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Analyzing Poetry

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Title: Analyzing Poetry


1
Analyzing Poetry
  • Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history
    (Plato)
  • And Dr. Seuss uses it, too!

2
Prose
  • The ordinary form of spoken or written language,
    without metrical structure, as distinguished from
    poetry or verse.
  • Prose is the form of written language that is not
    organized according to formal patterns of verse.
    It may have some sort of rhythm and some devices
    of repetition and balance, but these are not
    governed by regularly sustained formal
    arrangement. The significant unit is the
    sentence, not the line. Hence it is represented
    without line breaks in writing.
  • Novels, short stories, articles, works of
    nonfiction

3
Poetry
  • The art of rhythmical composition, written or
    spoken, for exciting pleasure by beautiful,
    imaginative, or elevated thoughts.
  • Literary work in metrical form verse.
  • Poetry is language spoken or written according to
    some pattern of recurrence that emphasizes
    relationships between words on the basis of sound
    as well as meaning. This pattern is almost always
    a rhythm or meter (regular pattern of sound
    units). This pattern may be supplemented by
    ornamentation such as rhyme or alliteration or
    both.

4
Poetry project due April 21
  • This partner-optional project will challenge you
    to use both your left and right sides of the
    brain. The left side, which is analytical, tends
    to see sequences, causes and effects, and
    differences. The right side, however, looks for
    patterns, emotions, images, analogies, and
    pictures.
  • For this assignment, you will select a poem that
    is 12-30 lines long from poetryoutloud.org. On a
    sheet of tag board, you will arrange the poem and
    poet in the center and arrange the right- and
    left-brain parts around it.
  • The project will be worth 50 points. Please
    refer to the below rubric as you construct your
    project. The assignment is due Thursday, April
    21, in the library (do not bring it to 259 on
    that day).

5
Left-Brain Components
  • Left-brain components include the following an
    analysis of the poem (see sample on page 7 and
    TP-CASTT explanation in packet), five key facts
    about the poet that are phrases IN YOUR OWN WORDS
    (give credit for this information) and three
    defined words (more credit). Submit all three
    parts to turnitin.com.

6
Right-Brain Components
  • Right-brain components consist of images from the
    poem and connections to your life (films, songs,
    or literature the poem reminds you of colors
    reactions your original efforts inspired by the
    poem youve chosen.
  • These should not just be images printed off the
    Internet. Be creative! Vary textures, colors,
    shapes, sizes.

7
Poetry Project Rubric (Remember that the analysis
must be submitted to turnitin.com, and the key
facts need documentation!
  • See rubric for expectations
  • Use a flat piece of tag board (2 x 3 feet)
  • Use a variety of textures and colors (unless
    black and white for artistic effect)
  • Do not roll up the project to bring to school
    (please keep flat)
  • Begin in the middle and work your way to the
    edges
  • Document your sourcesOR NO CREDIT.

8
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11
Rhythm in Poetry
  • While not all poetry has rhyme, rhythm, or both,
    some does.
  • The basic beat of poetry is called a FOOT.
  • A foot could have one, two, or three syllables.
    Only one syllable is stressed for each foot.
  • A stressed syllable /
  • An unstressed syllable U

12
Rhythm devices with three syllables
  • Anapestic three-syllable foot made of two
    unstressed syllables followed by a stressed
    syllable. An example of this would be comprehend
    (com-pre-HEND).
  • Hmmmhow would Dr. Seuss handle the anapestic
    foot?

13
If I Ran the Zoo by Dr. Seuss
  • U U / U U /
  • "So I'd open each cage.
  • U U / U U /
  • I'd unlock every pen.
  • U U / U U /
  • Let the animals go
  • U U / U U /
  • And start over again."

14
Rhythm devices with three syllables
  • Dactylic three-syllable foot made of a stressed
    syllable followed by two unstressed syllables.
    An example of this would be merrily (MER-ri-ly).
  • This is like the waltz beat ONE two three, ONE
    two three (think pterodactyl doing the waltz)

15
The Lorax by Dr. Seuss
  • / U U / U U / U U /
  • "I am the Lorax. I speak for the trees."

16
Rhythm devices with two syllables
  • Iambic two-syllable foot made of an unstressed
    syllable followed by a stressed syllable. An
    example of this would be regard (re-GARD).
  • Shakespeare used this, and so did Robert Frost.
    What about Dr. Seuss?

17
  • U / U / U / U /
  • I do not like green eggs and ham.
  • U / U / U / U /
  • I do not like them, Sam I Am."

18
Rhythmic devices with two syllables
  • Trochaic two-syllable foot made of a stressed
    syllable followed by an unstressed one. Think
    Poe's The Raven! An example would be raven
    (RAV-en).
  • So Poe liked this. Did Dr. Seuss? What do YOU
    think?

19
  • / U / U / U / U
  • "One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish.."

20
Name the rhythmic device
  • And to think that I saw it on Mulberry Street.
  • Anapestic
  • U U / U U / U U / U
    U /
  • And to think that I saw it on Mulberry
    Street.

21
Name that rhythmic device
  • I saw a pair of pale green pants
  • With nobody inside them.
  • Iambic
  • U / U / U / U /
  • I saw a pair of pale green pants

22
Name the TWO rhythmic devices
  • Now Sam McGee was from Tennessee,
  • Where the cotton blooms and blows
  • Iambic and anapestic
  • U / U / U U /
    U /
  • Now Sam McGee was from Tennessee

23
Name the rhythmic device
  • Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright
  • In the forest of the night!
  • Trochaic
  • / U / U / U /
  • Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright!

24
Name the rhythmic device
  • Had I but all of them, thee and thy treasures,
  • What a wild crowd of invisible pleasures!
  • Anapestic
  • / U U / U U / U U
    / U
  • Had I but all of them, thee and thy treasures

25
Whats a foot in poetry?
  • The number of stressed beats in a line of poetry
    is a foot. Most poems have more than one foot
    per line
  • Dimeter (two beats)
  • Trimeter (three beats)
  • Tetrameter (four beats) Green Eggs and Ham by
    Seuss
  • Pentameter (five beats)SHAKESPEARE!
  • Hexameter (six beats)
  • Septameter (seven beats)
  • Octameter (eight beats)The Raven by Poe

26
How many feet in these lines?
  • Robert Services The Cremation of Sam McGee
  • Now Sam McGee was from Tennessee, where the
    cotton blooms and blows.
  • Emily Dickinsons Because I Could Not Stop for
    Death
  • Because I could not stop for Death, he kindly
    stopped for me.
  • Robert Brownings The Laboratory
  • Had I but all of them, thee and thy treasures.
  • Dr. Seuss The Sneetches
  • Now the star-bellied Sneetches had bellies with
    stars,
  • But the plain-bellied Sneetches had none upon
    thars.
  • William Blakes The Tyger
  • Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
  • In the forests of the night

27
SOUND DEVICES--what helps with rhyme? sound
pictures?
  • Alliteration Repetition of initial sounds of
    words in a row. Example Peter Piper picked a
    peck of pickled peppers. (Of course, alliteration
    is not always so concentrated)
  • Assonance Repetition of internal vowel sounds of
    words close together in poetry. Example I made
    my way to the lake.
  • Consonance Repetition of internal or ending
    consonant sounds of words close together in
    poetry. Example I dropped the locket in the
    thick mud.

28
Onomatopoeia Words that sound like their
meaning. Example splash, boom, whizz
29
Rhyme
  •  True rhyme words that rhyme with all ending
    sounds Example trouble and bubble.
  • Sight rhyme words that look alike but do not
    rhyme. Example though and bough good and food
  • End rhyme words that rhyme and occur at the ends
    of different lines of poetry
  • Internal rhyme two words that rhyme within one
    line of poetry
  • ex. We were the first that ever burst

30
Rhyme Scheme
  • the pattern of rhyme in a poem. To get the rhyme
    scheme, each line in the poem is assigned a
    letter. The first line gets an "A". If the next
    line rhymes with the first, give it an "A" also.
    If not, give it a "B". Continue throughout the
    poem, following the same rules if the end word
    rhymes with anything before, match that letter.
    If not, give it the next unused letter of the
    alphabet.

31
Alone by Edgar Allen Poe
  • From childhoods hour I have not
    been             aAs others were I have not
    seen                        aAs others saw I
    could not bring                         bMy
    passions from a common spring.                
    bFrom the same source I have not
    taken            cMy sorrow I could not
    awaken                          cMy heart to joy
    at the same tone                      dAnd all
    I loved, I loved alone.                           
    d
  • What is the scansion (type of rhythm and number
    of feet)?
  • Iambic tetrameter

32
Beyond simile, metaphor, hyperbole, and
personification
  • Apostrophe Words that are spoken to a person who
    is absent or imaginary, or to an object or
    abstract idea. The poem "God's World" by Edna St.
    Vincent Millay begins with an apostrophe O
    World, I cannot hold thee close enough!/Thy
    winds, thy wide grey skies!/Thy mists that roll
    and rise!
  • Conceit A fanciful poetic image that likens one
    thing to something else that is seemingly very
    different. An example of a conceit can be found
    in Shakespeare's sonnet Shall I compare thee to
    a summer's day? and in Emily Dickinson's poem
    There is no frigate like a book.
  • Litotes A figure of speech in which a positive is
    stated by negating its opposite. Some examples of
    litotes no small victory, not a bad idea, not
    unhappy. Litotes is the opposite of hyperbole.

33
  • Metonymy A figure of speech in which one word is
    substituted for another with which it is closely
    associated. For example, in the expression The
    pen is mightier than the sword, the word pen is
    used for the written word, and sword is used
    for military power.
  • Synecdoche A figure of speech in which a part is
    used to designate the whole or the whole is used
    to designate a part. For example, the phrase all
    hands on deck means all men on deck, not just
    their hands. The reverse situation, in which the
    whole is used for a part, occurs in the sentence
    The U.S. beat Russia in the final game, where
    the U.S. and Russia stand for the U.S. team and
    the Russian team, respectively.

34
Which type of figurative language?
  • "for life's not a paragraphand death I think is
    no parenthesis" (e.e. cummings).
  • I should have been a pair of ragged
    clawsScuttling across the floors of silent seas
    (T.S. Eliot)
  • But the hand!
  • Half in appeal, but half as if to keep
  • The life from spilling (Robert Frost)
  • Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what
    you are (Mother Goose)
  • This flea is you and I, and thisOur marriage
    bed, and marriage temple is (John Donne).

35
TPCASTT A way to analyze poetry
  • Title
  • Paraphrase
  • Connotation
  • Attitude
  • Shifts
  • Title
  • Theme

36
Title
  • Ponder the title before reading the poem.
    Make up questions about the title. There are two
    kinds of titles interactive titles and naming
    titles. Interactive titles are have some sort of
    interplay with poem itself and can affect its
    meaning. Naming titles may give less crucial
    information. If a poem lacks a title, you can do
    this step with the first line of the poem or skip
    it.

37
Paraphrase
  • Translate the poem into your own words. And I
    mean translate! Word for word! Find synonyms for
    every possible word. Summarizing is NOT
    paraphrasing (see page 7 of the packet for a
    sample).

38
Connotation
  • Contemplate the poem for meaning beyond the
    literal. Identify and figure out the figurative
    language. Look for symbols and conceits (extended
    metaphors). Here also is where you will examine
    the form (rhythmic devices, for example).

