Elements of Poetry
Elements of Poetry
Dear God,
Thank you for this day and for the
opportunity to learn. Please help us to be
good listeners and to pay attention to our
teacher. Help us to remember what we learn
and to use it to make the world a better
place. AMEN
Elements of Poetry
Elements of Poetry
What is poetry?
• Poetry is not prose. Prose is the ordinary language
people use in speaking or writing.
• Poetry is a form of literary expression that captures
intense experiences or creative perceptions of the
world in a musical language.
• Basically, if prose is like talking, poetry is like singing.
• By looking at the set up of a poem, you can see the
difference between prose and poetry.
Distinguishing Characteristics of Poetry
• Unlike prose which has a narrator, poetry
has a speaker.
– A speaker, or voice, talks to the reader. The
speaker is not necessarily the poet. It can also be
a fictional person, an animal or even a thing
Example
But believe me, son.
I want to be what I used to be
when I was like you.
from “Once Upon a Time” by
Gabriel Okara
Distinguishing Characteristics of Poetry
Example
Open it.
Example
Does it stink like rotten meat?
from “Harlem” by Langston Hughes
Figures of Speech
• A metaphor also compares seemingly unlike
things, but does not use like or as.
Example
the moon is a white sliver
from “I Am Singing Now” by Luci Tapahonso
• Personification attributes human like
characteristics to an animal, object, or idea.
Example
A Spider sewed at Night
from “A Spider sewed at Night” by Emily
Dickinson
Figures of Speech
• Hyperbole – a figure of speech in which
great exaggeration is used for emphasis or
humorous effect.
Example
“You’ve asked me a million times!”
• Imagery is descriptive language that applies
to the senses – sight, sound, touch, taste, or
smell. Some images appeal to more than one
sense.
Sound Devices
• Alliteration is the repetition of consonant
sounds at the beginning of words.
• Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds
within a line of poetry.
• Onomatopoeia is the use of a word or phrase,
such as “hiss” or “buzz” that imitates or
suggests the sound of what it describes.
Example of Sound Devices
“In the steamer is the trout
seasoned with slivers of ginger”
from “Eating Together” by Li-Young Lee