Introduction To English Poetry First Year
Introduction To English Poetry First Year
Introduction To English Poetry First Year
English Poetry
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What is literature?
It is an art in which words play an important role. Plays, novels, and
poetry are all beautiful works of art.
What is connotation?
It is the associations that the word has gained through constant use.
It appeals to the feelings, for example, a flower could mean love or
beauty and mother is associated with security and warmth.
What is denotation?
It is the meaning of the word in the dictionary (lexical meaning). It
appeals to the brain, for example, a flower means a plant in dictionary,
and mother is the female parent of an animal.
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What is the definition of English Literature?
It is all literature written in English language, even if it is written by a
writer whose native language is not English, for example, Joseph
Conrad writes English novels though he is a Pole.
What is poetry?
What is a stanza?
It is a group of lines forming the division of a poem.
1. Metre:
Poetry is metrical while prose is not.
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4. Grammatical license
Many grammatical constructions which are not allowed to be used inprose
are usually used in poetry, e.x., the use of singular for the plural, or an
adjective for an adverb.
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William Blake's poem “The Sick Rose"
Form
The two quatrains of this poem rhyme : abcb. The rhythm of these
short, two beat lines contributes to the poem’s sense of foreboding or
dread and complements the directness with which the speaker tells
the rose she is dying.
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Break, Break, Break
BY ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
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Meaning by stanza
Stanza 1:
The poet is addressing the sea, crash into the stones, sea! (do what
you always do). He said that he wishes he could say the thoughts that
come to his mind. He is so sad that he cannot express his feelings.
Stanza 2:
The poet says that it is all good for the fisherman’s boy and his sister,
as they are shouting and playing. Also the sailor is singing in his
boat. They are happy doing what they usually do everyday. They are
expressing their feelings (singing and shouting). They are going on
with their life.
Stanza 3:
The huge ships are going to their harbors/shelters under the hill. The
poet sees and hears many things but these things do not distract him
from the one thought in his mind; he misses the hand and voice of
someone dear to him, his dead friend.
Stanza 4:
The poet repeats the first line, but this time the waves have changed ,
they are breaking at the foot of the crag. The poet says that despite
the fact that everything is going on, everything is doing what it
usually does, but his friend has gone and will never return back.
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From The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Meaning by stanza
Stanza 1:
The poet is describing how the ship enters the Pacific Ocean. The
breeze is is fine, the foam is flying, the cut made by the ship is like a
furrow( a long cut made in the ground by a plough) to suggest speed.
The sailors are the first to enter this silent sea, but everything seems
fine.
Stanza 2:
In this stanza, the breeze has become weaker, the sails are down, the
sea is silent, and everything has changed. Everybody now is sad. The
ship is still, because there is no wind to move it, that’s why the sails
are dropped down.
Stanza 3:
The poet is describing the weather in order to show how silent and
still the sea is. The sky is like copper (reddish brown). It is noon, and
the sun is like the colour of blood, it stood in the middle of the sky
looking like the moon, i.e. small, because of mist. The sailors can’t
see well. These are the signs of the curse; the sky and the sun are
angry (red).
Stanza 4:
The ship is still in the middle of the sea, while time goes on. There is
monotony. The ship is stuck, unable to move, and it looks as still as a
ship in a picture.
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Stanza 5:
The poet repeats the word ‘water’ to show how vast the sea is, yet the
sailors are thirsty, and the boards of the ship have shrunk because of
the salty water. This stanza suggests that the sailors are going to die
of thirst.
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Meaning by stanza
Stanza 1:
The speaker talks about Lucy who lived in a place where nobody
lives(untraveled road beside the river Dove). She is a lonely
unmarried girl who nobody loves.
Stanza 2:
The poet likens Lucy to a ‘violet’, a flower, but this flower is not in a
field among many flowers, it is a lonely flower half- hidden behind a
stone. He also likens her to a star, but not in the middle of other stars,
it is a star when there is only when in the sky which could be the
evening star, Venus. All these images suggest the girl’s loneliness.
Stanza 3:
The girl is unknown that’s why, when she died, only few knew about
her death. The speaker is perhaps one of these few and so he
expresses his sadness and sorrow for her death. It made a difference
to him.
