Elements of Poetry PDF
Elements of Poetry PDF
Elements of Poetry PDF
1. Sense
2. Structure
3. Sound
SENSE
“A mixture of common
sense, which not all Theme
have, with an uncommon Tone
Imagery
sense, which very few Diction
have.” Connotation
Denotation
- John Masefield Figures of Speech
Theme refers to the central topic in your work.
Two categories include thematic concept, or what your
readers think your work is about; and thematic
statement, which refers to what your work says about
the subject
Thematic Concept: Love. Death. Friendship. Betrayal
Thematic Statement: Love is blind. Love never dies.
Death is not forever. Honesty is the best policy.
Tone conveys the speaker’s implied attitude toward the
poem’s subject.
Imagery involves words and phrases that appeal to the
five senses. A poet may use imagery to create a picture
in the reader’s mind or to remind readers of familiar
sensations.
Diction refers to the choice and use of words and
phrases in speech or writing.
Denotation is a word’ or thing’s literal or main
definition. A word’s denotation is completely absent of
emotion, so it is defined as distinguished from its
connotation (its associated meaning). In other words,
denotation is a word’s “dictionary definition” rather
than its associated emotion or definition.
Connotation is a feeling or idea that a word has, in
addition to its literal or main meaning (the denotation).
Often, a series of words can have the same basic
definitions, but completely different connotations—
these are the emotions or meanings implied by a word,
phrase, or thing.
HEART
Connotation Denotation
It could mean love, affection The muscle that pumps blood
and feelings received from veins into
arteries throughout the body
15
Figure of Speech is a phrase or word having different
meanings than its literal meanings. It conveys meaning
by identifying or comparing one thing to another, which
has connotation or meaning familiar to the audience. It
is helpful in creating vivid rhetorical effect.
STRUCTURE
1. Lyric Poem
2. Narrative Poem
3. Descriptive Poem
Types of poetry: A poem may or
may not have a specific number
of lines, rhyme scheme and/or
Lyric Poem
metrical pattern, but it can still
Narrative Poem
be labeled according to its form Descriptive Poem
or style. Here are the three most Dramatic Poem
common types of poems
according to form:
Lyric Poem
It is any poem with one speaker
(not necessarily the poet) who There are many types
expresses strong thoughts and of lyric poems. Among
feelings. Most poems, especially the most common
modern ones, are lyric poems. It types are sonnet, ode,
highly musical that expresses the free verse, elegiac lyric
emotions of the speaker. and imagist poem
(Pilapil, et al., 2015).
Narrative Poem
It is a poem that tells a story; its [i.e. the introduction
structure resembles the plot line of conflict and
of a story characters, rising
action, climax and the
denouement].
Descriptive Poem
It is a poem that describes the While emotional, it is
world that surrounds the more "outward-
speaker. It uses elaborate focused" than lyric
imagery and adjectives. poetry, which is more
personal and
introspective.
Dramatic Poem
It is a verse that relies heavily on
dramatic elements such as A dramatic monologue is a
monologue (speech by a single poem that presents a
character) or dialogue speech of a single character
(conversation between two or in a dramatic situation.
more characters). Often dramatic Audre Lorde’s Hanging Fire
poems are narratives as well. In could be considered a
other words, they often tell dramatic poem. (Pilapil, et
stories. al., 2015)
Subtypes of Poetry
Ode
is usually a lyric poem of Elegy
moderate length, with a is a lyric poem that mourns
serious subject, an elevated the dead. It has no set metric
style, and an elaborate stanza or stanzaic pattern, but it
usually begins by reminiscing
pattern.
about the dead person, then
laments the reason for the
death
Subtypes of Poetry
Sonnet
is a lyric poem consisting of Ballad
14 lines and, in the English is a narrative poem that has
version, is usually written in a musical rhythm and can
iambic pentameter. be sung. It is usually
organized into quatrains or
cinquains, has a simple
rhythm structure, and tells
the tales of ordinary people.
Subtypes of Poetry
Epic
It is a long narrative poem in
elevated style recounting the
deeds of a legendary or
historical hero.
Other Subtypes of Poetry
Haiku
has an unrhymed verse form Limerick
having three lines (a tercet) has a very structured poem,
and usually 5,7,5 syllables, usually humorous &
respectively. It's usually composed of five lines (a
cinquain), in an aabba
considered a lyric poem.
rhyming pattern; usually
anapestic (weak, weak,
strong syllables)
Other Subtypes of Poetry
Diona
- is a Filipino tercet (three Ang marikit na tula
lines) of heptasyllabic (seven Kapag ‘yong binabasa’y
syllable) lines. Diona poems Abot-tanaw na tala.
are usually untitled
– Noahlyn C. Maranan
Other Subtypes of Poetry
Tanaga
- is a Filipino mono-rhyming Singko Sentimong Tula
(identical rhyme) quatrain Hinuli ko ang dila,
(four lines) of heptasyllabic Hinabi ko ang tugma.
(seven syllables) lines. Like Singko sentimong tula:
diona, tanaga are usually Butas-butas ang gitna!
untitled, but modern
practitioners sometimes add a – Mark Angeles
title.
SOUND
“Musical thought”
Word Sounds
Rhyme
– Thomas Carlyle Rhythm and Meter
Rhyme is the repetition of identical or similar concluding
syllables in different words, most often at the ends of lines.
Free verse is still verse; it is still poetry; and it still has meter
and rhyme; only that, the meter is inconsistent; and the
rhyme is inconsistently present or absent (Nery, 2017).
Line and Line Ending
A dropped line is a line broken into two parts, with the second part
indented to remain visually sequential like this one here.
Hello, can you hear me?
I’m in California dreaming about who we used to be
When we were younger and free
I’ve forgotten how it felt before the world fell at our
feet
(“Hello” by Adele)
“Faith” is a fine invention
For Gentlemen who see!
But Microscopes are prudent
In an Emergency!
Adonis Durado
The earliest poetry was oral, people
chanted it, sang it, recited it. Poetry is
supposed to be a living thing; its sounds
and rhythm must be given voice. So, write
your poem with an audience in mind!
And it might be good idea to say the
words out loud when you are writing your
poems.
Peter Solis Nery
Book Source/s:
Pilapil, Edwin A., Maga, Rhodora G., Sayaboc, Wilson M., & Camello, Lynnette Matea S. (2015).
World Literatures: New Texts, New Voices, New Perspectives. Malabon City: Mutya Publishing
House.
Internet Source/s:
www.literaryterms.net
https://learn.lexiconic.net/elementsofpoetry.htm