Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its...

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Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008

Transcript of Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its...

Page 1: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Sound Devices in Poetry

RHS

2008

Page 2: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Day 1

Page 3: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Onomatopoeia

• sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning

• Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash, cha-ching, cling

Page 4: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

rhythm

• alteration of stressed and unstressed sounds that make the voice rise and fall

Page 5: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Measurement

meter: strict rhythmic pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in each line

/ (ć) stressed symbol

υ (č) unstressed symbol

/…/ foot: the pattern of

stressed and unstressed

Page 6: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

1. iamb rhythm pattern: υ / Ex: /insist/

2. trochee rhythm pattern: / υ Ex: /double/3. anapest rhythm pattern: υ υ / Ex: /understand/4. dactyl rhythm pattern: / υ υ Ex: /excellent/5. spondee rhythm pattern: / / Ex: /football/

Page 7: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

All you need to remember…

Iamb pentameter

rhythm pattern: υ / Ex: /insist/

**this is the most common form because it is close to spoken English

Page 8: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

The Rusty Spigotby Eve Merriam

The rusty spigotsputters,uttersa splutter,spatters a smattering of drops,gashes wider;slash,splatters,scatters,spurts,finally stops sputteringand plash!gushes rushes splashesclear water dashes.

Page 9: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

On my Boat on Lake Cayuga By: William Cole

On my boat on Lake Cayuga

I have a horn that goes “Ay-oogah!”

I’m not the modern kind of creep

Who has a horn that goes “beep, beep.”

Page 10: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Your assignment…1. Write a poem using Onomatopoeia

a. You must have at least 20 words

b. At least 5 must be onomatopoetic

-underline, highlight, circle, etc the

onomatopoetic words

Page 11: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Day 2

Page 12: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

rhythm

• alteration of stressed and unstressed sounds that make the voice rise and fall

Page 13: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Measurement

meter: strict rhythmic pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in each line

/ (ć) stressed symbol

υ (č) unstressed symbol

/…/ foot: the pattern of

stressed and unstressed

Page 14: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

1. iamb rhythm pattern: υ / Ex: /insist/

2. trochee rhythm pattern: / υ Ex: /double/3. anapest rhythm pattern: υ υ / Ex: /understand/4. dactyl rhythm pattern: / υ υ Ex: /excellent/5. spondee rhythm pattern: / / Ex: /football/

Page 15: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

When writing in rhythm...

• The stress should be on the words you want to emphasize

• Example:“My dad gave me one dollar bill”

Page 16: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Iamb:my DAD gave ME one DOLlar BILL

Troche:MY dad GAVE me ONE dolLAR bill

Anapest:my dad GAVE me one DOLlar bill

Page 17: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Sonnet 130by Shakespeare

My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun;Coral is far more red than her lips' red;If snow be white, why then her flesh is dun;If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.I have seen roses damask'd, red and white,But no such roses see I in her cheeks;And in some perfumes is there more delightThan in the breath that from my mistress reeks.I love to hear her speak, yet well I knowThat music hath a far more pleasing sound;I grant I never saw a goddess go;My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rareAs any she belied with false compare.

Page 18: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Iambic Pentameter

Sonnet 130By: William Shakespeare

u / u / u / u / u /

My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun;

u / u / u / u / u /

Coral is far more red than her lips' red;

u / u / u / u / u /

If snow be white, why then her flesh is dun;If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.I have seen roses damask'd, red and white,But no such roses see I in her cheeks;And in some perfumes is there more delightThan in the breath that from my mistress reeks.I love to hear her speak, yet well I knowThat music hath a far more pleasing sound;I grant I never saw a goddess go;My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rareAs any she belied with false compare.

Page 19: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Assignment…

• Write a rhythm poem• Can rhyme but does not have to• Poem must be 5+ lines• 25+ words

• Indicate which rhythm pattern is used (iamb, troche, anapest, dactyl, and spondee)

• Note the rhythm pattern on the first two lines of your poem

Page 20: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Rhythm poem-

iamb

Homework

u / u / u / u

I hate to do my homework

u / u / u /

On each and every day

Especially writing poems

The way my teacher does

Just hate to do my homework

Oh each and every day!

Page 21: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Day 3

Page 22: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Rhyme

repetition of the sound of astressed vowel & any sound thatfollows it within a word

Ex: nails & whales; material &cereal

Page 23: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Rhyme scheme

regular pattern of rhyme in a poem

Ex: written with letters: A A B A C C D C or A A B B

Page 24: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

End Rhyme

rhyme at the end of the line

couplet: two consecutive lines ofpoetry that rhyme

Ex: How would you say You are doing today?

