Literaru Devices in Scpecific Forms of Poem
Literaru Devices in Scpecific Forms of Poem
Literaru Devices in Scpecific Forms of Poem
List of different poetic devices used in poetry is as follows -
Alliteration Metaphor
Allusion Onomatopoeia
Anaphora Oxymoron
Antithesis personification
Assonance Refrain
Asyndeton Rhyme
Consonance Repetition
Enjambment Simile
Hyperbole Synecdoche
Inversion
The definitions and examples of literary devices which are used in poetry are as follows:
1) Alliteration: The repetition of a consonant sound at the start of 2 or more consecutive
words is known as anaphora.
Examples of Alliteration are as follows -
1. Class 10 poem- Snake
“And flickered his two-forked tongue
From his lips, and mused a moment,
And stopped and drank a little more,
From the burning bowels of the earth.
Use of ‘b’ sound in burning bowels.
2. Class 9 poem- Lord Ullin’s daughter
“His horsemen hard behind us ride;
Should they our steps discover,
Then who will cheer my bonny bride
When they have slain her lover/”
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2) Allusion: A reference or suggestion to a historical or well known person, place or thing.
Examples of Allusion are as follows -
i. Class 10 poem- Not Marble Nor The Gilded Monuments (William Shakespeare)
“Nor Mars his sword nor war’s quick fire shall burn
The living record of your memory.”
Mars is the Greek god of war. (Reference of well known person, here god)
ii. Class 10 poem- Not Marble Nor The Gilded Monuments (William Shakespeare)
“So till the judgement that yourself arise, You live in this, and dwell in lover’s eyes.”
Judgement is referred to the judgement day which is an important day in the Christian
religion. They believe that god will judge the deeds of all dead people on this day.
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3) Anaphora: The repeated use of word at the start of two or more consecutive lines.
Examples of Anaphora are as follows -
1. Class 10 poem- The Frog and the nightingale
Said the frog:” I tried to teach her, But she was a stupid creature-
Far too nervous, far too tense.
Far too prone to influence.
The word ‘Far’ is used in the beginning of two consecutive lines.
2. Class 9 poem- The Brook
“I wind about, and in and out,
With here a blossom sailing,
And here and there a lusty trout,
And here and there a grayling
Use of ‘And’ in the beginning of two consecutive lines
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4) Antithesis: Use of opposite words in close placement
Examples of Antithesis are as follows -
1. Class 10 poem- The Frog and the nightingale
“Every night from dusk to dawn”
Meaning of dusk is sunrise and dawn is sunset. So the two opposite words are in close
placement.
2. Class 9 poem- Song of the Rain
“The voice of thunder declares my arrival;
The rainbow announces my departure.”
Meaning of arrival is to come and departure means to go. So the two opposite words are in
close placement.
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5) Assonance: The repetition of a vowel sound within a sentence.
Examples of Assonance are as follows -
“All the world’s a stage and all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and entrances”
Use of sound ‘e’ (men, women, merely, players, exits and entrances)
“Good gracious! How you hop!
Over the fields and the water too:
Use of sound ‘o’ (Good, you, hop, too)
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6) Asyndeton: A writing style in which conjunctions are omitted between words, phrases or
clauses.
Examples of Asyndeton are as follows -
Poem- Ozymandias
“I met a traveler from and antique land who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone”
Use of sound ‘t’, ‘l’, ‘d’ in the beginning, middle and end of the words.
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8) Enjambment: When a sentence continues into two or more lines in a poem
Examples of Enjambment are as follows -
Poem- Snake
“On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat, To drink there.”
The correct form of sentence is (I had gone to drink there in my pyjamas because of heat)
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12) Metaphor: It is indirect comparison by highlighting a particular quality of two things.
Examples of metaphor are as follows -
Here also both heavy and lightness are written together though they are opposite of each
other. Heavy means which has more weight and light means which has less weight.
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15) Personification: It means to give human quality to an object or a non living thing.
Examples of personification are as follows -
Poem- Mirror
“The guests are met, the feast is set:
May’st hear the merry din
Here the rhyming words are met and set
“The ship was cheered, the harbour cleared,
Merrily did we drop
Below the Kirk, below the hill,
Below the lighthouse top
Here the rhyming words are cheered-cleared and drop-top
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18) Repetition: It is the repeated use of a word of line to lay emphasis
Examples of repetition are as follows -
“Pulled out” word is used or repeated 3 times.
