Imagery, Diction, and Figure of Speech
Imagery, Diction, and Figure of Speech
Imagery, Diction, and Figure of Speech
1 FIGURE OF SPEECH
(HUMSS_CW/MP11/12-Ia-b-4)
Example:
An excerpt from Peter Redgrove’s Lazarus and the Sea contains imagery:
The air of my room, made the rough wood of my bed, (most dear),
Example:
“I prize thy love more than whole mines of gold,
FIGURES OF SPEECH
Figures of speech are words or phrases used in a non-literal sense for
rhetorical or vivid effect.
Example: “Ah, William, we’re wary of the weather,” said the sunflowers shining
with dew.
7. Synecdoche – a figure of speech in which the part stands for the whole, and
thus something else is understood within the thing mentioned.
• Imagery is used to signify all the objects and qualities of sense perception
referred to in works of literature.
• Diction refers to the kinds of words, phrases, and sentence structures, and
sometimes also figurative language, that constitute any work of literature.
• Figure of speech is an expression that departs from the accepted literal sense
or from the normal order of words, or in which an emphasis is produced by
patterns of sound.
MODULE ELEMENTS OF POETRY:
2 STRUCTURE OF POETRY
(HUMSS_CW/MP11/12c-f-6)
Poetry has remained a vital part of art and culture. Like other forms of
literature, poetry is made to express thoughts and emotions in a creative and
imaginative way. It conveys thoughts and feelings, describes a scene or tells a story in
a concentrated, lyrical arrangement of words.
STRUCTURE OF POETRY
One significant way to analyse poems is by looking into the stanza structure
and the form of the poem. Generally speaking, structure refers to the overall
organization of lines and/or the conventional patterns of sound. However, various
modern poems may not have particular structure.
A. Stanza
Stanzas refer to series of lines grouped together and separated by a space from
other stanzas. They correspond to a paragraph in an essay. Identifying the stanza is
done by counting the number of lines. The following are some of the terms used to
refer to the number of stanzas: monostich (1 line) couplet (2 lines), tercet (3 lines),
quatrain (4 lines), cinquain (5 lines), sestet (6 lines) (sometimes it's called a sexain),
septet (7 lines), octave (8 lines).
B. Form
In many cases, a poem may not have specific lines or stanza, and metrical pattern,
however, it can still be labelled according to its form or style. Here, we will discuss the
three most common types of poetry according to form are: lyric, descriptive and
narrative. We will also include other popular types of poetry.
1. Lyric Poetry. It is any poem with one speaker (not necessarily the poet) who
expresses strong thoughts and feelings. Most poems, especially modern ones,
are lyric poems. Below are some types of lyric poetry.
Rise up—for you the flag is flung—for you the bugle trills;
For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths—for you the shores a-crowding;
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
a. Ballad. It is a narrative poem that has a musical rhythm and can be sung. A
ballad is usually organized into quatrains or cinquains, has a simple rhythm
structure, and tells the tales of ordinary people.
3. Descriptive Poetry. It is a poem that describes the world that surrounds the
speaker. It uses elaborate imagery and adjectives. While emotional, it is more
"outward-focused" than lyric poetry, which is more personal and introspective.
Example: Excerpt from William Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud”
peach blossoms;
2. Limerick. It has a very structured poem, usually humorous & composed of five
lines (a cinquain), in an AABBA rhyming pattern; beat must be anapestic
(weak, weak, strong) with 3 feet in lines 1, 2, & 5 and 2 feet in lines 3 & 4. It is
usually a narrative poem based upon a short and often ribald anecdote.