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04 - Poetry

The document provides an overview of various types of poetry, highlighting their definitions, structures, and characteristics. It distinguishes poetry from prose and describes specific forms such as Haiku, Tanka, Limerick, and Sonnet, among others. Additionally, it includes examples and the origins of poetry, emphasizing its expressive and rhythmic nature.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views26 pages

04 - Poetry

The document provides an overview of various types of poetry, highlighting their definitions, structures, and characteristics. It distinguishes poetry from prose and describes specific forms such as Haiku, Tanka, Limerick, and Sonnet, among others. Additionally, it includes examples and the origins of poetry, emphasizing its expressive and rhythmic nature.

Uploaded by

cheetah.gamex
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Types of Poetry

What is the difference


between Prose and Poetry?
What is Prose?
Prose is writing or speaking that is
done in an ordinary form using
sentences and paragraphs.
What is Poetry?
Literary work in which the expression of
feelings and ideas is given intensity by
the use of distinctive style and rhythm;
poems collectively or as a genre of
literature
Origin and Characteristics of poetry

The word Poetry comes from the ancient


Greek word - poieo - which means I
create.
Poetry is written in lines or stanzas which
may or may not contain complete
sentences.
Poetry is usually shorter than prose.
Words and lines in poetry have more
rhythm than prose and there is
sometimes rhyme in poetry.
Cinquain

A five line poem How frail


containing 22 Above the bulk
syllables Of crashing water hangs
Autumnal, evanescent, wan
Two Syllables The moon.
Four Syllables
Six Syllables
Eight Syllables
Two Syllables
Diamante Poems
Line 1: one word (subject/noun that is contrasting to
line 7)
Line 2: two words (adjectives) that describe line 1
Line 3: three words (action verbs) that relate to line 1
Line 4: four words (nouns) first 2 words relate to line
1; last 2 words relate to line 7
Line 5: three words (action verbs) that relate to line 7
Line 6: two words (adjectives) that describe line 7
Line 7: one word (subject/noun that is contrasting to
line 1)
Diamante Poems
Example:
square
symmetrical, conventional
shaping, measuring, balancing
boxes, rooms, clocks, halos
encircling, circumnavigating, enclosing
round, continuous
circle
Haiku
A Haiku is a 3-line, unrhymed nature
poem of 17 syllables, divide so that the
first and third lines have 5 syllables
each and the middle line has 7
syllables.
Haiku poetry originated in Japan.
An essential element of Haiku is that a
season - or something that indicates a
specific season - must be mentioned.
Haiku
A Haiku is a 3-line, unrhymed nature
poem of 17 syllables, divide so that the
first and third lines have 5 syllables
each and the middle line has 7
syllables.
Haiku poetry originated in Japan.
An essential element of Haiku is that a
season - or something that indicates a
specific season - must be mentioned.
Tanka
The Tanka poem is very similar to haiku but
Tanka poems have more syllables and it uses
simile, metaphor and personification.
It consists of 5 lines for a total of 31 syllables.

The syllables per line are according to the


pattern:
5 -7 -5 - 7 - 7
Concrete Poems
Poetry
In concrete Is like
poems, the words Flames,
Which are
are arranged to Swift and elusive
create a picture Dodging realization
Sparks, like words on the
that relates to the Paper, leap and dance in the
Flickering firelight. The fiery
content of the Tongues, formless and shifting
poem. Shapes, tease the imiagination.
Yet for those who see,
Through their mind’s
Eye, they burn
Up the page.
Limerick
A limerick is a 5-line jingle whose purpose is
humor. It usually has an aabba rhyme
scheme. With the first, second, and fifth lines
either anapestic or amphibrach trimeter, and
the third and fourth lines of anapestic dimeter.
There once was a lady from Niger
Who smiled as she rode on the tiger.
They returned from the ride
With the lady inside,
And the smile on the face of the tiger!
Free Verse
Free verse is just what it says it is
- poetry that is written without
proper rules about form, rhyme,
rhythm, meter, etc.
Free verse poetry is very
conversational - sounds like
someone talking with you.
A more modern type of poetry.
Blank Verse
Written in lines of iambic pentameter,
but does NOT use end rhyme.
Example:

Cowards die many times before their deaths;


The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come when it will come.
from Julius Caesar
Narrative Poetry
A poem that tells Examples of Narrative
a story. Poems:
Generally longer
than the lyric “The Raven”
styles of poetry “The Highwayman”
b/c the poet “Casey at the Bat”
needs to establish
characters and a “The Walrus and the
plot. Carpenter”
Epic
An epic is a book-length narrative
poem about a single hero or group
of people.

Examples: Homer’s Iliad is a epic


about the Trogan War
Longfellow’s Evangeline ia another
example of an epic
Lyric Poetry
Lyric poetry is one of the broad
divisions of poetry. They are based
on the personal thoughts and
feelings of the author. They have a
musical quality to them. They
include a wide variety of patterns
including sonnets, odes, and elegies.
Example: "Dreams" "Dream
Deferred" by Langston Hughes
Shakespearean Sonnet
A fourteen line poem Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate.
with a specific rhyme Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
scheme. And summer’s lease hath all too short a date.
Sometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimmed;
The poem is written And every fair from fair sometimes declines,

in three quatrains and By chance or nature’s changing course


untrimmed.
ends with a couplet. But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st;
Nor shall Death brag thou wanderest in his shade,
The rhyme scheme is When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
abab cdcd efef gg So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
Sonnets
Sonnets use 14 lines to develop a
theme. Each set of 4 lines is called a
quatrain and the last pair is a
couplet.
– The 1st quatrain states the theme
– The 2nd quatrain develops the theme
– The 3rd quatrain develops the theme
or expresses conflict
– The couplet unifies the whole and
provides the climax.
Sonnets
Examples:
Shakespeare’s
Sonnet XVIII-"Shall I compare thee to
a summer's day?”
or
Elizabeth Barret Browning's
Sonnet XLIII- “How do I love thee?
Let me count the ways”
Ballads
A ballads is a type of lyric poem that tells
a story about a famous person or event.
Originally ballads were written to be
sung, like song lyrics.
Ballads usually feature a refrain, which is
a repeated phrase or idea.
In most cases, ballads contain a specific
rhyme pattern (abab or aabb), but may
also be arranged in free verse form.
Ballads

Famous ballads include:


Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s
“The Wreck of Hesperus” and his
“Paul Revere’s Ride.”
Elegy
An elegy is a poem of mourning that is
written in memory of someone.
The mood of an elegy is usually somber.
It may have any rhyme scheme, rhythm
pattern, or stanza pattern.
Example:
"O Captain! My Captain!" by Walt
Whitman, written for President Abraham
Lincoln.
Ode
An ode is a lengthy lyrical poem of
praise.
An ode may have any rhyme scheme,
rhythm pattern, or stanza pattern.

Examples:
“Ode to Duty” by William Wordsworth
“To a Skylark” by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Parody
Parody poetry is based on a poem that is well
known that mimic of its rhythm, rhyme scheme, or
phraseology is immediately recognized. The topic
may be totally different from the original poem or it
may have a different view or slant on the same
topic.

Example:
“ ‘Twas the night before Christmas and all through the
flat,
Not a creature was stirring, not even a rat.”

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