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19) Simile: It is the comparison between two things or persons by using like or as.
Examples of simile are as follows -
“The bride hath paced into the hall,
Red as a rose is she”
Here the bride is compared with rose by using ‘as’
Poem- Snake
Poem- Ozymandias
“The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed”
Here the word hand is used to refer to the sculptor who made the statue of Ozymandias and
heart is used to refer to King Ozymandias who gave the right expression for the statue.
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21) Transferred epithet: It is an adjective used with a noun refers to another noun.
“Pursuing stick”
Here it is not the stick that pursues, rather the person who carries it is pursuing
Poem- snake
Allegory
An allegory is a story, poem, or other written work that can be interpreted to have a secondary
meaning.
Aesop’s Fables are examples of allegories, as they are ostensibly about one thing (such as “The Ant
and the Grasshopper”) but actually have a secondary meaning. Fables are particularly literal
examples of allegories, but there are many others, as well, such as George Orwell’s Animal
Farm or Christina Rossetti’s “Goblin Fruit.”
Alliteration
Alliteration is the repetition of a sound or letter at the beginning of multiple words in a series.
“Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary…”
Allusion
“The Cunninghams are country folks, farmers, and the crash hit them hardest.”
- Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird
Lee isn’t speaking of a literal crash—she’s referencing the stock market crash of the late 1920s,
which left many people without money. Scout, To Kill a Mockingbird’s narrator, references the stock
market crash in a way that’s appropriate for her context, which readers can gather from the novel’s
setting.
Using this allusion allows Lee to do some quick scene-setting. Not only does it establish the novel
firmly within its setting, but it also shows that Scout herself is a clear part of that setting—she
speaks to the audience in the way that a child of that era would speak, giving the story a greater
sense of realism.
Apostrophe
An apostrophe is a poetic device where the writer addresses a person or thing that isn’t
present with an exclamation.
- Billy Collins, “To A Stranger Born In Some Distant Country Hundreds Of Years From Now”
Though we know from the title that Collins is addressing a stranger from the future, in the final stanza
of the poem he addresses that stranger directly. Apostrophe was particularly common in older
forms of poetry, going all the way back to Ancient Greece—many works of Greek literature begin
with an invocation of the Muses, typically by saying something like, “Sing in me, O Muse.” Because
the narrator of Collins’ poem is calling out to someone in the future, he mimics the language of the
past and situates this poem in a larger context.
Assonance
Assonance is the repetition of vowel or diphthong sounds in one or more words found close
together.
“ Hear the loud alarum bells—
Brazen bells!/ What tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!
In the startled ear of night
How they scream out their affright!
Too much horrified to speak,
They can only shriek, shriek,
Out of tune….”
Blank Verse
Blank verse refers to poetry written without rhyme, especially if that poetry is written in iambic
pentameter.
Consonance
Enjambment
Irony
Irony has a few different meanings. The most common is the use of tone or exaggeration to convey
a meaning opposite to what's being literally said. A second form of irony is situational irony, in which a
situation or event contradicts expectations, usually in a humorous fashion. A third form is dramatic
irony, where the audience of a play, movie, or other piece of art is aware of something that the
characters are not.
Basic irony, where what someone says doesn't match what they mean, might look something like this:
"Yeah, I love dogs," she said dryly, holding the miniature poodle at arm's length as hives sprang up
along her arms.
Situational irony would include things like a police station getting robbed or a marriage counselor
getting a divorce—we would expect police to be able to resist getting robbed and a marriage
counselor to be able to save their own marriage, so the fact that these unexpected things occur is
darkly funny.
One of the most famous examples of dramatic irony is in Romeo and Juliet. The audience knows that
Juliet isn't dead when Romeo comes to find her in the tomb, but obviously can't stop Romeo from
killing himself to be with her. Unlike other forms of irony, dramatic irony often isn't funny—it heightens
tension and increases audience investment, but doesn't necessarily have to make people laugh.
Metaphor
“An emotional rollercoaster” is a common example of a metaphor—so common, in fact, that it’s
become cliche. Experiencing multiple emotions in a short period of time can feel a lot like riding a
roller coaster, as you have a series of extreme highs and lows.
Meter
Meter refers to the rhythm of a poem or other written work as it’s expressed through the
number and length of the feet in each line.
