English 7 Module 4
English 7 Module 4
English 7 Module 4
English
MODULE 4
(Bridging Program)
Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work of
the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or office
wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit. Such
agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of royalties.
Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this module are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from their
respective copyright owners. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim ownership
over them.
YOUR JOURNEY
Have you ever wondered why you are just right here at the moment?
Nevertheless, this moment is an opportunity leading you to a brighter
future that may open doors for your self-improvement and encouragement
to love reading literary texts especially poetry.
However, this will challenge you to appreciate the beauty and power
of words in a poem. Furthermore, it will help you to explore and embrace
the golden moments of reading with analyzation and comprehension.
As you go through this lesson, you will learn to analyze poems in
terms of its elements through doing the tasks/activities provided for you.
Enjoy and have fun.
YOUR OBJECTIVES
As you go through this lesson, you are expected to analyze poem
with four or more stanzas in terms of its elements.
YOUR TEXT
I WANT TO KNOW THIS!
Poetry is a personal type of writing where words flow and carry you
along the realms of beautiful thought. Poems are written in lines which
may or may not be sentences. A group of lines is called a stanza. A
stanza is printed with space above and below it.
A stanza is one element of poetry that may consist of just one line
while other stanzas may have more lines. In the poem “The Song of Maria
Clara”, there are three stanzas consisting four lines for each stanza.
Another element of poem is its sound. Words that end with the same
sound is called rhyme. Rhyming words do not appear only at the end of
the lines in poems, but they may also appear within the line.
Example:
END RHYME INTERNAL RHYME
A tree in bloom Warm kisses play on her mother’s lips,
So near my room; On her fond, tender breast awakening:
Upon the tree When round her neck the soft arms slips
A pollened bee, And bright eyes smile, all love partaking.
Two singing birds
So loud with words, Sweet is death for one’s native land,
And dragonflies Where all is dear the sunbeams bless:
With beryl eyes: Dead is the breeze that sweeps the strand,
I’ll leave my book Without a mother, home, or love’s caress.
I’ll look and look. -Jose P. Rizal, translated by Charles E. Derbyshire, from
-Maximo Ramos, “A Tree, A Book” the “Song of Maria Clara”
TASK 3. BE QUIET! Pause for a while and be quiet for at least three
minutes. Try to observe the sounds that you hear in your environment.
Note the sounds as you hear them.
QUIET
PLEASE!!!
I WANT TO KNOW THIS!
Other ways of achieving a musical effect is through the use of
onomatopoeia. The poet uses words that suggest sounds at the same
time describe actions being made. Onomatopoeia is a sound device used
by poets to suggest actions, movements and meanings.
Examples: I heard buzzing of the bees and the hissing of the
snakes.
Other interesting features of a poem that make it musical is the
presence of sound devices like alliteration, assonance, consonance
and repetition.
1. Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning
of words like:
doubting, dreading dreams no mortal
enter dared to dream before
-Edgar Allan Poe, from The Raven
CRITERIA POINTS
Originality 4
Content 3
Language/Choice of Words 3
TOTAL 10
MY TREASURE
QUESTIONS ANSWER
What have I learned?
MODULE
TEXTBOOK
Nem Singh,Rosario P.
Communication Arts and Skills I
Anvil Publishing Inc. 1997
INTERNET
https://www.google.com/Literaturapoetry.wordpress.com,
accessed March 13, 2014