Poetry 12 Terminology: Types of Poems
Poetry 12 Terminology: Types of Poems
This list of terms builds on the preceding lists you have been given in grades 9-11. It contains all
the terms you were responsible for learning in the past, as well as the new terms you are now
responsible for learning for the exam.
o The new terms are marked with (NT): New Term.
o Government exam terms are marked with an asterisk (*).
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Poem: Words organized in such a way that there is a pattern of rhythm, rhyme and/or
meaning. The relationships between words are emphasized in poetry, so the various word-
clusters or verses have a collective impact on the reader/listener (which is different from
prose, where the words “hit” the reader one at a time in sentences).
Speaker*: The voice used by a poet to speak a poem. The speaker is often a created identity
(a made up self) and should not automatically be equated with the author. The speaker is not
the same as the author—poets and storytellers make things up (fiction). The speaker does
not necessarily reflect the author’s personal voice; however, authors sometimes use speakers
as masks to protect themselves when they are writing about controversial ideas and/or
criticizing politics or religion.
Types of Poems
Ballad*: A long poem that tells a story, usually a folk tale or legend, in rhyme. Often
set to music, the traditional ballad typically has a refrain or chorus, which adds to its
musical qualities.
Concrete: Concrete poetry experiments with the very materials of the poem itself:
words, letters, format. The final product does what it says in that its words, letters,
and format demonstrate the poem’s meaning. Concrete poems rely heavily on the
visual or phonetic to get across their meaning.
Dramatic Monologue*: The words of a single speaker who reveals his/her own
personality and the dramatic situation (setting, audience) through his/her words. It is
different from a stage soliloquy because there is no play to help the reader
understand setting – the poem does it all. (NT)
Elegy*: This is a particular type of lyric that is written to mourn the passing of
something or someone. (NT)
Epic*: This is a very, very long poem that tells a story. Epic poems are narrative
poems that are long enough to be in a book of their own, rather than an anthology.
Epitaph*: Epitaphs are poems about the dead that are written to be on a tombstone;
this means they are usually very short.
Epigram*: These are very short, witty poems that make a pithy pronouncement about
something. Usually they are written as a couplet.
Free Verse*: Modern poetry that has no regular pattern of rhythm, rhyme or line
length. Free verse poems experiment with words to create images for the reader.
Lyric*: Shorter poems of intense feeling and emotion. Some are modern free verse
poems and others are more “old-fashioned” poems that have rhythm and rhyme.
Types: sonnet, ode, and elegy.
Narrative*: A poem that tells a story. Narratives may or may not rhyme, but they
almost always follow the plot structure of a short story.
Parody*: A parody is a mockery of another piece of literature; it copies the style and
voice, and sometimes language of the original for comedic effect. Parodies can exist in
any genre, not just poetry.
Ode*: This is a very serious form of the lyric; it is written about a serious topic and is
very dignified, if not stately, in tone and style. (NT)
Poetic Devices
A. Sound
Assonance*: Repeating vowel sounds in the middle of words. This device also uses
sound to catch the reader’s attention. This is a subtle device for which you have to
listen carefully. Twinkle twinkle little star is an example of assonance because of the
repeating short “i” sound.
Cacophony*: Sounds that are unpleasant and harsh to the ear. Usually, cacophony is
achieved through repeating “s”, “c”, “k” or other, similarly harsh-sounding sounds. For
example: “and squared and stuck their squares of soft white chalk.” The opposite of
euphony.
Consonance*: Repeating consonant sounds in the middle of words. This device also
uses sound to catch the reader’s attention. This is a subtle device, although it is less
subtle than assonance. If elephants laugh carefully, it is because they are afraid is an
example of consonance with the repeating “f” sound. Notice that the ‘ph’, ‘gh’ and ‘f’
letter patterns all make the “f” sound.
Euphony*: Sounds that are very pleasant to the ear. The opposite of cacophony.
Onomatopoeia*: Words that sound like what they mean are called onomatopoeia.
“Buzz”, “hiss”, “splash” are typical examples of this sound device. Onomatopoeia is also
known as imitative harmony.
B. Comparison
Simile*: A comparison between two dissimilar items using “like” or “as” to make the
comparison. The stars are like diamonds in the sky is a simile, comparing stars to
diamonds.
C. Word Play
Denotation*: The literal meaning of the word that a person would find in the
dictionary.
Figurative Language*: The imaginative language that makes a poem rich to a reader.
Figurative language often relies on comparison devices like simile, metaphor, and
personification to make the point. Figurative language is the opposite of literal
language.
Idiom*: A phrase that can’t be translated literally into another language because the
meaning isn’t the same as the words that make up the phrase. There are thousands of
idioms in English. Some examples include: “it is raining cats and dogs”; “flat broke”;
“going to hell in a hand-basket”; and “head in the clouds.” (NT)
Image*: A single mental picture that the poem creates in the reader’s mind.
Imagery*: Poets create pictures in the reader’s mind that appeal to the sense of sight;
they also create descriptions to appeal to the other four senses. This collection of
appeals to the five senses is called the imagery of the poem. Also: the collection
and/or pattern of images in a poem.