39
Attitude
  • After identifying a subject/topic of the poem,
    figure out how the speaker (and/or the poet)
    feels about it.
  • Look at word choice. Is the diction formal or
    informal?
  • Look at tone. Is the poem ironic?
  • Dont assume the speaker and the poet are the
    same. Who is the narrator of the poem? Male or
    female? Young or old?

40
Shifts
  • Note transitions in the poem. Shifts in subject,
    attitude, or mood. Look for words like but or
    then.
  • Look at the punctuation, like questions and
    answers
  • Look for a change in verb tense (said to says)
    or person ( I to you, or I to he or she?)
  • Look for a change in time

41
Title (second time)
  • Examine the title again, this time on an
    interpretive level. Answer your questions. Figure
    out how the title illuminates the poem. Remember
    a "naming title" may not mean much. Remember you
    can do this with the first line of a poem if it
    lacks a title or you can skip this step
    altogether.
  •                      

42
Theme (NOT A MORAL!)
  • After identifying a subject/topic of the poem,
    determine what the poet thinks about the subject.
    What is the poet saying about life? Remember, it
    cannot be a command (no bossing the reader).
  • Theme Imagination can be powerful.
  • Moral Let your child daydream.

43
Sample paraphraseno figurative language
allowedand no big words!
  • I enjoy seeing it drink up the miles and use its
    tongue to consume the valleys. Then it pauses to
    eat at a watering tank. After that it takes a
    gigantic step around some mountains while
    haughtily peeking into some crudely built huts on
    the roadsides. It slices through an open pit of
    rocks just enough to squeeze itself through. It
    complains constantly with a repetitive sound and
    then speeds down the hill, making a thunderous
    noise. Right on time it stops, nicely and
    powerfully, at its shed.

44
Sample connotationanalyze!
  • I Like To See It Lap the Miles is an extended
    metaphor because the train is compared to a
    horse. In fact, train engines were referred to
    as iron horses, which is probably where
    Dickinson got the idea for this poem. The
    feeding tanks are the water and coal needed to
    fuel the engine, the complaints and neighs are
    the sounds a train makes as it goes up and down
    hills or toots its whistle. The stable door is
    the station. In order to make the engine seem
    like a living creature, Dickinson uses
    personification. A train engine does not have a
    tongue, so it cant lap the Miles or lick the
    Valleys up. It doesnt have a mouth or stomach,
    so it could not feed itself at Tanks. The
    language gives the engine many attributes of a
    horse mouth, stomach, eyes, legs, and vocal
    chords. Dickinson also uses an allusion in the
    phrase neigh like Boanerges. Boanerges means
    son of thunder and is what Jesus called James
    and John, the sons of Zebedee, in the New
    Testament.
  • Besides imagery, the poet uses sound
    devices. The second and fourth lines of each
    verse either rhyme or have near rhyme up and
    step, Star and door. The entire poem is
    iambic, with the first and third lines in
    tetrameter and the second and fourth lines in
    trimeter. Dickinson also uses alliteration
    like to see it lap and horridhooting.

45
Sample attitude
  • The speaker of the poem seems to be a child with
    a good imagination. Many of the words are
    simple, though supercilious, prodigious,
    Boanerges and omnipotent require most people
    to find a dictionary. Still, a child growing up
    in a religious household in the nineteenth
    century would have been familiar with these
    words. The speaker may have been describing this
    scene to a friend or to a parentor may have
    simply been wondering aloud.

46
Sample shift
  • The poet uses "then" four times. Each time the
    train stops what it has been doing and begins
    another activity. This is similar to the many
    stops a train makes during the day. In fact,
    steam engines had to stop every seven miles,
    which is why so many towns in rural areas are
    only seven miles apart.

47
Sample theme
  • The theme seems to be the power of imagination or
    wonder of a child. Just as the speaker is able
    to compare a steam engine to a horse, children
    have the capability of pretending that one object
    is really something else.
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