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Poetry Notes - Final

Lyrical poems express the thoughts and feelings of a persona in a very personal way through emotions and opinions. They do not narrate a story, use first person point of view, and may include repeated phrases. Common forms include sonnets about love that use metaphors and repetition to explore themes of love, grief, and nature through 14 lines with a turn between the octave and sestet. Ballads tell a story through narrative with characters and dialogue, using a rhyme scheme of AABB and varying line lengths, while epics focus on a heroic figure through adventure and achievement using long narrative form, the supernatural, and metaphor. Limericks are short funny poems in a rhyme scheme of AABBA and

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views

Poetry Notes - Final

Lyrical poems express the thoughts and feelings of a persona in a very personal way through emotions and opinions. They do not narrate a story, use first person point of view, and may include repeated phrases. Common forms include sonnets about love that use metaphors and repetition to explore themes of love, grief, and nature through 14 lines with a turn between the octave and sestet. Ballads tell a story through narrative with characters and dialogue, using a rhyme scheme of AABB and varying line lengths, while epics focus on a heroic figure through adventure and achievement using long narrative form, the supernatural, and metaphor. Limericks are short funny poems in a rhyme scheme of AABBA and

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cloudexz
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Poetry Notes Lyrical Poems Characteristics - Expresses thoughts and feelings of persona (the speaker in the poem) - very

personal - emotions and opinions of the persona - feeling is powerfully conveyed - Non-narrative (does not narrate / talk about a story - dont have characters, setting, actions) - First person point of view (I, me, mine) - directly addresses the readers (you) - Repeated phrases / lines (refrain) - either exactly as it is, or with slight variation - Commonly in free form - no fixed number of stanza, words, rhythm metres Language used - Simile - Metaphor - Personification - Repetition - Onomatopeia - Imagery - Diction - comparing two things / ideas using as or like - comparing two ideas / things without as and like - giving human traits to non-living things - emphasise on an idea, create musical effect - words that represents sounds - words that make readers imagine things / scenery - lots of emotive words, strongly represents feelings

- Simple, everyday language - Strong, impactful words - Imagery - No comparisons (simile, metaphor) is used (emphasis on simple language) Main Theme - Folklores - Myth, legends - Current impactful events - Humorous or scandalous events - Grotesque (Ballad of Birmingham) - Love Sonnets Characteristics - A type of lyric poetry - Closed-form poetry (fixed form) - 14 lines long - 10 syllables for Shakespearean, 10 - 11 syllables for Italian - Iambic pentameter (unstressed - stressed pattern) - Has a turn (the climax of the poem) - meaning of the turn is different from the other stanzas Type & Form - Shakespearean: three quatrains (four lines each) and a concluding couplet (two lines) - rhymes abab cdcd efef gg - The turn occurs after the eighth line / after the tenth line / at the couplet - Italian (or Petrarchan): an eight-line octave and a six-line sestet. - Octave: rhyming abbaabba - Sestet: rhyming varieties of c, d and e (cdecde or cdcdcd) - The turn occurs between the octave and sestet - Octave normally opens the poem as the question sestet is the answer Language Used - Metaphors - Repetition of phrases / lines - Paradoxes (pairing of opposite ideas) Main Theme - About love or nature

Main Theme Emotion: love, grief and loss, proud, love in family Motivation: practice good values, advices Ballads Characteristics - Closed-form poetry (fixed form) - Often set to music, can be sung (because of its rhythmic features) - Tells a story - have elements of a story: characters, setting, plot, climax, narration, dialogue - Narration in third person p.o.v, Dialogues in first person p.o.v - Repeated phrases (in a form of chorus such as in songs) Form - Stanzas of four lines - Second and fourth line rhymes - Rhyme scheme - abcb - Rhythm: First, Third line - four stresses, Second, Fourth line - three stresses - Dialogues (people talking) and narration (description) Language used

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Epic Characteristics - Long, narrative poem on a serious issue - Focus is on a heroic figure - whose deeds and actions could change the fate of the world - Setting is enormous - covers great geographical distances underworld, across time - Character is the ideal man of the time - has superhuman powers, divine traits - Presence of supernatural, immortals - being interested to the hero - celebrating the adventures and achievements of a hero (ceremonial) Form - Very long - Starts with asking guidance from Muse, to help tell the story of the hero - Opens in media res - in the middle of the climax (usually when hero is losing, or at his lowest point) - Voice of narration changes from time to time (author to Gods to characters) - Dialogues (long speeches) of characters - plot is non-linear jumps to any part of the story usage of flashbacks Language Used - Metaphor - Simile - Imagery - Symbolism - Epithet - descriptive expression of the characters (e.g: Father of Gods and Men - Zeus) Main Theme - Love - Family - Power - Heroism - Violence and suffering (of the people and the hero) Limericks Characteristics - A funny poem - Short poem - only five lines - made up of a triplet + a couplet

Form - Five lines - 1 triplet + 1 couplet - Line 1, 2, 5 - should rhyme, have 7 - 10 syllables Line 3, 4 - should rhyme, have 5 - 7 syllables - Rhyme scheme: aabba Language Used - Everyday words - No imagery, simile etc. - Sometimes have dialogues Main Theme - Usually nonsense - Sometimes bawdy - Always humorous Haiku Characteristics - A type of Japanese poem - Three unrhymed lines - 17 syllables altogether - Paints an image into readers mind - Capture a single moment of nature Form - Three unrhymed lines - Line 1 - 5 syllables Line 2 - 7 syllables Line 3 - 5 syllables - written in present tense Language Used - Always contain seasonal words (words that describe seasons and weathers summer snow, leaves etc.) - Everyday words Main Theme - Nature - Love

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