Page 25: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Approximate Rhyme

words that repeat the sounds but are not exact

rhymes (also called half-rhymes)

Ex: moon & morn

Page 26: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Internal Rhyme

rhyme that occurs within the lines

Ex: Ah, distinctly I remember itwas in the bleak December;and each separate dyingember wrought its ghostupon the floor

Page 27: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Résumé by: Dorothy Parker

Rhyme SchemeRazors pain you A

Rivers are damp; B

Acids stain you AAnd drugs cause cramp. BGuns aren’t lawful; CNoses give; DGas smells awful; CYou might as well live D

Page 28: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

We Real Coolby Gwendolyn Brooks

We real cool. WeLeft school We

Lurk late. We Strike strait. WeSing sin. WeThin gin. We

Jazz June. WeDie soon.

Page 29: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

The Cloudby Percy Bysshe Shelley I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers,From the seas and the streams;I bear light shade for the leaves when laidIn their noon-day dreams.From my wings are shaken the dews that wakenThe sweet buds every one,When rocked to rest on their mother's breast,As she dances about the Sun.I wield the flail of the lashing hail,And whiten the green plains under,And then again I dissolve it in rain,And laugh as I pass in thunder.

Page 30: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Beginning of The Ravenby Edgar Allen Poe

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary,

Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,

While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,

As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.

`'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, `tapping at my chamber door –

Only this, and nothing more.'

Page 31: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Your assignment…

• Write a poem with end rhyme and identify the rhyming scheme next to the poem• At least 10 lines

Page 32: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Day 4

Page 33: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

repetition

the repetition of sounds, words,phrases, and entire lines

Page 34: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

alliteration

repetition of consonant sounds inwords that appear close together

Ex.: Wendy wanted to eat white donuts.

Sally sells sea shells at the sea shore

Page 35: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

assonance

repetition of similar vowel sounds in words close together

Ex: fleet feet sweep by sleeping geeks

Page 36: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

consonance

repetition of similar consonant sounds in words close together

Ex: While I nodded, nearly napping,

suddenly there came a tapping

Page 37: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

maggie and milly and molly and may by: e. e. cummings

maggie and milly and molly and may went down to the beach(to play one day)and maggie discovered a shell that sang so sweetly she couldn't remember her troubles, and milly befriended a stranded starwhose rays five languid fingers were;and molly was chased by a horrible thing which raced sideways while blowing bubbles:andmay came home with a smooth round stone as small as a world and as large as alone.For whatever we lose (like a you or a me) it's always ourselves we find in the sea

Page 38: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Blissing on the Season's First SnowfallBy: Charlie Rossiter

I light a morning candle and lift my cup of espresso the hiss of the old radiator purrs to me like a friendly cat I lift my cup of espresso and wish a silent wish blissing on the season's first snowfall listening to the hiss of the old radiator the kiss of morning espresso steam rising to disappear in pearly air outside, snow falls silent as a stalking cat the candle flickers in columns of warm air rising, I lift my cup of espresso to the single silent wish, to always and forever to this much love my life.

Page 39: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Your assignment…

• Write a sentence or poem using alliteration• At least 10 words long• At least 4 words that are alliterative • Can be the same letter or multiple

letters• EXAMPLE: Angry ants can bite big bees.

• Poetry Forms: Acrostic and Limerick

Page 40: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Assignment part 2

• Take 2 stanzas from “The Raven” by Edgar Allen Poe and identify all the sound devices and figurative language used• You may not use the first stanza

Page 41: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

Excerpt from “The Raven”By Edgar Allen Poe

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary,

Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a

tapping,As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber

door.`'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, `tapping at my chamber

door –Only this, and nothing more.‘

End rhyme= orangeInternal rhyme= pinkRepetition = underlinedAssonance = purpleConsonance = blueAlliteration = green

Page 42: Sound Devices in Poetry RHS 2008. Day 1 Onomatopoeia sound of the word imitates or suggests its meaning Ex: drip, bing, bang, buzz, moo, boom, crash,

1. Find any Shakespeare sonneta. Write out the iambic pentameter over

the first 3 lines

b. Make sure to draw the symbols over the

beginning of the stressed syllables

c. You still need to include the entire

sonnet