Terms for Discussing Poetry
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An asterisk (*) indicates terms not discussed
in class; you are not responsible for knowing those.
Alliteration: The repetition of identical consonant
sounds, most often the sounds beginning words, in close proximity. Example:
pensive poets, nattering nabobs of negativism.
Allusion: Unacknowledged reference and quotations
that authors assume their readers will recognize.
Anapest (anapestic): unstressed unstressed stressed.
Also called "galloping meter." Example: 'Twas the night before Christmas,
and all through the house/ Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse."
Anaphora: Repetition of the same word or phrase
at the beginning of a line throughout a work or the section of a work.
Apostrophe: The addressing of a poem to a real
or imagined person who is not present. Example: "Milton! Thou shouldst
be living at this hour /England hath need of thee: she is a fen / Of stagnant
waters." --William Wordsworth, "London, 1802"
Assonance: The repetition of identical vowel
sounds in different words in close proximity. Example: deep green sea.
*Ballad: A narrative poem composed of quatrains (iambic tetrameter alternating
with iambic trimeter) rhyming x-a-x-a. Ballads may use refrains.
Examples: "Jackaroe," "The Long Black Veil"
*Blank verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter. Example: Shakespeare's plays
Caesura: A short but definite pause used for
effect within a line of poetry.
Carpe diem poetry: "seize the day." Poetry concerned
with the shortness of life and the need to act in or enjoy the present.
Example: Herrick’s "To the Virgins to Make Much of Time"; Marvell's "To
His Coy Mistress"
*Consonance: the counterpart of assonance; the
partial or total identity of consonants in words whose main vowels differ.
Example: shadow meadow; pressed, passed; sipped, supped. Owen uses this
"impure rhyme" to convey the anguish of war and death.
Couplet: two successive rhyming
lines. Couplets end the pattern of a Shakespearean sonnet.
Dactyl (dactylic) stressed unstressed
unstressed. This pattern is more common (as dactylic hexameter) in Latin
poetry than in English poetry. Example: Grand go the years in the Crescent
above them/ Worlds scoop their arcs/ and firmaments row (Emily Dickinson)
Diction (formal or high): Proper, elevated, elaborate, and often polysyllabic
language. This type of language used to be thought the only type suitable
for poetry.
Diction (neutral or middle): Correct language characterized by directness
and simplicity.
Diction (informal or low): Relaxed, conversational and familiar language.
Double rhyme or trochaic rhyme: rhyming words of two syllables in which
the first syllable is accented (flower, shower)
Dramatic monologue: A type of poem,
derived from the theater, in which a speaker addresses an internal listener
or the reader. In some dramatic monologues, especially those by Robert
Browning, the speaker may reveal his personality in unexpected and unflattering
ways.
End-stopped rhyme: A line ending
in a full pause, usually indicated with a period or semicolon.
Enjambment: A line having no end
punctuation but running over to the next line.
*Explication: A complete and detailed
analysis of a work of literature, often word-by-word and line-by-line.
Eye rhyme: Words that look as though they should rhyme because they
are spelled identically but pronounced differently. Example: bear/fear,
dough/cough/through/bough
Foot (prosody): A measured combination
of heavy and light stresses. The numbers of feet are given below.
-
monometer (1 foot)
-
dimeter (2 feet)
-
trimeter (3 feet)
-
tetrameter (4 feet)
-
pentameter (5 feet)
-
hexameter (6 feet)
-
heptameter or septenary (7 feet)
Heroic couplet: two successive
rhyming lines of iambic pentameter; the second line is usually end-stopped.
*Hymn meter or common measure: quatrains of iambic tetrameter alternating
with iambic trimeter rhyming a b a b.
Hyperbole (overstatement): exaggeration
for effect
Iamb (iambic): an unstressed stressed
foot.
Iambic pentameter: The most
natural and common kind of meter in English; it elevates speech to poetry.
Image: Images are references that
trigger the mind to fuse together memories of sight (visual), sounds (auditory),
tastes (gustatory), smells (olfactory), and sensations of touch (tactile).
Imagery refers to images throughout a work or throughout the works of a
writer or group of writers.
Metaphor: A comparison between
two unlike things, this describes one thing as if it were something else.
*Metaphysical conceit: An elaborate and extended
metaphor or simile that links two apparently unrelated fields or subjects
in an unusual and surprising conjunction of ideas. The term is commonly
applied to the metaphorical language of a number of early seventeenth-century
poets, particularly John Donne. Example: stiff twin compasses//the joining
together of lovers like legs of a compass. See also "To His Coy Mistress"
Meter: The number of feet within
a line of traditional verse. Example: iambic pentameter.
Octave: The first eight lines of
an Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, unified by rhythm, rhyme, and topic.
Onomatopoeia. A blending of consonant
and vowel sounds designed to imitate or suggest the activity being described.
Example: buzz, slurp.
Paradox: A rhetorical figure embodying
a seeming contradiction that is nonetheless true.
Personification: Attributing human
characteristics to nonhuman things or abstractions.
Petrarchan sonnet: A sonnet (14
lines of rhyming iambic pentameter) that divides into an octave (8) and
sestet (6)
Prosody: the metrical pronunciation of a song or poem.
Pyrrhic foot (prosody):
two unstressed feet (an "empty" foot)
Quatrain: a four-line stanza or poetic unit.
In an English or Shakespearean sonnet, a group of four lines united by
rhyme.
Rhyme: The repetition of identical concluding syllables in different
words, most often at the ends of lines. Example: June/moon.
Rhyme scheme: The pattern of rhyme, usually indicated
by assigning a letter of the alphabet to each rhyme at the end of a line
of poetry.
Scan (scansion): the process of marking beats
in a poem to establish the prevailing metrical pattern
Sestet: A six-line stanza
or unit of poetry.
Shakespearean sonnet: A fourteen-line poem written
in iambic pentameter, composed of three quatrains and a couplet rhyming
abab cdcd efef gg.
Slant rhyme: A near rhyme in which the concluding consonant sounds are identical
but not the vowels. Example: sun/noon, should/food, slim/ham.
Sonnet: A closed form consisting of fourteen
lines of rhyming iambic pentameter.
Spondee: stressed stressed. A two-syllable foot
with two stressed accents. The opposite of a pyrrhic foot, this foot is
used for effect.
Stanza: A group of poetic lines corresponding
to paragraphs in prose; the meters and rhymes are usually repeating or
systematic.
Synaesthesia: A rhetorical figure that describes
one sensory impression in terms of a different sense. Example:
"darkness visible" "green thought"
*Syntax: Word order and sentence structure.
Triple rhyme or dactylic rhyme: Rhyming words of three or more syllables
in which any syllable but the last is accented. Example: Macavity/gravity/depravity
Trochee (trochaic): stressed unstressed. Example:
"Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright"
Understatement (litotes): deliberately underplaying
or undervaluing a thing to create emphasis.
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