The Poetry
Poetry
Topic
:
Poetry, the theory in analyzing poetry ( Figurative
Language, extrinsic and intrinsic elements)
Definition
:
Poetry is an imaginative awareness of experience expressed through meaning,
sound, and rhythmic language choices so as to evoke an emotional response.
Poetry has been known to employ meter and rhyme, but this is by no means
necessary. Poetry is an ancient form that has gone through numerous and drastic
reinvention over time. The very nature of poetry as an authentic and individual
mode of expression makes it nearly impossible to define.
Example
:
“Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune–without the words,
And never stops at all,
“And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.
“I’ve heard it in the chilliest land,
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity,
It asked a crumb of me.”
(Emily Dickinson)
Figurative
Language Of Poetry
Simile is the rhetorical term used to
designate the most elementary form of resemblances: most similes are
introduced by "like" or "as." These comparisons are
usually between dissimilar situations or objects that have something in
common, such as "My love is like a red, red rose."
A metaphor leaves out
"like" or "as" and implies a direct comparison between
objects or situations. "All flesh is grass." For more on metaphor, click here.
Synecdoche is a form of metaphor, which
in mentioning an important (and attached) part signifies the whole (e.g.
"hands" for labour).
Metonymy is similar to synecdoche; it's
a form of metaphor allowing an object closely associated (but unattached)
with a object or situation to stand for the thing itself (e.g. the crown
or throne for a king or the bench for the judicial system).
A symbol is like a
simile or metaphor with the first term left out. "My love is like a
red, red rose" is a simile. If, through persistent identification of
the rose with the beloved woman, we may come to associate the rose with
her and her particular virtues. At this point, the rose would become a
symbol.
Allegory can be defined as a one to one
correspondence between a series of abstract ideas and a series of images
or pictures presented in the form of a story or a narrative. For example,
George Orwell's Animal Farm is an extended allegory that represents
the Russian Revolution through a fable of a farm and its rebellious
animals.
Personification occurs when you treat
abstractions or inanimate objects as human, that is, giving them human
attributes, powers, or feelings (e.g., "nature wept" or
"the wind whispered many truths to me").
Irony takes many forms. Most
basically, irony is a figure of speech in which actual intent is expressed
through words that carry the opposite meaning.
Paradox: usually a literal
contradiction of terms or situations
Situational Irony: an unmailed
letter
Dramatic Irony: audience has
more information or greater perspective than the characters
Verbal Irony: saying one thing
but meaning another
Overstatement
(hyperbole)
Understatement
(meiosis)
Sarcasm
Irony may be
a positive or negative force. It is most valuable as a mode of perception that
assists the poet to see around and behind opposed attitudes, and to see the
often conflicting interpretations that come from our examination of life.
Elements Of Poetry
1. Rhythm: This is the music made by
the statements of the poem, which includes the syllables in the lines. The best
method of understanding this is to read the poem aloud, and understand the
stressed and unstressed syllables.
2. Meter: This is the basic structural
make-up of the poem. Do the syllables match with each other? Every line in the
poem must adhere to this structure. A poem is made up of blocks of lines, which
convey a single strand of thought. Within those blocks, a structure of
syllables which follow the rhythm has to be included. This is the meter or the
metrical form of poetry.
3. Stanza: Stanza in poetry is defined
as a smaller unit or group of lines or a paragraph in a poem. A particular
stanza has a specific meter, rhyme scheme, etc. Based on the number of lines,
stanzas are named as couplet (2 lines), Tercet (3 lines), Quatrain (4 lines),
Cinquain (5 lines), Sestet (6 lines), Septet (7 lines), Octave (8 lines).
4. Rhyme: A poem may or may not have a rhyme. When you
write poetry that has rhyme, it means that the last words or sounds of the
lines match with each other in some form. Rhyme is basically similar sounding
words like cat and hat, close and shows, house and mouse, etc. Free verse
poetry, though, does not follow this system.
5. Rhyme Scheme: As a continuation of rhyme, the rhyme
scheme is also one of the basic elements of poetry. In simple words, it is
defined as the pattern of rhyme. Either the last words of the first and second
lines rhyme with each other, or the first and the third, second and the fourth
and so on. It is denoted by alphabets like aabb (1st line rhyming with 2nd, 3rd
with 4th); abab (1st with 3rd, 2nd with 4th); abba (1st with 4th, 2nd with 3rd),
etc.
6. Theme: This is what the poem is all
about. The theme of the poem is the central idea that the poet wants to convey.
It can be a story, or a thought, or a description of something or someone;
anything that the poem is about.
7. Symbolism: Often poems will convey
ideas and thoughts using symbols. A symbol can stand for many things at one
time and leads the reader out of a systematic and structured method of looking
at things. Often a symbol used in the poem will be used to create such an
effect.
8. Imagery: Imagery is also one of the
important elements of a poem. This device is used by the poet for readers to
create an image in their imagination. Imagery appeals to all the five senses.
For e.g., when the poet describes, the flower is bright red, an image of a red
flower is immediately created in the readers mind.
Part Of Poetry
1. Ode: It is usually a lyric
poem of moderate length, with a serious subject, an elevated style, and an
elaborate stanza pattern.
2. Elegy: It is a lyric poem
that mourns the dead. [It's not to be confused with a eulogy.]It has no set metric or stanzaic
pattern, but it usually begins by reminiscing about the dead person, then
laments the reason for the death, and then resolves the grief by concluding
that death leads to immortality. It often uses "apostrophe" (calling
out to the dead person) as a literary technique. It can have a fairly formal
style, and sound similar to an ode.
3. Sonnet: It is a lyric poem
consisting of 14 lines and, in the English version, is usually written in
iambic pentameter. There are two basic kinds of sonnets: the Italian (or
Petrarchan) sonnet and the Shakespearean (or Elizabethan/English) sonnet. The
Italian/Petrarchan sonnet is named after Petrarch, an Italian Renaissance poet.
The Petrarchan sonnet consists of an octave (eight lines) and a sestet (six
lines). The Shakespearean sonnet consists of three quatrains (four lines each)
and a concluding couplet (two lines). The Petrarchan sonnet tends to divide the
thought into two parts (argument and conclusion); the Shakespearean, into four
(the final couplet is the summary).
4. 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.
5. Epic: It is a long narrative
poem in elevated style recounting the deeds of a legendary or historical
hero.
6. Haiku: It has an unrhymed
verse form having three lines (a tercet) and usually 5,7,5 syllables,
respectively. It's usually considered a lyric poem.
7. 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's usually a narrative
poem based upon a short and often ribald anecdote.
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