POETRY
Definition of Poetry
Elements of Poetry
Figurative language
Step to consider in Reading Poetry
Definition of Poetry
   “It is a special kind of writing in which languages, imagery and sound
    combine to create a special emotional effect. It is usually arranged in
    lines, frequently has regular rhythm that sometime rhyme. It packs
    meaning into a small number of sounds which tend to be more visual
    and musical than prose.” (McMillan Literature Series)
   “Poetry is a kind of rhythmic, compressed language that uses figures of
    speech and imagery designed to appeal to our emotions and
    imagination.”(Elements of Literature, Fourth Course, Holt, Rheinhart and Winston, Inc
   In poetry you must love the words, the ideas, the images and the rhythm
    with all your capacity to love anything at all.” Wallace Stevens
   Comparison of Poetry from Prose
             Poetry                             Prose
Form         Written in lines                   Written in paragraphs
Content      More concise
             Highly compressed
             More visual
             Musical
             Very rich in figurative language
     ELEMENTS of POETRY
1.   Diction is the proper choice of words.
      a. Connotation is the suggestive or emotional meaning attached to the word in the
         context it is used.
      b. Denotation is the dictionary meaning of words.
2. Rhythm- is the rise and fall of speech. It brings about themusicsl sound in poetry.
3. Rhyme is the device used by the poet to create musical effects by repeating similar
   vowels and consonant sounds.
    a. internal rhyme
    b. end rhyme
4. Persona it the voice or the speaker in the poem.
5. Imagery and Symbolism
  Imagery is the language that appeal to our senses.
  Symbol is anything that is used by the poet to stand for another.
6. Theme is the central idea or the significant truth about life in the
poem.
Figures of Speech
It is a word or phrase used by the poet to vividly describe a situation or
an experience by appealing to the reader’s imagination.
1.Simile is a figure of speech comparing two unlike things using “as” or
“like.”
    In the glitter of your eyes
     As bright as the color of dreams
2.Metaphor is direct or indirect comparison of two unlike things without
the use of “as or “like.”
     The clouds are white wool in the sky
      White wooly clouds graze the sky
3.Apostrophe is a figure of speech that address the absent as if
present and the non-human as if human.
      O Wind, if winter comes
   Can Spring be far behind?
4. Onomatopoeia is a figure of speech in which a word whose sound
suggests or imitates the meaning is used.
   Hark! Now I hear them
   Ding dong, bell
5. Personification- is a figure of speech in which non- human subject
are given human qualities or characteristics.
   Th Mountain sat upon the Plain
   In his mighty Chair
6.Allusion is a figure of speech that refers to a person, place, event or
thing taken from literature, history, myth, politics, religion, science, or art.
  A Daniel came to judgment!
7. Alliteration is a repetition of initial consonant sounds.
  To the gull’s way and the whale’s way
   Where the wind’s’ like in whetted knife
8. Metonymy is a figure of speech using one name and referring to an
idea to which the term is closely related or associated.
   Finally the Crown has proclaimed the verdict.
9. Synechdoche is a figure of speech that uses a part to mean a whole.
  He asked for he hand in marriage
10. Paradox is a statement which seems false and self-contradictory but
may seem true or clever.
   A people’s want like peace is the thistle.
11. Irony is a figure os speech which states what it meant as the opposite
to express sarcasm, humor, or dislike.
   You ask for a sentence, he delivers an encyclopedia.
12. Hyperbole is a figure of speech that uses exaggeration for effect or
humor.
    I am so hungry, I could eat a horse
Types of Poetry
   A. Narrative poem which intends to tell a story and as such
    has a plot, setting, dialogue, and theme.
   1. A ballad is a narrative poem telling a simple dramatic story. It is
    intended either to be sung or to be recited. Most ballads have
    anonymous authors and are handed down from one generation to
    another by a word of mouth.
   2. An epic is a long narrative poem that tells the adventures and
    exploits of a legendary hero who usually embodies the aspirations
    and cultures of a particular reace or group of people.
   3. A metrical romance is a narrative poem telling about the love
    and adventures of knights and their ladies. This type of poetry
    was highly inspired during the age of chivalry in England and
    other parts of Europe.
   4. A metrical tale is a narratyive poem about simple and
    ordinary people.
   B. A lyric poem is a highly musical poem expressing the personal thought and
    feelings of the writer. In ancient times, these lyric poems were sung and
    accompanied by a stringed instrument like the lyre.
   1. A sonnet is a special form of lyric poem consisting of 14 lines popularized by
    Francesco Petrach in Italy. It is otherwise known as Petrachan or Italian
    sonnet. The other one is called the English, Shakespearean or the
    Elizabethan sonnet which was written by William Shakespeare.
   Petrachan sonnet- octave (theme) and sestet (summarizing an idea)
   Shakesperean sonnet-three quatrains (developing the theme) and a
    couplet enforcing an idea.
   2. An ode is a lyric poem of praise of a person , inanimate object or a lofty
    and profound idea written in a highly dignified manner.
   3. An elegy is a lyric poem of lamentation over a loss of a loved
    one.
   4. A simple lyric is any short, simple poem expressing the writer’s
    response to any ordinary thing which provokes a certain deep
    feeling or emotion.
