Analyzing Poetry

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Analyzing Poetry

If you are just beginning to delve into the world of poetry, you may initially feel overwhelmed by the
occasional ambiguity and inaccessibility of this literary style. However, learning the elements and poetic
tools used to build a poem will help to understand and analyze poems.
Getting Started:
1) Give yourself a lot of time to read the poem several times. Trying reading it out loud.
2) Have a copy of the poem that you can take notes on. As you read, write down every observation,
question, or feeling you get from the poem as you read. Pay special attention to how the poem
begins and ends.
3) Use your notes as entry points to begin your investigation and analysis of the poem. Ask yourself
what elements in the poem lead you to a particular observation and how the poet achieves this
effect.
4) Always keep in mind that the poet uses poetic devices to achieve a particular effect. Breaking up
the poem into formal poetic components enhances your understanding of the poems overall
theme, tone, and/or general purpose. In other words, use form to understand the content and
create a thesis about the poem.
Here are some elements and corresponding poetic devices you can focus on. Note: Many of these
divisions are arbitrary. Poetic elements frequently overlap.
Content: How does the tone of the speaker and the context of the work change your understanding of the
poem?
1) Speaker: Is the speaker the poet or a specific persona? How is the speaker involved in the poem?
Is the speaker an omniscient narrator or casual observer? Does the speaker refer to himself/
herself in the 1st person? Is the speaker from an identifiable time period? How does knowing the
historical context of the poem change your understanding of the speakers attitude?
2) Tone: How is the tone of the poem developed through the language used to create imagery? How
does diction influence the understanding of the tone? Does the tone change as the poem
progresses? Is it consistent at the beginning and ending of the poem?
3) Tension: What is the conflict or point of tension in the poem? Is there an external or internal
conflict? Physical, spiritual, moral, philosophical, social, etc? How is the tension in that conflict
developed with poetic elements? Is it resolved?
4) Context: When was the poem written? What were the historical, political, philosophical, and
social issues of that time? Does that change your understanding of the poems theme? Did poets
during that time period follow particular style? Is the poem consistent with the literary
conventions of that era? How is it inconsistent?

Undergraduate Writing Center, The University of Texas at Austin


UWC website: uwc.fac.utexas.edu
Last revised Sedef Akkor, July 2006

Form: How does the form of the poem correspond to theme and main idea of the work?
1) Structure: Does the poem follow a formal poetic structure such as a sonnet, haiku, sestina, ode,
blues poem, etc.? If so, what are the characteristics of that form? How does it deviate from that
form?
2) Stanza and Lines: Are stanzas and lines consistently the same length? Do they follow a
particular pattern? Are there any stanzas, lines, or words that diverge from the pattern?
3) Rhyme Scheme: Does the poem follow an identifiable rhyme scheme corresponding to a specific
poetic form? What kind of rhyme is used internal or end rhyme, slant or true rhyme, etc.? Is it
consistent or scattered throughout? If not, where does the rhyme change or appear and why?
What is the overall purpose or effect of the rhyme scheme?

Imagery: How does the imagery construct the poems theme, tone, and purpose?
1) Visuals and Sensory: Are the images literal or figurative, abstract or concrete? What sensory
experiences are evoked? Are certain images repeated?
2) Metaphor: Does the poet use metaphors to make comparisons and express images or abstract
ideas? Is there an extended metaphor? What is the effect of the metaphors on the tone and theme
of the poem?
3) Symbolism: Are certain objects or actions developed in the imagery symbolic of an abstract idea?
Do these symbols reoccur? Do they help to create an allegory?
Language: How does the language and rhythm contribute to the meaning, purpose, or emotional force?
1) Word Choice: How would you characterize the poets word choice? Is it formal, conversational?
Does the poet use a specific dialect for the speaker?
2) Meaning: What are the connotations and denotations of particular words? Are certain words
repeated? Are they abstract or concrete, literal or metaphorical?
3) Rhythm: Does the poem have an identifiable rhythm arranged in the meter (iambs, spondees,
trochees, dactyls, etc)? How many syllables are in each line? Does it follow a pattern? What
syllables are stressed and unstressed? How does alliteration, assonance, or consonance enhance
the rhythm and musicality of the poem?
Syntax: How do the poets syntactical choices change or expand the ideas in the poem?
1) Enjambment: How are lines broken? Are they broken before a grammatical or logical
completion of a thought to create an enjambment? Or are they end-stopped, breaking after the
completion of a sentence or other grammatical pauses? How does the use of enjambment create a
duality of meaning in the lines?
2) Verbs: Are verbs active or passive? What tense does the poet use? Is it consistent? How does
tense consistency (inconsistency) affect the passage of time within the poem?
3) Sentence Structure: Does the poet use complete sentences, fragments, or a combination of both?
Is there a pattern? How does the poets sentence choices contribute to the understanding of the
poem? Within the sentence, is the word order natural or grammatically irregular?
4) Punctuation: How is punctuation used or not used? Is it consistent with grammatical
conventions? What effect does the punctuation create on how the poem is read? How does it
affect the speed? Where are the pauses? Does the poet use italics, bold fonts, dashes, or any other
uncommon fonts or punctuation devices? If so, why?
See Poetic Elements UWC Handout for definitions of the underlined words.

Undergraduate Writing Center, The University of Texas at Austin


UWC website: uwc.fac.utexas.edu
Last revised Sedef Akkor, July 2006

Undergraduate Writing Center, The University of Texas at Austin


UWC website: uwc.fac.utexas.edu
Last revised Sedef Akkor, July 2006

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