Ode
Though Keats’ ode here may be in earnest, the deliberate use of language far outside our normal
method of speaking often makes the form ripe for satire. In this case, Keats is using this language to
discuss beauty and truth, two rather lofty themes that work in tandem with the lofty language.
Pun
A pun is a play on words, using multiple meanings or similar sounds to make a joke.
"Mine is a long and a sad tale!" said the Mouse, turning to Alice, and sighing.
"It is a long tail, certainly," said Alice, looking down with wonder at the Mouse's tail; "but why do
you call it sad?" And she kept on puzzling about it while the Mouse was speaking...."
Repetition
Rhetorical Question
“Look at me! Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man
could head me! And ain't I a woman? I could work as much and eat as much as a man - when I
could get it - and bear the lash as well! And ain't I a woman? I have borne thirteen children, and
seen most all sold off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief, none but Jesus heard
me! And ain't I a woman?”
By asking the question, Sojourner Truth is raising the point that she is a woman, and therefore should
be part of the conversation about women’s rights. “Ain’t I a woman?” isn’t a question of gender, but a
question of race—if it’s a conference about women’s rights, why weren’t black women included? By
asking a question about an undeniable truth, Sojourner Truth was in fact pointing out the
hypocrisy of the conference.
Rhyme
A rhyme is a repetition of syllables at the end of words, often at the end of a line of poetry, but
there are many unique kinds of rhymes.
Rhythm
Rhythm refers to the pattern of long, short, stressed, and unstressed syllables in writing.
Sonnet
A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem with a strict rhyme scheme, often written in iambic
pentameter.
Because sonnets have a rhyme scheme, they feel removed again from realistic speech. But that
works in form’s favor—the rigid structure encourages unconventional word use (hence the
memorability of “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.”) and marks poems in this style as
having a kind of heightened reality. Because blank and free verse arose later, writing sonnets in
modern times gives poems a classic or even intentionally antiquated feeling, which can work in the
poet’s favor.
Read More
Reading widely in a variety of literary forms—poetry, prose, essays, non-fiction, and so on—is one of
the best ways to learn more poetic devices. You may not notice them all, but challenge yourself to
find one example of a poetic device every time you read. Remember, there are lots of kinds of poetic
devices; they don’t always have to be things you’d only find in poetry.
The more you read, the more exposed you are to different kinds of writing styles. If you read widely,
you’ll see more people using language creatively—when you see something interesting, make note of
it and see if it’s a poetic device you can use in your own writing!
Use Them In Your Own Writing
Identifying them is great, but to really understand poetic devices, try using them. Not every
device is right for every situation, but playing a little with your language can reveal to you exactly how
these devices work. Challenge yourself to use new devices to get a better appreciation for how they
can elevate your writing.
When you come upon a poetic device in something you’re reading, ask yourself what the author is
doing with it. What purpose does alliteration serve in a specific context? Why did I choose to use that
spices metaphor earlier in this article? Was it effective or confusing?
The more you think about these devices, the more you’ll get a feel for how they work and why writers
use them. Understanding the different ways they can be used will help you discover how to use them
better, so don’t be afraid to start questioning how and why professionals do it!
First, don’t overuse them. Poetic devices can be great for making your writing sound more
interesting or to deliver information in a more impactful manner, but too much really stands out.
Alliteration is great, but an alliterative sonnet that’s an allusion to Greek literature can feel a little
gimmicky. Even too much alliteration can quickly feel hackneyed if it’s not done with a purpose. Ask
yourself why you’re using these devices and trim them if you can’t think of a reason—restraint is
as much a part of good writing as the skillful use of a poetic device.
Don’t forget that poetic devices are good for more than just poetry. A well-written essay can use a
great metaphor. A sonnet can be written in plain English for a great effect. An article for your school
newspaper might be improved with a little alliteration. Feel free to experiment with how and when
these devices are used—adding in an unexpected poetic device is a great way to elevate your
writing.
What’s Next?
Poetic devices are just one of the many kinds of tools you can use to enhance your writing. Check
out this list of rhetorical devices for even more things you can do to liven up your work!
Want even more poetic devices? Check out this article on personification, which covers examples of
this device in both poetry and literature!
Dylan Thomas' "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," is a great example of repetition, but there's
a lot more to it than that! This article will give you some in-depth information on the meaning of Dylan
Thomas' poem, including how to analyze it!