   C. Dramatic Poetry portrays life and character put into
    action.
   Poetic plays
   Comedy portrays an optimistic view of life, aims to amuse
    and entertain, usually ends happily.
   Tragedy involved heroes struggling mightily against
    dynamic forces; he meets death or ruin without success.
   Historical play a drama about the lives of outstanding
    figures in history.
   Farce is an exaggerated form of comedy depicting ridiculous and
    impossible situations to produce boisterous laughter.
   Melodrama is characterized by exaggerated characters and situations to
    produced transitional effects, violent emotional appeals and a happy
    ending.
   Masque is a form of court pageantry which was popular in England in
    the 16th century where characters were dressed in lavished costumes
    against a lavish scenery and music.
   Dramatic Monologue is a combination of drama and poetry in
    presenting the speech the of a single character addressed to one or
    more listeners who are silent, one sided conversation.
Other kinds of Poetry
   The Haiku or Hokku is an ancient form of Japanese poetry which consist
    of three lines (tercet) , the first and the third lines have five syllables and
    the second has seven syllables(575).Haikus don’t have to rhyme and are
    usually written to evoke a particular mood or instance.
   Free verse is popular style of modern poetry and there is a fair amount of
    freedom. It can be rhymeor not or it can have many lines or stanzas as the
    poet wants, and it can beabout anything you like.
   Acrostic like Haikus, this type of poem spells out a name, word or phrase
    or message with the first letter of each line of the poem. It can be rhyme or
    not and typically the word spell out, lays down thetheme of the poem.
 Villanelle is another very old form of poetry that came from
  France and has lots of rules. It is made up 19 lines; five
  stanzas of three lines (tercet) each and a final stanza of four
  lines (quatrain). The rhyme scheme is ABA ABA ABA ABA ABA
  ABAA these type of poem only has two rhyming sounds plus
  there are lots of repetition throughout the villanelle.
 Line one will be repeated in lines six, 12and 18. and line three
  will be repeated in lines nine, 15 and 19. Although this takes
  out extra work of having to write 19 individual lines , the real
  challenge is to make meaning out of those repeated lines.
 Limericks are funny (and sometimes rude!)poems which were
  popular by Edward Lear in the 19th century. They have a set of
  rhyme scheme of AABBA with lines, one, two, and five all
  being longer in length than lines three and four. The last line
  often the punchline. Their sound is very distinctive.
   Reference: https://www.pemguin. Co.uk?discover/childrens-articles/different-
    types- of- poetry.
Steps to consider in Reading poetry
1.Read the poem attentively, observing proper pauses for every
   thought unit.
2. Identify the speaker or the persona used by the poet.
3.Take note of the unfamiliar expressions such as the figures of
   speech.
4. Be active in responding to the vivid images of the poem.
5. Read the poem aloud and listen to its musical quality creted by the
   rhythm and rhyme.
6. Express the meaning of the poem in your own words.
Performance Task
Find a copy of the following poems:
1. God Said, “ I made a MAN- Jose Garcia Villa
2. Bloom of Waters Call- Amador Daguio
3. Bonsai- Edith Tiempo
4. When I look at women- Amador Daguio
5. First born, Bumpy
  Guidelines of your Performance Task
Secure a copy of the poem.
You READ ALOUD or MEMORIZED the poem.
Discus about the poem
 a. persona
 b. Imagery
 c. rhythm and rhyme
 d. theme
 e. symbolism
  f. figures pf speech used
BONSAI (EDITH TIEMPO)
      All that I love
    I fold over once
    And once again
   And keep in a box
Or a slit in a hollow post
     Or in my shoe
     All that I love?
   Why, yes but for the moment
       And for all time, both.
Something that folds and keeps easy,
 Son’s note, or Dad’s one gaudy tie,
  A roto picture of a young queen
     A blue Indian shawl, even
            A money bill.
  It’s utter sublimation,
A feat, this heart’s control
   Moment to moment
  To scale all love down
To a cupped hand’s size.
Till seashells are broken pieces
 From God’s own bright teeth,
     All life and love are real
     Things you can run and
      Breathless hand over
       To the merest child
   FIRSTBORN (Elsa Martinez Coscolluela)
                         I
     Child, wrought of your father’s bone
     And my own blood welded into form
     By love’s bright fire, a mystic growth
 Pulsing in my dark womb, breathing the air
I breathe from your father; now you’ve come
          Into our world, the first fruit
              Of a hopeful season.
                       II
Tonight as we watch you play, your tiny voice
  And grasping hands speak of tomorrow’s
        Boy, each day growing farther
 From my womb, You cry as I hold your hand
      Too tight. Let go, your father says.
   A hand too tight upon his own may bind
     Him yet forever. This boy must grow
                      III
  In his own time and measure. Let him bare
The earth of all its promised wisdom. But how
    Explain a mother’s fears? Is it perhaps
   From holding you so long in the hollow
Of my womb, or birthing you with so much pain
One fears the day when you will have to know
         Your own share of sorrow?
                  IV
 Let go, your wise father says, let go.
And though I understand, a certain grief
          Assaults my heart.