Poetic language appeals to feelings – description



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poetic language appeals to feelings – description

  • poetic language appeals to feelings – description

  • set in a special form

  • has a special rhythm to it

  • words chosen on how they sound as well as what they say



As the cat

  • As the cat

  • climbed over

  • the top of

  • the jam closet

  • first the right forefoot

  • carefully

  • then the hind

  • stepped down

  • into the pit of the empty

  • flowerpot

  • - William Carlos Willams



  • When/where is the poem set?

  • What situation does it describe?

  • What story does it tell?

  • Who is the speaker?

  • Poetry is about suggestion rather than direct statements. You have to think about all elements to figure out what it means to you.



  • sound

  • shape MEANING

  • images

  • Topic = subject

  • Theme = message



This is just to say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold

  • This is just to say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold



This is just to say

  • This is just to say

  • have eaten

  • the plums

  • that were in

  • the icebox

  • and which

  • you were probably saving for breakfast

  • forgive me

  • they were delicious

  • so sweet

  • and so cold





Literal (Denotative) Level – looking at the words for their usual meaning without exaggeration or imagination.

  • Literal (Denotative) Level – looking at the words for their usual meaning without exaggeration or imagination.

  • Figurative (Connotative) Level – using words out of their ordinary meaning to add beauty and force.



language that represents one thing in terms of another, usually by comparison.

  • language that represents one thing in terms of another, usually by comparison.

  • Figurative language creates vivid sensory images in our minds and makes poems fresh and original.



He clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ring'd with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.

  • He clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ring'd with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.

  • - Alfred Lord Tennyson



Summary - Denotative

  • Summary - Denotative

  • The poem has a very simple concept. It focuses on one eagle, alone in the wild. In the first line, the eagle is atop a mountain, poised to strike. He is high up where no other animal or human can go. He is alone in his grandeur, with the sun and the bright blue sky forming the perfect background scenery.

  • The second stanza shows the only action of the eagle. The first and second line show that as he watches from his high perch, the sea moves below him. Then, in the final line, the eagle makes a grand dive towards the sea. The poem ends here, with the reader not quite sure why the eagle dived off his mountain roost.



LITERAL:

  • LITERAL:

  • Analysis: Tennyson provides the image of a predatory bird scouring the sea for prey.

  • FIGURATIVE:

  • Example: "He clasps the crag with crooked hands." (line 1).

  • Analysis: The hard consonant sounds combined with images of crags and crooked hands set up the desolateness of nature and its cruelty.

  • Example: "And like a thunderbolt he falls." (line 6).

  • Analysis: Tennyson employs a simile, comparing the eagle's descent to a thunderbolt. It hints at the suddenness at which life can end.



metaphor - a direct comparison between two seemingly unlike things.

  • metaphor - a direct comparison between two seemingly unlike things.

  • simile - a comparison between two seemingly unlike things using like or as.

  • personification - giving human characteristics to inanimate objects.

  • allusion - a reference to a famous person, event, or other literary work.

  • hyperbole - a deliberate exaggeration.

  • pun – a play on words - when a word or phrase is used with two different meanings.





Descriptions of people, places, or things are often made more vivid through the use of comparisons.

  • Descriptions of people, places, or things are often made more vivid through the use of comparisons.

  • Definition: Any comparison that is introduced by the preposition like or as

  • Harold was like a werewolf, waiting for the moon to turn full.

  • Linda’s personality is as exciting as a carton of low-fat cottage cheese



Metaphors offer a more dramatic way of drawing a comparison. Unlike similes, there are no prepositions used.

  • Metaphors offer a more dramatic way of drawing a comparison. Unlike similes, there are no prepositions used.

  • Definition: draws a comparison. States that one thing is something else. Just watch that you don’t over-use them – then they become clichés…

  • Life is just a bowl of cherries

  • He is a stuffed shirt

  • Jane is a tower of strength



a phrase or opinion that is overused and betrays a lack of original thought.

  • a phrase or opinion that is overused and betrays a lack of original thought.

    • Meek as a mouse
    • As old as the hills
    • Busy as a bee
    • Strong as a bull
    • Brave as a lion
      • etc.






Use what we learned about simile and metaphor yesterday to make these mundane sentences sparkle! Select any 3 - but avoid clichés!

  • Use what we learned about simile and metaphor yesterday to make these mundane sentences sparkle! Select any 3 - but avoid clichés!

    • The moon was full
    • The tidal wave was big
    • The diamond was bright
    • The keys on the jailer’s belt were heavy
    • The tea was hot
    • The man walked quickly


A figure of speech where animals, ideas, or inorganic objects are given human characteristics

  • A figure of speech where animals, ideas, or inorganic objects are given human characteristics

    • “The wind stood up and gave a shout. He whistled on his two fingers.”
    • The thunder grumbled like an old man. (personification and simile)
    • Read “Autumn”


It squats,

  • It squats,

  • head hanging low,

  • patient

  • It watches through my skylight

  • as the sun fades into the trees,

  • Then suddenly becomes alert,

  • preparing for the assault

  • of darkness

  • When night creeps through it raises its metal-sheathed head

  • so its gaping mouths face the oncoming foe

  • Click!



A reference in a work of literature to a person, place, or event in another work of literature, history, art, or music

  • A reference in a work of literature to a person, place, or event in another work of literature, history, art, or music

    • He gave a Herculean effort during the football game.
    • He was a real Scrooge when asked to donate to the organization.
    • I thought the software was safe to open, but it was a Trojan Horse.


Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo,

  • Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo,

  • Shovel them under and let me work –

  • I am the grass: I cover all

  • And pile them high at Gettysburg.

  • And pile them high at Ypres and Verdun.

  • Shovel them under and let me work.

  • Two years, ten years, and the passengers ask the conductor:

  • What place is this?

  • Where are we now?

  • I am the grass.

  • Let me work.



Literal: Read aloud first time and answer questions:

  • Literal: Read aloud first time and answer questions:

  • What is the setting?

  • Who is the narrator?

  • What story does it tell?

  • Where is the crucial moment where the action shifts? – what do you make of this change?

  • Figurative: Read again silently and try to answer the following questions:

  • Where do you see examples of PERSONIFICATION

  • What is the TONE of the poem? ( I hear 2 distinct tones…)

  • What are possible THEMES of the poem?( A couple work here…)

    • What is Sandburg saying about these themes?


An extravagant exaggeration

  • An extravagant exaggeration

    • You’ve grown like a bean sprout.
    • I’m older than the hills.


Many words like “fire” can have multiple meaning – literal and figuratively. This adds to the mystery of poetry

  • Many words like “fire” can have multiple meaning – literal and figuratively. This adds to the mystery of poetry



Alliteration

  • Alliteration

  • Assonance

  • Rhyme

  • Meter



The repetition of consonant sounds (often a the beginning of words) – often used in advertising/slogans

  • The repetition of consonant sounds (often a the beginning of words) – often used in advertising/slogans

    • Tippecanoe and Tyler, too!”
    • Many tongue twisters are examples of alliteration – Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers


The repetition of vowel sounds

  • The repetition of vowel sounds

    • I like Ike”
    • “He gives his harness bells a shake” (from Robert Frost’s “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening”)
    • A blinding sight


A word that corresponds with another in related sound

  • A word that corresponds with another in related sound

    • Behold, cold, bold, sold, doled, polled, etc.


The measured arrangement of words in poetry, as by accentual rhythm, syllabic quantity, or the number of syllables in a line

  • The measured arrangement of words in poetry, as by accentual rhythm, syllabic quantity, or the number of syllables in a line

    • There are several types of set meter


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