Thursday, April 27, 2017
TP-CASTT Template
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Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Sound Devices and Kinds of Poetry
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Definition
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Example
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Alliteration: the repetition of accented consonant sounds at the beginning of
words that are close to each other, usually to create an effect, rhythm, or
emphasis.
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Big. bad, barking dog. The noisy
gnat knit nine sweaters.
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Assonance: the repeated use of a vowel sound.
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How now brown cow. Twice five
miles in a mazy motion.
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Consonance: same consonant sounds in words with different vowel
sounds that are not at the beginning of words.
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If she love me,
this believe,
I will die ere
she shall grieve
Emily
Dickenson
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Internal rhyme: a rhyme that is within the line, rather than the
end.
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Once upon a midnight dreary while
I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious
volume of forgotten lore.
Edgar
Allen Poe
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End rhyme: a rhyme that comes at the end of lines of poetry.
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Tyger Tyger, burning bright,
In the forests of the night.
William
Blake
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Feminine rhyme: rhymes that end on one or two unstressed syllables.
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A woman's face with Nature's own
hand painted
Hast thou, the master-mistress of
my passion;
A woman's gentle heart, but
not acquainted
With shifting change, as false
women's fashion.
William
Shakespeare
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Masculine rhyme: rhymes ending on stressed syllables
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Whose woods these are I think I know,
His house is in the village, though;
Robert
Frost
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Perfect rhyme: rhymes that have final stressed vowel sounds that
are identical
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Twinkle, twinkle little star
How I wonder what you are.
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Slant rhyme (aka half rhyme): rhymes that do not share the exact same vowel sound, but
sound similar
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If love is like a bridge
Or maybe like a grudge,
George
Wolff
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Eye rhyme (aka sight rhyme): a rhyme that includes words that are spelled or look the same,
but do not sound the same
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Come live with me and be my love,
And we will all the pleasures prove…
Christophe
Marlow
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Forced
rhyme: a rhyme that depends upon an
unusual pronunciation of words to work.
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See “Bonny Barbara
Allan.”
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Types of Poems
Narrative Poetry: a category of poetry that tells a story.
Lyric Poetry: a category of poetry that presents personal impressions.
Ballad: a narrative poem that is typically written in quatrains and has a musical quality to it (refrains, simple rhyme schemes, steady meter).
Ode: a formal lyric poem that addresses a subject of great importance or influence.
Elegy: a formal lyric poem to lament the dead.
Dramatic Monologue: a poem revealing a speaker's character through an account of an event, usually using a conversational tone.
Sonnet: a formal poetic form composed of 14 lines of iambic pentameter
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