Monday, 29 August 2011

Poetic devices in Poetry

!±8± Poetic devices in Poetry

Poetry has emotion, imagery, significance, beauty, dignity, rhythm, sometimes rhyme, a different arrangement which can include inversion, and concreteness in its images.

One way to attain the qualities so essential to making words poetic is through the use of poetry devices. We won't begin to cover all the known poetic devices or terms. Rather we'll discuss and use some of the more commonly known and used ones.

Below are the more commonly used poetic devices and terms. We hope that all the examples can better understand some of the ways in which poetry, and more poetic. The examples given are my poems and they are copyrighted in my name.

Devices of poetry (a large sample size):

Alliteration: The repetition of initial sounds.

Rain reigns around all day.

Anger rages from the sky

Partners talk with tears tormented

From clouds wondering why

Lightning tears their souls apart.

In the first twoLines, the r sound is repeated. In the third line p starts two adjoining words.

Allusion: a reference to someone or something random in history or literature that creates a mental image.

An ordinary woman

Helen of Troy, they do not,

Among the world through war,

But a woman wrapped in plain paper

With a heart of love still untapped

Wait, yearning for her destiny

If you know of a charger

Or, to go behind a garbage truck.

PerhapsInstead of a room of students

Lurking in the shadows of his life

The need to show their interest.

But we must also mention other concerns

No, no, Helen of Troy,

But a woman of the world to subdue

Wherever they are.

Helen of Troy brings to mind a woman so beautiful that two countries went to war over them.

Analogy: a comparison between two things explained to show how it is similar to the other.

Day

The day dawns, asTravel.

First, a train leaving the station

Rushing past other places

Without a pause or stop,

Look at the faces blur through the window,

No time to say goodbye.

And the speed of the train

By the end of the line can be seen,

Another sunset down

No lasting memories.

The whole poem makes an analogy to compare a day and a train ride.

Caesura: the pausing or stopping in a line of poetry caused by the necessaryPunctuation.

Living, breathing apathy

Juices, energy, desire, interest,

They leave no desire to win.

All that remains are the ashes,

Ashes of what might have been.

Punctuation within the lines (in this case, all commas) are the turning point, not the punctuation at the end of lines.

enjambment: the continuation of the thought of a verse of a poem to the next without punctuation at the end of the previous line (n).

Looking through the eyes

OfWonder, joy,

The children see their world

With confidence, with hope

The only life will change.

Enjambment at the end of lines 1, 3 and 4 found, because the punctuation is not necessary in those places.

Hyperbole: extreme exaggeration effect.

Giants rising like mountains

High above dwarfs

Bring your gaze on a common basis

For no longer small heights.

Weapons of tree trunks wrapped

Comfort in the soft delicate

Unthoughtthe basis of size,

But the welcome in their strength.

Giants are not really as high as mountains, tree trunks are not weapons, but the use of exaggeration helps the image was created.

Metaphor, for example, the comparison of two unlike things, one is the other.

Sun, hope lights

Air flows from the store

Bringing smiles of warming grace

Such heavy loads easier.

Clouds are ships in full sail

Race across the sky blue of the sea.

Wind fills theCotton Canvas

Pushing them away from me.

In the first stanza, the sun is compared to hope, as compared to the second, the clouds and ships.

Metonymy: the substitution of a word to one in which they are intimately connected.

Scandals peep from every window,

They hide behind every hedge,

Wait pounce on the unwary,

While the White House creeps in awe.

White House is used in place of the president or the government, and readers to understandthat is, without exactly who that is directly addressed.

Onomatopoeia: the sound of what makes

Roaring through the pain

Caused by lightning flashes,

Thundering shouts: "Yeow BOOOOOM Craaaashhhh"

Then he mumbles, rumbling on its way.

Grrrr, echoing the cry of the lion

Through the jungle of the cave

Creatures that cause small

To rush into their holes.

Roaring, rumbling cry is, examples of onomatopoeia, but are verbs. Boooom,craaaashhh are examples onomatapoeia Yeow and grrrrr.

Oxymoron: The use of contradictory terms (together) for the effect.

Freezing heat of hate

Around the heart

Stall, killing kindness

Bringing destruction to departure.

Frost and heat are contradictory opposites, but the two together a mental picture.

Personification: the granting of human characteristics to nonhuman things are not capable of these properties.

He frowns and angergrowls,

Send bolts of fire from darkest night

This brings no gloss

Instead of seeing only black was added.

Frowning and snarling are human traits, can not experience anger, but it needs to function because of problems created from the images.

Parable, for example, the comparison of two unlike things, one is like one or the other.

Sun, as hope turns,

Flows from the heaven of heavens

Bringing smiles of warming grace

On breeze whispers like aSigh.

Clouds are like ships in full sail

Race across the sky blue of the sea.

Wind fills the cotton canvas

Pushing them away from me.

These two verses of poetry and metaphor are almost identical. Both metaphors and similes are comparisons of unlike things, but metaphor states one thing to another, as the parable says that one is like another, or the other.

Symbol: something that represents something other than themselves.

The dove with oliveBranch in its beak,

Slide across the country

Searching for a place to light.

Storms of war linger on every hand,

Throughout the Falcons not to fight.

The dove is a symbol of peace and the hawk is a symbol of war. With them in poetry is a painting, without explaining in detail.

Other terms:

Elegy: a poem of lament (extreme sadness, as caused by the death)

Free verse or a poem without a rhyme or a rhythm, rhyme even though they may be used,only without any reason.

Blank verse: un-rhymed lines of iambic pentameter (ten syllables with all the accented syllables also)

Images: The use of words to create a mental image

Mood: the emotional impact of a poem or story

The understanding and use of this equipment and the conditions can contribute to the strengthening and poetry. Imagery is essential for living the poetry, and the units in the development of visual language.


Poetic devices in Poetry

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