Literal language*: The literal meaning of the poem, which ignores imagery,
symbolism, figurative language and any imagination on the part of the poet or the
reader. Literal language is the opposite of figurative language.
Mood*: The emotion of the poem. The atmosphere. The predominant feeling created
by or in the poem, usually through word choice or description. The feelings created by
the poem in the reader; mood is best discovered through careful consideration of the
images presented by the poem, and thinking about what feelings those images
prompt. For example: if the “rain weeps”, the mood is sad; if the “rain dances”, the
mood is happy. Mood and tone are not the same.
Oxymoron*: An oxymoron is a pair of single word opposites placed side by side for
dramatic effect. A contradiction in terms. For example, “cold fire” or “sick health” or
“jumbo shrimp”.
Paradox*: A large oxymoron. An apparently contradictory statement that, despite the
contradiction, has an element of truth in it. Wordsworth’s “the child is the father of
the man” is a paradoxical statement.
Symbol*: Something that represents something else. For example, a dove often
represents the concept of peace.
Syntax: Word order—the way words are put together to form phrases, clauses or
sentences in a poem. Sometimes poets play with syntax to increase the richness of
their figurative language or to make a line of poetry work into a particular rhythm.
(NT)
Tone*: The narrator’s attitude toward the subject of the poem and, sometimes,
toward the reader of the poem. Tone is NOT THE SAME AS MOOD, although the two
can overlap.
Voice*: Voice is the personality of the writing, the specific characteristics that make
the writing unique. The voice of a piece of writing is assessed in terms of style and/or
tone. Every writer/narrator/speaker has a unique and recognizable voice. (NT)
Verse Forms
Other examples:
and
In Scarlet Town, where I was born
There lived a fair maid dwellin';
Made many a youth cry well-a-day,
And her name was Barbara Allen.
and
In folk ballads, the meter is often irregular (as in the example above from "Barbara
Allen") and the rhymes are often approximate.
Couplet*: Two lines of poetry that rhyme. The last two lines of an English sonnet
work together to make a couplet. The following is an example of a couplet:
Roses are red, violets are blue
Sugar is sweet and so are you
Octave*: Eight lines of poetry that have a rhyme scheme. The first part of an Italian
sonnet is an octave.
Quatrain*: Four lines of poetry that have a rhyme scheme. Quatrains often have an
abab, abcb, or aabb rhyme scheme. The first three verses of an English sonnet are
quatrains.
Sestet*: Six lines of poetry that have a rhyme scheme. The second part of an Italian
sonnet is a sestet.
Blank Verse*: Unrhymed iambic pentameter. All sonnets, Shakespearian plays and
the King James version of the Bible are written in blank verse. Unrhymed iambic
pentameter is said to closely mimic the cadences of natural speech. See below for
more information on iambic pentameter.
End Rhyme: Rhyme that occurs at the ends of verse lines. The nursery rhyme in
“rhyme scheme” below is written with end rhyme.
Iambic Pentameter*: A line of poetry that is ten syllables in length. The syllables
follow a pattern in which an unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed one. The
words “giraffe” and “destroy” are iambs. An iamb is two syllables, and “penta” means
five, so five iambs in a row = iambic pentameter. A line of iambic pentameter bounces
gently along (soft-hard-soft-hard-soft-hard-soft-hard-soft-hard). For example, when
Romeo says, “O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright” (Romeo and Juliet, I.v.44),
he is speaking in iambic pentameter. The following is an example of iambic
pentameter (in this case, blank verse) from Hamlet:
Internal Rhyme: When two or more words rhyme within the same line of poetry. For
example, “Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary” is an
example of internal rhyme.
Metre (meter)*: The regular beat of a poem. There are different kinds of meters,
depending on the syllable pattern in the line of poetry. Different syllable patterns, and
different numbers of patterns, have different names. For example: dimeter. trimeter,
tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octameter. (NT)
Tetrameter: “Penta” means “five”, and “tetra” means “four.” So, if pentameter is five
repeating patterns of syllables, tetrameter is four repeating patterns of syllables. Lines
1 and 3 in the “typical” ballad stanza are in tetrameter. (NT)
Refrain*: The chorus of a ballad, or a repeating set of words or lines, is the refrain of a
poem. Refrains add to the musical quality of a poem and make them more song-like.
This is interesting because the ancestral origin of poetry was song.
Rhyme*: When sounds match at the end of lines of poetry, they rhyme (technically, it
is end-rhyme). The examples below in “rhyme scheme” and “couplet” demonstrate
this.
Rhyme Scheme*: The pattern of rhyme in a poem, indicated with letters of the
alphabet. To decide on a rhyme scheme, you assign a letter of the alphabet to all
rhyming words at the ends of lines of poetry, starting with the letter “a”. When you
run out of one rhyme sound, you start with the next letter of the alphabet. For
example, the following is an example of an aabb rhyme scheme (star, are, high, sky):
Twinkle, twinkle, little star
How I wonder what you are
Up above the world so high
Like a diamond in the sky