Literary Poetic Devices
Literary Poetic Devices
Literary Poetic Devices
by Mara Rockliff
Poem 1
from Green Eggs and Ham
This poem cannot be included in this publication
because the copyright holder has denied permission
and/or has electronic use conditions with which we
cannot comply.
Poem 2
who are you, little i
who are you, little i
(five or six years old)
peering from some high
window; at the gold
of november sunset
(and feeling: that if day
has to become night
this is a beautiful way)
If somebody gave you these two poems and told you one was written by E. E.
Cummings and one by Dr. Seuss, would you be able to tell which was which? If youve
ever read anything by either writer, you almost certainly would know the first is by Dr.
Seuss and the second is by E. E. Cummings. But how would you know?
The answer is stylethe way a writer uses language. The regular rhythm and the
rhyme pattern we expect in a Dr. Seuss book, along with his silly-sounding invented
words, make up his unique style. E. E. Cummingss use of lowercase letters, words that
bump into each other, and unusual punctuation make up another style.
Every writer has a style, though some styles are more distinctive than others.
Generations of beginning writers have tried to copy the unmistakable plain style of
Ernest Hemingway. In fact, every year theres an Imitation Hemingway Contest, in
which writers try to create the best really good page of really bad Hemingway.
Unexpected Connections
Most writers dont self-consciously try to come up with a style. But style comes
naturally from the choices writers make when they put words on a page. A long word or
a short one? A simple sentence or one thats long and complex? A sarcastic and biting
tone or one that is passionately sincere?
An important part of many writers style is their use of figures of speech, expressions
that are not literally true but that suggest similarities between usually unrelated things.
Some figures of speech are so common that we use them without even noticing they're
not literally true.
He was tied up in traffic.
That check you wrote bounced!
I sat at the foot of the bed.
The bed doesnt actually have a foot; were comparing it to a body, which has feet at
the bottom. The check didnt really bounce like a rubber ball, and the man tied up in
traffic wasnt tied with ropesthough he may have felt as if he were.
Here are some of the types of figurative language youre likely to come across:
Similes compare two unlike things using a word of comparison such as like, than, as,
or resembles.
Her hands were like ice.
I feel lower than a snake in a ditch.
Metaphors compare two unlike things directly, without using a specific word of
comparison.
His heart is made of stone.
Lewis is a rotten skunk!
In an extended metaphor the comparison is extended as far as the writer wants to
take it.
This poem "Fame is a bee" by Emily Dickinson cannot be included in this publication
because the copyright holder has denied permission and/or has electronic use
conditions with which we cannot comply.
Personification speaks of a nonhuman or inanimate thing as if it had human or lifelike
qualities.
A falling leaf danced on the breeze.
The train eats up the miles.
The sun smiled on our cookout.
Symbols, in literature, are people, places, or events that have meaning in themselves
but that also stand for something beyond themselves. Moby-Dick is a white whale
hunted by Captain Ahab in the novel Moby-Dick, but he is also a symbol of evil. In
everyday life we have many symbols. They are called public symbols because everyone
knows what they mean: A dove with an olive branch symbolizes peace; a skull and
crossbones symbolizes poison; a bearded man called Uncle Sam symbolizes the U.S.
government.
Writers try to create fresh figures of speech to help us to see everyday things in a new
way. Her hands were as cold as ice is a clicheveryones heard it before. But what
about Her handshake would make a snowman put on gloves? or Her hands were
colder than a lizard in an ice chest?
Unexpected Events
Another way writers create a fresh and exciting style is by playing with our
expectations. When reality contradicts what we expect, its called irony.
Verbal irony occurs when we say one thing and mean something else. Thats just
great, your friend says in a disgusted tone, and you know she means its not great at
all.
Situational irony is a situation that turns out to be just the opposite of what wed
expect. The son of the police chief is arrested for burglary. The firehouse burns to the
ground. The prize encyclopedia goes to the kid who never studied for the exam.
Dramatic irony occurs when we know something that a character in a book (or a
movie or play) doesnt know. Dont go down that dark hallway! we want to scream,
but the heroine goes anyway, and we know what shell find there.
Putting Us There
Style also comes from the way a writer uses words so that they spring to life from the
page. Vivid imagerylanguage that creates word pictures and appeals to the senses
makes us feel that we are seeing (or hearing, touching, tasting, or smelling) what the
writer is describing. The poet John Greenleaf Whittier helps us experience the start of a
New England blizzard with this image: The sun that bleak December day/Rose
cheerless over hills of gray.
Writers can also appeal to the ear with dialect, a way of speaking thats characteristic
of a particular place or group of people. Yall come back now tells us were in the
South. In older movies wed hear a New York City cabdriver say: Dat bum wanted me
to take him and huh all da way to Noo Joisey.
PRACTICE
Prepare a literary devices wall display for your classroom. You can keep
adding to this display as your experience with literary devices grows. Here
is how you do it:
Get seven poster boards, and give them the following labels:
Symbols
Similes
Images
Metaphors
Irony
Personification
Dialect
Under each term, write its definition. Then, under each definition, write in
examples that you think are interesting. You can find your examples in
newspapers and magazines, as well as in the stories, poems, and novels
you are reading in class and independently. Be sure to cite the author and
title of the work you take each quotation from.
indicates
A regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables is called meter. The metric
pattern for lines 1, 2, and 5 of the limerick is the same:
The pattern for lines 3 and 4 is slightly different. Re-read lines 3 and 4 to hear the
difference.
Chiming Sounds
The chiming effect of rhyme adds to the music of a poem, like the tinkling of a bell or
the clash of cymbals. Most rhymes in poetry are end rhymes. In the limerick the end
rhymes are Crewe, stew, and too (lines 1, 2, and 5) and shout and about (lines 3 and
4). When the two rhyming lines are consecutive, theyre called a couplet. Here is a
couplet with end rhymes that are spelled differentlybut they rhyme:
Some people think approximate rhymes sound less artificial than exact rhymes, more
like real speech. Some poets use approximate rhymes because they feel that all the
good exact rhymes have already been used too many times.
PRACTICE
Find a poem you like, and prepare it for reading
aloud. Here are some tips: