Formulaic Diction in Kazakh Epic Poetry
... There are no major variants of this version. A text recorded from the singer Abulxayïr Danekerov in 1954 leaves out lines 534 and 537 to 544; line 542 is, however, added to line 545, which has a slightly altered form (Moynïņdï beri bura ket, / bizdïņ üyge tüse ket; see Auezov and Smirnova 1959:377). ...
... There are no major variants of this version. A text recorded from the singer Abulxayïr Danekerov in 1954 leaves out lines 534 and 537 to 544; line 542 is, however, added to line 545, which has a slightly altered form (Moynïņdï beri bura ket, / bizdïņ üyge tüse ket; see Auezov and Smirnova 1959:377). ...
7th Grade English Poetry Unit Assignments Note: There are no
... about everyday things. Many themes include nature, feelings, or experiences. Usually they use simple words and grammar. The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) s ...
... about everyday things. Many themes include nature, feelings, or experiences. Usually they use simple words and grammar. The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) s ...
ABC poem = a poem that has five lines and creates a mood, picture
... Line 2 – two adjectives describing LINE 1 noun Line 3 – three participles ending in –ing or –ed to describe LINE 1 noun Line 4 – four words – two related to the noun in LINE 1 and two related to the new noun in LINE 7 Line 5 – three participles ending in –ing or –ed to describe LINE 7 noun Line 6 – ...
... Line 2 – two adjectives describing LINE 1 noun Line 3 – three participles ending in –ing or –ed to describe LINE 1 noun Line 4 – four words – two related to the noun in LINE 1 and two related to the new noun in LINE 7 Line 5 – three participles ending in –ing or –ed to describe LINE 7 noun Line 6 – ...
Jeopardy-Maritza
... A poem that has 14 lines, Tells a story, and usually written in iambic pentameter… ...
... A poem that has 14 lines, Tells a story, and usually written in iambic pentameter… ...
Simile: willow and Ginkgo by Eve Merriam
... ANALYZE: What metaphor does the speaker introduce in lines 5-6? SYNTHESIZE: Think about the poems title. What job might the speaker have? Whom does the speaker want to approach poetry ...
... ANALYZE: What metaphor does the speaker introduce in lines 5-6? SYNTHESIZE: Think about the poems title. What job might the speaker have? Whom does the speaker want to approach poetry ...
Kate Reed
... lyricism of ghazal, to the liberation of free verse, in which the artist constructs a whole new vase for his/herself. The form of a poem is how the poem interacts with its audience; it is the ...
... lyricism of ghazal, to the liberation of free verse, in which the artist constructs a whole new vase for his/herself. The form of a poem is how the poem interacts with its audience; it is the ...
Introduction
... Epic poetry is generally the weightiest expression of a cultural community and is the source and inspiration for future generations and future literature. It is often encyclopaedic as it reflects the history, culture, philosophy and aspirations of a nation in a lofty or 'elevated' style. In simple w ...
... Epic poetry is generally the weightiest expression of a cultural community and is the source and inspiration for future generations and future literature. It is often encyclopaedic as it reflects the history, culture, philosophy and aspirations of a nation in a lofty or 'elevated' style. In simple w ...
Rhythm
... to be a poem just because it is verse. (Any composition in lines of more or less regular rhythm, usually ending in rhyme, is verse.) Here, for instance, is a specimen of verse that few will call poetry: ...
... to be a poem just because it is verse. (Any composition in lines of more or less regular rhythm, usually ending in rhyme, is verse.) Here, for instance, is a specimen of verse that few will call poetry: ...
Jaz Storyboard III
... uploads from my computer, saved from Google images or Photobucket. They will be added in a Photobucket to currently unknown order into the presentation. find photographs - The video that I find and select for my presentation will be entered into my presentation either via a relevant to the link or u ...
... uploads from my computer, saved from Google images or Photobucket. They will be added in a Photobucket to currently unknown order into the presentation. find photographs - The video that I find and select for my presentation will be entered into my presentation either via a relevant to the link or u ...
Voice Inverse
... this special issue revolve, either implicitly or explicitly, around the assumption that poems are transcriptions or prescriptions for voice. Some locate a speaker in their reading of Victorian poetic genres (sonnets, ballads, odes, narrative verse, dramatic monologues, and so on) while others disloc ...
... this special issue revolve, either implicitly or explicitly, around the assumption that poems are transcriptions or prescriptions for voice. Some locate a speaker in their reading of Victorian poetic genres (sonnets, ballads, odes, narrative verse, dramatic monologues, and so on) while others disloc ...
THE ESSENCE OF T. S. ELIOT`S THEORY OF POETIC DRAMA I am
... so shrewd a dramatic sensibility toward prose and verse that Shakespeare could achieve this dramatic effect of contrast. For they could hear the prose and verse expression quite naturally, liked the mixture of the bombastic language and the low and comical language in the same play and thought that ...
... so shrewd a dramatic sensibility toward prose and verse that Shakespeare could achieve this dramatic effect of contrast. For they could hear the prose and verse expression quite naturally, liked the mixture of the bombastic language and the low and comical language in the same play and thought that ...
Poetic Devices - Spokane Public Schools
... original lyric that expresses personal feeling or modify Katy Perry’s “Firework” to expresses your own feelings. Be sure to include four or more examples of poetic devices and four stanzas. Ex: Emotion: over-whelmed Do you ever feel like you’re on a stage People staring at you Waiting for a mistake? ...
... original lyric that expresses personal feeling or modify Katy Perry’s “Firework” to expresses your own feelings. Be sure to include four or more examples of poetic devices and four stanzas. Ex: Emotion: over-whelmed Do you ever feel like you’re on a stage People staring at you Waiting for a mistake? ...
“The Poet” by Tom Wayman (1989)
... things can take place later. It really is not an end in itself, but a means to an end. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: When you sit down and scrutinize that moment, do you try to write the poem in one sitting? How do you do it? BILLY COLLINS: Yes, I write pretty rapidly. I mean maybe my critics would say, "we ...
... things can take place later. It really is not an end in itself, but a means to an end. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: When you sit down and scrutinize that moment, do you try to write the poem in one sitting? How do you do it? BILLY COLLINS: Yes, I write pretty rapidly. I mean maybe my critics would say, "we ...
melody
... Keats of course is writing in heroic couplets, Pope’s own favorite verse form, but the caesura doesn’t mechanically alternate (as Pope’s caesuras tend to do) between the fourth syllable and the sixth syllable of the line; Keats puts the caesura in some quite odd places, even in the middle of a foot ...
... Keats of course is writing in heroic couplets, Pope’s own favorite verse form, but the caesura doesn’t mechanically alternate (as Pope’s caesuras tend to do) between the fourth syllable and the sixth syllable of the line; Keats puts the caesura in some quite odd places, even in the middle of a foot ...
War and Words: A Poetry 12 Unit Plan
... Groups will then read their poems aloud and explain to the class the characteristics of that particular poetic form (i.e. They must “teach” their poetic form to the class) o As the groups present their poems and descriptions, the remainder of the class will fill in their handouts on Poetic Forms (i. ...
... Groups will then read their poems aloud and explain to the class the characteristics of that particular poetic form (i.e. They must “teach” their poetic form to the class) o As the groups present their poems and descriptions, the remainder of the class will fill in their handouts on Poetic Forms (i. ...
Macquarie University Marcelle Freiman Ekphrasis, poetry and
... affective responses to its environment are intensities which act as ‘analogue amplifiers’, alerting the person to the impact the experience has upon them and triggering motivation for action. These correlated responses involve ‘the facial muscles, the viscera, the respiratory system, the skeleton, a ...
... affective responses to its environment are intensities which act as ‘analogue amplifiers’, alerting the person to the impact the experience has upon them and triggering motivation for action. These correlated responses involve ‘the facial muscles, the viscera, the respiratory system, the skeleton, a ...
Full Text
... It is impossible to find a pattern of short vs. long syllables, or of stressed vs. unstressed syllables: or, rather, it is possible to find so many patterns (such as the quasi-dactylic line that begins “Steady the roar of the gale,” or the quasi-iambic line that begins “On beachy slush”) that no pat ...
... It is impossible to find a pattern of short vs. long syllables, or of stressed vs. unstressed syllables: or, rather, it is possible to find so many patterns (such as the quasi-dactylic line that begins “Steady the roar of the gale,” or the quasi-iambic line that begins “On beachy slush”) that no pat ...
CHAPTER TWO THEORIES IN DEFENCE OF POETIC DRAMA AND
... were poetic dramatists. All through these ages, poetry and drama were quite inseparable. But since the eighteenth centuiry, there has been an increasing separation between the living stage and poetic ...
... were poetic dramatists. All through these ages, poetry and drama were quite inseparable. But since the eighteenth centuiry, there has been an increasing separation between the living stage and poetic ...
Reviewing poetic techniques
... A metaphor describes something by saying that it is something else. Usually the items being compared are very different but meaning is enriched by the connotations of the second item. There’s daggers in men’s smiles (Shakespeare). Personification Personification is a special kind of metaphor in wh ...
... A metaphor describes something by saying that it is something else. Usually the items being compared are very different but meaning is enriched by the connotations of the second item. There’s daggers in men’s smiles (Shakespeare). Personification Personification is a special kind of metaphor in wh ...
Text Analysis pg1
... In a figure of speech, words are used in an imaginative way to communicate meaning beyond their strict definition. Figures of speech include • Similes, which use like or as to compare two unlike things. For example: The frozen lake is like glass. • Metaphors, which make comparisons without the words ...
... In a figure of speech, words are used in an imaginative way to communicate meaning beyond their strict definition. Figures of speech include • Similes, which use like or as to compare two unlike things. For example: The frozen lake is like glass. • Metaphors, which make comparisons without the words ...
doc - SZM.com
... With all these thoughts in mind I would like to concentrate on the actual creative process in which the poet writes or creates the art product- his poetry. There are three irreplaceable factors: the artist himself-poet´s persona, the process of structuring or composing, and the poetic language that ...
... With all these thoughts in mind I would like to concentrate on the actual creative process in which the poet writes or creates the art product- his poetry. There are three irreplaceable factors: the artist himself-poet´s persona, the process of structuring or composing, and the poetic language that ...
Songs about Saint Petersburg by Sergei Slonimsky. On the Question
... ring composition, which gives the poem an inner harmony and completeness. In terms of phonetic, syntactic and composition aspects of the poem the verbal refrain “White night” in the beginning of the third line of each stanza plays a big role. This anaphora creates a structurally meaningful core of t ...
... ring composition, which gives the poem an inner harmony and completeness. In terms of phonetic, syntactic and composition aspects of the poem the verbal refrain “White night” in the beginning of the third line of each stanza plays a big role. This anaphora creates a structurally meaningful core of t ...
Two Haiku - Lesson Corner
... The modern Japanese Haiku, as we know it today, was born through influences of another form of poetry closely resembling it from ancient Japan. A form of poetry called Haikai was popular during the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries or during the Edo period. Haikai was a longer poem that started ...
... The modern Japanese Haiku, as we know it today, was born through influences of another form of poetry closely resembling it from ancient Japan. A form of poetry called Haikai was popular during the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries or during the Edo period. Haikai was a longer poem that started ...
A Sliver Of Liver
... Of that quivery shivery livery pile, There may not be nearly enough. Just a sliver you say? No thanks, not today. Tomorrow I really can’t say; But today I would sooner eat slivers of glass, Eat the tail of a skunk washed down with gas, Eat slivers of sidewalks and slivers of swings, Slivers and Sliv ...
... Of that quivery shivery livery pile, There may not be nearly enough. Just a sliver you say? No thanks, not today. Tomorrow I really can’t say; But today I would sooner eat slivers of glass, Eat the tail of a skunk washed down with gas, Eat slivers of sidewalks and slivers of swings, Slivers and Sliv ...
Meet the Poet on - The Education Fund
... genres (e.g., poetry, fiction, short story, dramatic literature) as forms chosen by an author to accomplish a purpose; LA7-8.2.1.4- The student will identify and analyze universal themes and symbols across genres and historical periods, and explain their significance; LA.7-8.1.7.8- The student will ...
... genres (e.g., poetry, fiction, short story, dramatic literature) as forms chosen by an author to accomplish a purpose; LA7-8.2.1.4- The student will identify and analyze universal themes and symbols across genres and historical periods, and explain their significance; LA.7-8.1.7.8- The student will ...
Poetry
Poetry is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and rhythmic qualities of language—such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre—to evoke meanings in addition to, or in place of, the prosaic ostensible meaning.Poetry has a long history, dating back to the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh. Early poems evolved from folk songs such as the Chinese Shijing, or from a need to retell oral epics, as with the Sanskrit Vedas, Zoroastrian Gathas, and the Homeric epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Ancient attempts to define poetry, such as Aristotle's Poetics, focused on the uses of speech in rhetoric, drama, song and comedy. Later attempts concentrated on features such as repetition, verse form and rhyme, and emphasized the aesthetics which distinguish poetry from more objectively informative, prosaic forms of writing. From the mid-20th century, poetry has sometimes been more generally regarded as a fundamental creative act employing language.Poetry uses forms and conventions to suggest differential interpretation to words, or to evoke emotive responses. Devices such as assonance, alliteration, onomatopoeia and rhythm are sometimes used to achieve musical or incantatory effects. The use of ambiguity, symbolism, irony and other stylistic elements of poetic diction often leaves a poem open to multiple interpretations. Similarly figures of speech such as metaphor, simile and metonymy create a resonance between otherwise disparate images—a layering of meanings, forming connections previously not perceived. Kindred forms of resonance may exist, between individual verses, in their patterns of rhyme or rhythm.Some poetry types are specific to particular cultures and genres and respond to characteristics of the language in which the poet writes. Readers accustomed to identifying poetry with Dante, Goethe, Mickiewicz and Rumi may think of it as written in lines based on rhyme and regular meter; there are, however, traditions, such as Biblical poetry, that use other means to create rhythm and euphony. Much modern poetry reflects a critique of poetic tradition, playing with and testing, among other things, the principle of euphony itself, sometimes altogether forgoing rhyme or set rhythm. In today's increasingly globalized world, poets often adapt forms, styles and techniques from diverse cultures and languages.