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Poetry

Poetry. Prose All forms of ordinary writing. Poetry Writing in its most intense, most imaginative, and most rhythmic forms. Poetry. Theme The Central idea developed in a literary work. Mood The emotional attitude in a literary work, (regret, hope).

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Poetry

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  1. Poetry Prose All forms of ordinary writing. Poetry Writing in its most intense, most imaginative, and most rhythmic forms.

  2. Poetry Theme The Central idea developed in a literary work. Mood The emotional attitude in a literary work, (regret, hope).

  3. Poetic DevicesStrategies used in poetry for effect Onomatopoeia The use of words whose sound imitates the sound of the thing being named. Click on picture for link: Alliteration The repetition of identical sounds at the beginning of words or accented syllables.

  4. Poetic DevicesStrategies used in poetry for effect Consonance A repetition of consonant sounds. A lot like Alliteration. Assonance The repetition of vowel sounds. Internal Rhyme The rhyming of words within one line of poetry.

  5. Figurative LanguageA Writer’s use of words apart from their ordinary, literal meaning Personification A figure of speech in which human characteristics are assigned to non-human things. Hyperbole An exaggeration for effect SimileSimiles for Kids Click then scroll down for writing similes exercise A direct comparison between two unlike things using the words “like” or “as” (seems, than, appears) Metaphor An implied comparison between two unlike things. (To say something IS something else)

  6. Figurative LanguageA Writer’s use of words apart from their ordinary, literal meaning. Symbolism A concrete or real object used to represent an idea. Descriptive Language Language that paints a colorful picture of a person, place, thing, or idea using vivid details. Imagery The use of vivid or figurative language to represent objects, actions, or ideas.

  7. Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost "Nature's first green is gold”. • Frost's poem contains the perfect image of Vermont's spring landscape. The hardwoods lose their leaves in autumn and stay bare through the winter. In spring, the first green to appear is really gold as the buds break open. The willows and maples have this temporary gold hue. In only a few days, the leaves mature to green.

  8. The Outsiders by Robert Frost Ponyboy reciting “Nothing Gold Can Stay” Click on picture for link: Nature's first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leaf's a flower; But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides to leaf. So Eden sank to grief, So dawn goes down to day. Nothing gold can stay. -- Robert Frost STAY GOLD!

  9. Types of Poetry Free Verse Poetry written without proper rules about form, rhyme, rhythm, meter, etc. Limerick A five line poem written with one couplet and one triplet. Haiku A three line Japanese poem that contains 5 syllables the first line, 7 syllables the second line, and 5 the third. Click for Link Harry Potter Haiku Couplet A pair of lines of poetry that are usually rhymed. Diamante A seven lined poem, shaped like a diamond.

  10. Online Reading by Sharon Creech, Click to go to link:

  11. Online Reading of Harlem by Walter Dean Myersillustrated by Christopher MyersThe Kennedy Center Storytime online Click Here

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