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Poetic Devices
Poetry has special qualities that make it delightful and enjoyable to
the reader. These qualities are:
1. Sense Devices
These devices are related to sense where two different objects are
brought together by comparison. Below are some of the most
frequently used sense devices:
1.1. Simile
It is a kind of comparison where the poet compares between two
things using the words “as” or “like”.
Simile is found in :
The poet compares the real ship to a painted one to show how still
and motionless the ship is. The purpose of simile here is to show how
the ship is destined to stay in the same place forever.
B- ‘Lucy’
Fair as a star, when only one
Is shining in the sky
The purpose of the simile here is to show the rarity of Lucy’s beauty.
Lucy’s beauty is as rare as the beauty of a star when there is only one
in the sky.
1.2. Metaphor
It is very much like simile in that it is also a comparison but not direct.
It is an implied comparison without the use of as or like.
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Metaphor is found in:
A-’Lucy’
In ‘the furrow followed free’, the poet uses metaphor to compare the
line made by the fast ship in the ocean to a furrow made in a
ploughed field. The purpose of this metaphor is to show the speed of
the ship.
1.3 Personification
It is used to give an inanimate object a human form or quality by
making it speak for example.
Personification is found in Shelley’s ‘Ode to the West Wind’
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2. Sound Devices
2.1. Alliteration
It is the repetition of the same consonant sound/letter at the
beginning of words in a line of verse, e.x.,
-In ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’:
‘the furrow followed free’
The purpose of alliteration in this line is to add music to the line. It
suggests speed, because “f” makes the line run quickly.
In ‘Day after day, day after day’, “d” suggests monotony and
immobility.
2.2. Onomatopoeia
It is found in words that imitate the sound made by the object
described, e.x.,
Swish - the sound produced by quick movement
Buzz - the sound of bees
Cuckoo- the sound made by the bird Cuckoo
Crush- loud noise like that of thunder
Hum - singing with closed lips.
2.3. Rhyme
It appears in the middle or end of lines in poetry, depending on its
type whether end or internal. Words that rhyme end with the same
sound/letter. However, for the two words to rhyme, the consonant
sounds/letters that come before the vowel should not be the same,
e.x., “sight” and “right” rhyme, but “night” and “knight” do not
rhyme.
In ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’, there are two kinds of rhyme,
end rhyme (same sound at the end of each line of a poem), and
internal rhyme (two rhyming words within the same line). But why
does Stanza (1) have six rhyming words, while in stanza (3), there
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are only two rhymes? The answer is that the use of many rhymes in
stanza 1 suggests the high speed of the ship, but later on to
suggest that the ship slows down, the poet uses only two rhymes.
2.4 Assonance
It is the repetition of the same vowel sound in nearby words within
a line of verse, e.x., bride..wide..crime
2.6 Rhythm
It is the musical succession of sounds. It adds to the meaning of
the poem, and expresses the mood of the poet, whether sad or
happy. For example,
In the first stanza of ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’, the rhythm
is quick, but after that it becomes slow to suggest the slow pace.
In ‘Lucy’, the rhythm reflects the poet’s sorrow and sadness.
3. Structural Devices
They are related to the structure of the poem, i.e., how the poem is
built.
3.1 Contrast
It occurs when two opposite pictures are put side by side in the poem.
Sometimes the contrast is obvious and sometimes it is implied, e.x.,
(1)The stillness contrasted with quickness, and (2) motion; “burst into
the sea” contrasted with lack of motion, “ down dropt the breeze” in
‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’.
3.2 Illustration
It takes the form of a picture/an image which the poet uses to refer to
an idea (to illustrate an idea). In illustration, the poet draws a picture,
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e.x.,
(1) In ‘Break, Break, Break’, lads playing and ships sailing are
images which suggest that life is going on without stop.
(2) In ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’, the last three stanzas are
pictures that refer to the idea of a motionless ship.
3.3 Repetition
The poet repeats a line or a whole stanza, either for musical effect or
to emphasize a particular idea which he/she wants to attract our
attention to, For Example, in ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’,
Water, water, everywhere,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.
The repetition of the word “water” makes readers feel (1)How big the
ocean is (2) How thirsty the sailors are. Water is everywhere, but at
the same time there is no water to drink.
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Kinds of Poetry
1. Subjective Poetry
2. Objective Poetry
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