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Introducing... DRIFT

Introducing... DRIFT. D RI F T. iction. hyme and Rhythm. magery. orm. one/Voice. D RI F T. iction. An author’s choice of words. In good writing words are not chosen lightly but are carefully selected for their impact, including subtle connotations.

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Introducing... DRIFT

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  1. Introducing...DRIFT

  2. D RI F T iction hyme and Rhythm magery orm one/Voice

  3. D RI F T iction

  4. An author’s choice of words. In good writing words are not chosen lightly but are carefully selected for their impact, including subtle connotations.

  5. Toboggan Hill by Gordon DownieI’m thinking back to when we were youngand eating donutswith a set of plastic vampire teeththat we were passing back and forth.We weren’t so young as tothink a dog was a horse.Nor were we old enough yet to namethe cold purpose of musical chairs.We were like-minded spiritsekeing out a rhythmwhispering transmissionsthrough wet woollen mittens.Growing up on a toboggan hillnothing was material.I’m thinking back to when we were youngif only to find outforensicallywhat it waswe used towant.

  6. Toboggan Hill by Gordon DownieI’m thinking back to when we were youngand eating donutswith a set of plastic vampire teeththat we were passing back and forth.We weren’t so young as tothink a dog was a horse.Nor were we old enough yet to namethe cold purpose of musical chairs.We were like-minded spiritsekeing out a rhythmwhispering transmissionsthrough wet woollen mittens.Growing up on a toboggan hillnothing was material.I’m thinking back to when we were youngif only to find outforensicallywhat it waswe used towant.

  7. Each pair/group will use the poems you brought to class today.Analyze and discuss the voices and diction and write a thesis to show the main differences between your selections to share and discuss.

  8. D RI F T hyme and Rhythm

  9. Rhyme is the author’s use of words with similar or identical sounds.Rhythm is the author’s control of the flow of sound. This can be achieved through the use of punctuation, line lengths and breaks, syllables, diction, etc.

  10. Rhyme is used very often in poetry but it’s never quite as obvious as...

  11. This example is called True Rhyme. The matching sounds are identical which makes this the easiest rhyme to spot.

  12. Slant Rhyme (or half rhyme) is where the sounds are similar but not identical.Example:I sat in the darknursing my broken heart.

  13. Eye Rhyme (or sight rhyme) is where the last syllables look alike but sound different.Example:have and grave

  14. Internal Rhyme links two or more rhyming words within the same line. Ie. “The bird heard the word of Mr. Graham”Double Rhyme is a two-syllable rhyme as in “running” and “sunning”

  15. A Rhyme Scheme is a recurring pattern of rhymed endings repeated regularly in each stanza.Examples: ABAB, AABB, ABBA, etc.

  16. D RI F T magery

  17. Descriptive or figurative language used to create word pictures for the reader that can be perceived by any of the five senses.

  18. The Red Wheelbarrow by William Carlos Williamsso much dependsupona red wheelbarrowglazed with rainwaterbeside the whitechickens.

  19. This Is a Photograph of Me by Margaret AtwoodIt was taken some time ago.At first it seems to bea smearedprint: blurred lines and grey flecksblended with the paper;then, as you scanit, you see in the left-hand cornera thing that is like a branch: part of a tree(balsam or spruce) emergingand, to the right, halfway upwhat ought to be a gentleslope, a small frame house.In the background there is a lake,and beyond that, some low hills. (The photograph was takenthe day after I drowned.I am in the lake, in the centreof the picture, just under the surface.It is difficult to say whereprecisely, or to sayhow large or small I am:the effect of wateron light is a distortionbut if you look long enough,eventuallyyou will be able to see me.)

  20. D RI F T orm

  21. Poetry can take many different forms. Each for comes with its own unique rules and limitations that can affect numerous elements. Examples: Sonnet, Free Verse, Blank Verse, Haiku, etc.

  22. D RI F T one/Voice

  23. A writer’s attitude and approach towards his/her subject and/or audience. This attitude can best be discovered through the choice of diction which collectively reveals the tone.

  24. I don’t want tobecause boysdon’t write poetry.Girls do.- Sharon Creech from Love That Dog

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