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LITERARY DEVICES
PowerPoint Created By:
Mr. Brooks
THE “WHAT”
DEFINE POETRY!
• Poetry (from the Greek "ποίησις", poiesis, a
"making") is a form of literary art in which
language is used for its aesthetic and evocative
qualities in addition to, or in lieu of, its apparent
meaning. Poetry may be written independently,
as discrete poems, or may occur in conjunction
with other arts, as in poetic drama, hymns or
lyrics.
The Turtle
breaks from the blue-black
skin of the water, dragging her shell
with its mossy scutes
across the shallows and through the rushes
The Turtle and over the mudflats, to the uprise,
comes out of the water to the yellow sand,
walks across the sand to dig her ungainly feet
digs a nest a nest, and hunker there spewing
and lays some eggs her white eggs down
into the darkness…
By: Mr. Brooks
By: Mary Oliver
WHAT IS FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE?
• Figurative language presents
ordinary things in fresh ways,
communicating ideas that go beyond
words’ ordinary meanings.
Examples of simile:
• “Life is like a box of chocolates.”
• “The girl is as beautiful as a rose.”
• “The willow is like an etching…”
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE:
IT IS A METAPHOR
– a comparison of two unlike things without
using the words like or as.
Examples of metaphor:
• “My father is a tall, sturdy oak.”
• “The hotel is a diamond in the sky.”
• “who know’s if the moon’s a balloon…”
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE:
PERSONIFICATION
– the giving of human qualities to an animal,
object, or idea.
Examples of personification:
• “Hunger sat shivering on the road.”
• “The flowers danced on the lawn.”
• “SpongeBob SquarePants” and “Smokey the
Bear” are personified characters.
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE:
HYPERBOLE
- an exaggerated statement used to make a
point.
Examples of hyperbole:
• “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.”
• “I could sleep for a year.”
• “This book weighs a ton.”
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE:
IMAGINE THE IMAGERY
-figures of speech or vivid descriptions used to
produce mental images (appeal to the five
senses).
Examples of imagery:
• “Her clammy back felt like bark of the tree after a
summer’s rain.”
• “…the small pond behind my house was lapping
at it’s banks…”
• “The willow’s music is like a soprano…”
WHAT IS A SOUND DEVICE?
• The effect of a poem can depend on
the sound of its words.
Examples of onomatopoeia:
• “The bang of a gun.”
• “The hiss of a snake.”
• “The buzz of a bee.”
• “The pop of a firecracker.”
SOUND DEVICE: REPETITION
- the repeating of sound, words, phrases or lines in a
poem used to emphasize an idea or convey a certain
feeling.
Examples of repetition:
• “Sing a song full of faith that the dark past has taught
us, Sing a song of the hope that the present has
brought us…”
• “I think I can, I think I can, I think I can, I think I can…”
• “The isolation during my vacation created a situation
of relaxation.”
SOUND DEVICE:
I RHYME ALL THE TIME AND I GUESS IT
SOUNDS FINE…
- repetition of sound at the ends of words. (Rhyme occurring
within a line is called internal rhyme. Rhyme occurring at
the end of a line is called end rhyme)
Example of rhythm:
“I looked at the shell in the ocean
I looked at the bell in the sea,
I noticed the smell and the motion
Were very peculiar to me.”
SOUND DEVICE: ASSONANCE
- repetition of VOWEL SOUNDS at the
BEGINNING, MIDDLE or END of at least two
words in a line of poetry.
Examples of Assonance
• Repeating the “eh” sound in the words:
“crescent,” “flesh,” “extending,” “medicine”
and “death”
SOUND DEVICE: CONSONANCE
- repetition of CONSONANT SOUNDS at the
BEGINNING, MIDDLE or END of at least two
words in a line of poetry.
Examples of Consonance
Repeating the “sh” sound in the words:
“shush,” “wish,” “sharp,” “cushion” and
“quash”
SOUND DEVICE: ALLITERATION
- repetition of CONSONANT SOUNDS at the
BEGINNING of at least two words in a line of
poetry. Example of alliteration:
Examples of Alliteration
• “the frog frolicked frivolously on the forest floor.”
• “…Little skinny shoulder blades Sticking through
your clothes…”
• “…struck out by a steed flying fearless and
fleet…”
WHAT IS FORM?
• The form of a poem involves the physical
arrangement of the words on the page,
sometimes involving rhyme and rhythm.
• LINE: a sentence or fragment of sentence.
• STANZA: a group of more than one line.
Butterflies
Gentle creatures
Fluttering, searching, landing
Lovely flashes of light
Miracles
FORM: ENJAMBMENT
• The running over of a line or thought into the
next line without a strong break or pause
• Example:
I’m feeling rather sleepy, but
I really don’t know why. I guess it
is the way the day has spun
out of control.
FORM: FREE VERSE
• Poetry that does not contain regular patterns of rhyme and rhythm. The
lines flow more naturally and have “everyday speech” rhythm. Poets who
write in free verse often use the sound devices we have already discussed.
Here’s an example from May Swenson’s “Southbound on the Freeway: