2. WHAT IS POETRY?
Poetry is the
spontaneous overflow of
powerful feelings: it takes
its origin from emotion
recollected in tranquility. –
William Wordsworth
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3. WHAT IS POETRY?
Poetry is not a turning
loose of emotion, but an
escape from emotions;
it is not the expression
of personality, but an
escape of personality. –
T.S. Eliot
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4. WHAT IS POETRY?
• It can be defined as 'literature in a metrical form'
or 'a composition forming rhythmic lines'. A poem
is something that follows a particular flow of
rhythm and meter. Compared to prose, where
there is no such restriction, and the content of
the piece flows according to story, a poem may
or may not have a story, but has a structured
method of writing.
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5. POETRY VERSUS VERSE
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Poetry Verse
Applied to the many forms in
which human beings have
given rhythmic expression to
their most intense
perceptions of the world,
themselves, and the relation
of the two
The metrical line as a
basic unit of poetry
Any form of metrical
composition.
6. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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1. Images – refer to the mental pictures
the poet creates through language
2. Diction – this refers to the selection of
specific words.
3. Form – is the arrangement words, lines,
verses, rhymes, and other features.
7. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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4. Cadence – refers to the rhythmic change in the inflection of
sounds from words being spoken. It also refers to the flow of
words.
5. Meter – refers to the rhythm that continuously repeats a single
basic pattern. 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 must be
included. This is the meter or the metrical form of poetry.
8. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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6. Rhyme – refers to the repetitive occurrence of identical
or similar sounding words usually found at the end of
lines on poems or songs. 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.
9. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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7.Rhythm – the variation or alternation of strong
and weak syllables or elements in the flow of
speech. 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.
10. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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8. Stanzas – refer to a series of lines grouped together and
separated by an empty line from other stanzas. 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).
11. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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9. Rhyme Scheme - 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.
12. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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Persona: The Speaking Voice of the Poem
Each poem has an assumed speaker who is the source
of the spoken words. This speaker serves as the persona
whose voice is heard by the listeners and/or readers.
Persona originally refers to the mask worn by a Greek
actor when he performs. The term is also used to refer to
the author’s second self also known as ―literary double‖
who will serve as his or her mouthpiece. Thus, the persona
who speaks in the poem and the poet who wrote it are not
necessarily the same.
13. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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Tone: The Attitude of the Poet towards the
Audience
In poetry, tone refers to the intellectual
and emotional attitudes of the poet towards
his or her intended audience.
14. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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Mood: The Attitude of the Poet towards the
Subject Matter
The term mood is defined by some critics as a
quality of literature that is synonymous with tone or
atmosphere and sometimes both. Mood refers to the
emotional and intellectual attitudes of the author
towards his or her subject matter in each literary
work.
15. ELEMENTS OF POETRY
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Atmosphere: The Dominant Emotional
Aura of the Poem
In literature, the term atmosphere denotes the
dominant mood or emotional tone of a work. The
atmosphere in literature refers to the dominant
emotional aura or general feeling created in the
readers or audience by a work at any given point. It
also describes the overall feelings or emotions
experienced by the readers or audience.
18. ALLUSION
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It is a reference to something else outside of the subject of
the poem.
Example: from "Nothing Gold Can Stay" (1923) by Robert Frost
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So, Eden sank to grief,
So, dawn goes down today.
Nothing gold can stay.
(This idea that nothing—not even Paradise—can last forever)
19. METAPHOR
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It is a comparison between two unlike things
without using like or as.
Example: from ―Hope Is the Thing with Feathers‖
by Emily Dickinson (compares hope to a bird)
"Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all.
20. PERSONIFICATION
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It is attributing human qualities to animals or
inanimate objects.
Example: from ―Trees‖ by Joyce Kilmer
A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray.
21. REPETITION
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It is a recurrence of elements to create unity.
Example: from ―The Bells‖ by Edgar Allan Poe
'To the swinging and the ringing of the bells,
bells, bells-
Of the bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells-
To the rhyming and the chiming of the bells!'
22. SIMILE
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It is a comparison between two objects using like,
as, or than.
Example: from ―The Daffodils‖ by William
Wordsworth
―I wandered lonely as a cloud
that floats on high o’er vales and hills. ‖
23. SYMBOLISM
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It is a technique using one object to suggest another
meaning.
Example: The line 'Two roads diverged in a yellow
wood' refers to the divergent paths the solitary
narrator encounters on his autumnal journey,
which represent the difficult choices we must
often make alone.
24. THEME
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It is the dominant unifying idea in a poem.
Example: The poem The Road Not Taken comprises
uncertainty and perplexing situation of the minds
of people about what they may face when
standing on the verge of making choices. It is
because life is full of choices, and the choices we
make, define the whole course of our lives.
25.
26. READ THE POEM BELOW. ANSWER THE QUESTIONS THAT
FOLLOW. WRITE ONLY THE LETTERS OF YOUR ANSWERS
IN YOUR ANSWER SHEET.
Trees
By Joyce Kilmer
I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.
A tree whose hungry mouth is prest.
Against the earth’s sweet flowing breast.
A tree that looks at God all day, And lifts
her leafy arms to pray;
A tree that may in Summer wear
A nest of robins in her hair.
Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.
Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.
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27. 1. The line ―A poem lovely as a tree
is an example of .
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Allusion
Metaphor
Simile
Symbolism
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28. 2. The words see-tree, prest-breast
show .
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Form
Rhyme
Rhythm
Stanza
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29. 3. A nest of robins in her hair;‖ (Line 8) and
―And lifts and leafy arms to pray‖ (line 6)
are examples of .
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Alliteration
Metaphor
Symbolism
Theme
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30. 4. A poem lovely as a tree, A tree whose hungry
mouth is prest, A tree that looks at God all day, A
tree that may in summer wear, but only God can
make a tree are lines that clearly show
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Allusion
Repetition
Symbolism
Theme
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31. 5. The poem Trees by Joyce Kilmer explains that
_____________________.
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God created humans
and trees.
God gave humans
trees to provide shade.
Humans are as
beautiful as trees.
Humans despite being
talented could not replicate
the beauty achieved by
nature.
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32. IDENTIFY THE ELEMENT OF
POETRY DESCRIBED IN EACH OF
THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES.
1. It refers to the rhythm that
continuously repeats a single basic
pattern.
2. This refers to the selection of specific
words.
3. These refer to series of lines grouped
together and separated by an empty
line from other stanzas.
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33. IDENTIFY THE ELEMENT OF POETRY DESCRIBED
IN EACH OF THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES.
4. It is the variation or alternation of strong and weak syllables or
elements in the flow of speech.
5. These refer to the mental pictures the poet creates through
language.
6. This refers to the repetitive occurrence of identical or similar
sounding words usually found at the end of lines on poems or
songs.
7. It is the arrangement words, lines, verses, rhymes, and other
features.
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34. THANK YOU
IRENE A. JALOS, PhD
irene.jalos0306@gmail.com
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