Poetic Devices

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# Poetry
## Poetic Devices
### Figures of Speech
A way of saying something other than the ordinary way.
#### Simile
An **explicit (direct) comparison** between two things using words such as like, as, appears, or seems.
Examples:
- A sip of Mrs. Cooks coffee is like a punch in the stomach.
- He is as rich as Bill Gates.
#### Metaphor
Makes an **indirect comparison** between two unlike things without using words such as like or as.
Examples:
- Allan is a tower of strength for his family.
- Life is “a brief candle” William Shakespeare
#### Personification
**Human qualities are given to non-human** things such as an animal, thought, or object.
Examples:
- The trees screamed in the raging wind.
- The wind whispered her name.
#### Paradox
A statement that initially appears to be self-contradictory but that, on closer inspection, turns out to make sense
Examples:
- You can save money by spending it.
- The beginning of an end.
- “All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others”. -- Animal Farm by George Orwell
#### Hyperbole / Overstatement
Use of exaggeration.
Example:
- Ive told you a million times dont slam the door!
- Her brain is the size of a pea.
#### Understatement
A deliberate playing down of a situation in order to make a point; intentionally make a situation seem less important than it really is.
Example:
- One nuclear bomb can ruin your day.
#### Irony
A meaningful gap between expectation and outcome, or when what is said is different from what is meant.
Examples:
- I posted a video on YouTube about how boring and useless YouTube is.
- “Oh great! Now you have broken my new camera.”
#### Symbolism
An object represents the subject / idea. Its the “symbol” of the idea.
*Some common associations:*
- Sleep is often related to death. Night often suggests darkness, death, or grief. Dreams are linked to the future or fate.
- Seasons often represent ages: winter/old age or death; spring/youth; summer/prime of life; fall or autumn/middle age
- Colours are often linked to emotions: red/passion or anger; blue/happiness or calm; green/jealousy; colors are also used to represent states of being: black/death or evil; white/purity or innocence; red/danger; green/growth
#### Repetition
Ideas or words that are repeated more than once to emphasise and deepen meaning.
Example:
“And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep”
-- Robert Frosts Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
#### Allusion
A reference to another work of fiction, a film, or a piece of art with which the reader is presumably familiar.
Examples:
- She felt like she had a golden ticket. (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory)
- If Im not home by midnight, my car might turn into a pumpkin. (Cinderella)
- My math teacher is he who must not be named. (Voldemort from the Harry Potter series)
### Sound Devices
#### Onomatopoeia
The use of words which sound like what they mean
Examples:
- the **buzzing** of the bee
- the **splashing** of the rain
#### Rhyme
A pattern of words that contains similar sounds at the end of the line.
Example:
Baa baa black sheep, have you any **wool**?
Yes sir, yes sir, three bags **full**!
One for the master, one for the **dame**,
And one for the little boy who lives down the **lane**.
#### Internal rhyme
Rhyming that occurs within the line(rather than at the end) .
Examples:
- p**iece** of m**e** emerges.
- I went to t**own** to buy a g**own**.
#### Assonance
Repetition of internal vowel sounds of words close together in poetry.
Examples:
- mystery disguised within.
- "Hear the mellow wedding bells" by Edgar Allen Poe.
#### Consonance
Repetitive sounds produced by consonants (non-vowel sounds) within a sentence or phrase.
Examples:
- Do no***t*** *go gen**t**le in**t**o tha**t** good nigh**t** ** the title of a poem by Dylan
- Thomas
- I dropped the lo**ck**et in the thi**ck** mud.
- Some ma**mm**als are cla**mm**y.
### Alliteration
Repetition of the initial consonant sounds.
Example**s:
- **t**errible **t**ruths
- A **b**ig **b**ully **b**eats a **b**aby **b**oy.
In our daily life, we notice alliteration in the names of different companies. It makes the name of a company catchy and easy to memorize. Here are several common examples.
- **C**oca **C**ola
- **B**est **B**uy
## In-class Poetry
### You Fit Into Me
### Some Days
### Funeral Blues