analyze poetry for the ways in which
poets inspire the reader to share emotion
What distinguishes
poetry from prose?
The
Form and Structure
The Language
The Sound
Form
The
external patter of a poem
Its rhythm,
rhyme scheme, and
organization by line and stanza
The Structure of Poetry
Created through the organization of
Images
Ideas
Words
Organization
Stanzas
Most poems are divided into stanzas, the
“paragraphs” of poetry
Each stanza contains a prescribed number of
lines- rows of words that may or may not form
sentences
Some poems have regular stanzas (for
example, each stanza may have 4 lines), but
others may vary in length of stanzas
Language of Poetry
Imagery-
descriptive language used to
represent objects, feelings, and thoughts
Appeal to one or more of the five senses
Intended to remind readers of something they
have seen, heard, tasted, smelled, or touched
Language of Poetry
Figurative
Language- words used
differently from their ordinary, literal
meanings
Poets use figurative language to bring power,
vitality, and freshness to their writing
Language of Poetry
Figure
of speech: a word or expression not
meant to be taken literally
Examples:
• Simile- uses the word like or as to compare two
seemingly unlike things
• Metaphor- states or implies that one thing IS
another
• Hyperbole- uses exaggeration to express strong
emotion, make a point, or evoke humor
• Personification
The Sound of Poetry
Rhythm
& Meter
Rhyme
Sound
Devices
Rhythm & Meter
Rhythm:
the pattern of stressed and
unstressed syllables in a line of poetry
A poem’s rhythm can be regular or irregular
Meter:
the regular pattern of stressed and
unstressed syllables that can establish the
rhythm of the poem
The basic unit of measuring meter is the foot
• A foot usually contains one stressed syllable and
one or more unstressed syllables
Rhyme
The repetition of the same stressed vowel sounds
and any succeeding sounds in 2 or more words
(ex. stop rhymes with drop)
Internal rhyme: occurs when two words in the
same line rhyme
End rhyme: occurs at the end of lines
Slant rhyme: occurs when the sounds of words
are similar but not identical (ex. soul and all)
Rhyme scheme: the pattern of end rhyme in a
poem
Sound Devices
A poems’ impact depends not only on what it says,
but also on how it sounds.
Alliteration:
repetition of consonant
sounds at
the beginning of words
Assonance: repetition of similar vowel
sounds w/in non-rhyming words
Onomatopoeia: words that imitate the
sound of what they describe
Repetition: the repetition of a sound,
word, phrase, line, or even an entire
stanza
Guide to Reading Poetry
Respond
to a poem as a whole before
analyzing its details
Pay attention to the ways a poem may
“refresh language” and make it seem new
Use your emotions, experiences, and
imagination to help you create meaning in
a poem
Guide to Reading Poetry
Read a poem at least 3 times:
1st time:
2nd time:
3rd time:
For enjoyment
For meaning
For structure and language
Other Elements of Poetry
Speaker
Tone
Enjambment
Parallelism
Juxtaposition
Paradox
Epiphany
Symbolism
Diction
Apostrophe
Catalog
Repetition
Alliteration
Character
Style
The
expressive qualities that distinguish
an author’s work
Includes:
• Word choice
• Length and arrangement of sentences
• Figurative language & imagery
Types of Poems
Haiku
Sonnet
Epic
Lyric
Free
verse
“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”
Lake District of England
“I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud”