OTTAVA RIMA-consists of Eight Iambic Pentameter Lines With A Rhyme Scheme of A-B-A-B-A-B-C-C. It Is A Form That Was Borrowed From The Italians
OTTAVA RIMA-consists of Eight Iambic Pentameter Lines With A Rhyme Scheme of A-B-A-B-A-B-C-C. It Is A Form That Was Borrowed From The Italians
OTTAVA RIMA-consists of Eight Iambic Pentameter Lines With A Rhyme Scheme of A-B-A-B-A-B-C-C. It Is A Form That Was Borrowed From The Italians
A. RHYME: is the similarity of likeness of sound existing between two words. A true rhyme should consist of
identical sounding
RIME ROYAL—is a stanza consisting of seven lines in iambic pentameter rhyming a-b-a-b-b-c-c. It called so because
King James I used it.
OTTAVA RIMA—consists of eight iambic pentameter lines with a rhyme scheme of a-b-a-b-a-b-c-c. It is a form that
was borrowed from the Italians.
A. SPONDEE:
B.
DEVICES OF SOUND
With the
ber of syllables presenting a similarity of sound are:
1. MASCULINE RHYME—occurs when one syllable of a word rhymes with another word:
bend and send; bright and light
2.FEMININE RHYME—occurs when the last two syllables of a word rhyme with another word:
lawful and awful; lighting and fighting syllables that are stressed and the letters preceding the vowels sounds
should be different. Thus fu Once upon a midnight DREARY, while I pondered, weak and WEARY,
STANZA FORMS
rm. Stanzas based on form are marked by their rhyme scheme.
Stanzas are known by the
1. DRAMATIC IRONY—a device by which the author implies a different meaning from that intended by the speaker (or
by a speaker) in a literary work. An incongruity or discrepancy between what a character says or thinks and
what the reader knows to be true (or between what a character perceives and what the author intends the reader
to perceive.)
2. IRONY OF SITUATION—a situation in which there is an incongruity between actual circumstances and those that
would seem appropriate or between what is anticipated and what actually comes to pass.
3. VERBAL IRONY—a figure of speech in which what is meant is the opposite of what is said.
5. OXYMORON—a compact paradox—a figure of speech that combines two contradictory words, placed side by side:
bitter sweet, wise fool, living death.
Wherein I rest
good.
HEPTAMETER: The iambic heptameter example, etc. Poetic lines are classified according to the number of feet in a line.
syllables established in a line of by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables are:
A. iambic As one,
B. s a unit of meter. A metrical foot can have two or Unknown
three syllables. A foot consists generally of one They cannot know, they cannot
care
stressed and one or more unstressed syllables. A line
| the bough.
is from a poem And gone.
C. PYRRHIC: The pyrrhic foot consists of two
B. DIMETER: Below is an example of a poem in
unstressed syllables. This type of foot is rare and is
trochaic dimeter by Richard Armour.
found interspersed with
other feet.
MONEY
SPENSERIAN STANZA—is a nine-line stanza consisting of eight iambic pentameter lines followed by an alexandrine, a
line of iambic hexameter. The rhyme scheme is a-b-a-b-b-c-b-c-c. The form derives its name from Edmund
Spenser, who initiated the form for his Faerie Queene.
SONNET—is a fourteen-line stanza form consisting of iambic pentameter lines. The two major sonnet forms are the Italian
(Petrarchan) and the English (Shakespearean) sonnet.
Petrarchan or Italian Sonnet—is divided usually between eight lines called the octave, using two rimes arranged
a-b-b-a-a-b-b-a, and six lines called the sestet, using any arrangement of either two or three rimes: c-d-c-d-c-d and
c-d-e- c-d-e are common patterns. The division between octave and sestet in the Italian sonnet (indicated by the
rhyme scheme and sometimes marked off in printing by a space) usually corresponds to a division of thought. The
octave may, for instance, present a situation and the sestet a comment, or the octave an idea and the sestet an
example, or the octave a question and the sestet an answer. Thus the structure reflects the meaning.
English or Shakespearean Sonnet—is composed of three quatrains and a concluding couplet, riming a-b-a-b c-d-c-d
e-f-e-f g-g. Again the units marked off by the rimes and the development of the thought often correspond. The
three quatrains, for instance, may present three examples and the couplet a conclusion or the quatrains three
metaphorical statements of one idea and the couplet an application.
VILLANELLE—consists of five tercets and a quatrain in which the first and third lines of the opening tercet recur
alternately at the end of the other tercets and together as the last two lines of the quatrain.
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ELEGY—usually a poem that mourns the death of an individual, the absence of something deeply loved, or the transience
of mankind.
LYRIC—is the most widely used type of poem, so diverse in its format that a rigid definition is impossible. However,
several factors run common in all lyrics:
a. limited length d. expression of thoughts and feelings of one speaker
b. intensely subjective e. highly imaginative
c. personal expression of personal emotion f. regular rhyme scheme
I wish that my room had a
ODE—an exalted, complex rapturous lyric poem written FLOOR
about a dignified, lofty subject
I don’t so much care for a DOOR
But this walking
AROUND
It was not death, for I stood up, Without touching the
And all the dead lie down. GROUND
It was not night, for all the bells Is getting to be quite a BORE!
Put out their tongues for noon.
2. INTERNAL RHYME: consists of the
B. POSITION OF RHYME: Rhyme may be end rhyme
similarity occurring between two or more words in the
or internal rhyme.
same line of
L. verse. foot line
1. END RHYME: consists of the similarity
M. pentameter—five-foot line
occurring at the end of two or more lines of verse:
N. hexameter—six-foot line
O. heptameter—seven-foot line
P. octometer—eight-foot line
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Q. loaf | is a two-syllable foot with the stress on the second syllable. The iambic foot is the most common foot in
English.
I. ANAPEST: The
E. illustrate iambic pentameter.
and head
3. TRIPLE RHYME—occurs when the last three syllables of a word or line rhyme:
victorious and glorious; ascendency and descendency; quivering and shivering; battering and
shattering
D. RHYME SCHEME—is the pattern or sequence in which the rhyme occurs. The first sound is represented or designated
as a, the second is designated as b, and so on. When the first sound is repeated, it is designated as a also.
E. ALLITERATION—is the repetition of the initial letter or sound in two or more words in a line of verse.
F. ONOMATOPOEIA—is the use of a word to represent or imitate natural sounds (buzz, crunch, tingle, gurgle, sizzle, hiss)
G. ASSONANCE—is the similarity or repetition of a vowel sound in two or more words. Lake and stake are rhymes; lake
and fate are assonance. Base and face are rhymes; base and fate are assonance.
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H. CONSONANCE—is the repetition of consonant sounds within a line of verse. Consonance is similar to alliteration
except that consonance doesn’t limit the repeated sound to the initial letter or a word.
I. REFRAIN—is the repetition of one or more phrases or lines at intervals in a poem, usually at the end of a stanza. The
refrain often takes the form of a chorus.
FIGURES OF SPEECH
A FIGURE OF SPEECH—is an expression in which the words are used in a nonliteral sense to present a figure, picture, or
image. The basic figures are:
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1. simile 7. allegory 13. irony of situation
2. metaphor 8. overstatement (hyperbole) 14. verbal irony
3. personification 9. understatement (litotes) 15. paradox
4. synecdoche 10.antithesis 16. oxymoron
5. metonymy 11. apostrophe
6. symbol 12. dramatic irony
9. SIMILE—is a direct or explicit comparison between two usually unrelated things indicating a likeness or similarity
between some attribute found in both things. A simile uses like or as to introduce the comparison. In the
expression “John swims like a fish,” the grace and naturalism with which John swims is compared with the
grace and naturalness with which a fish swims. Literally, it would be impossible for John to swim like a fish
because of his human nature. However, we can imagine the figure or image of a very skilled and graceful
swimmer beneath the surface.
10.METAPHOR—is an implied comparison between two usually unrelated things indicating a likeness or analogy
between attributes found in both things. A metaphor, unlike a simile, does not use like or as to indicate the
comparison.
11.PERSONIFICATION—the giving of human characteristics to inanimate objects, ideas, or animals. “The wind
whistled.” “Her heart cried out.”
12.SYNECDOCHE—is the technique of mentioning a part of something to represent the whole. “All hands on deck!”
13.METONYMY—is the substitution of a word naming an object for another word closely associated with it. “Pay tribute
to the crown.” “The White House has decided.”
14.SYMOL—is a word or image that signifies something other than what it literally represents. The cross is a symbol of
Christianity. The donkey and the elephant are symbols of the two American political organizations.
15.ALLEGORY—a narrative or description having a second meaning beneath the surface one.
OVERSTATEMENT—is an exaggeration for the sake of emphasis and is not to be taken literally. “rivers of blood” “sweat
to death”
The hills, the meadows, and the lakes,
Enchant not for their own sweet sakes.
G. by Ernest Thayer.
THE RAVEN What oft was thought, but ne’er so well express’d.
The bookful blockhead, ignorantly read,
With loads of learned lumber in his head.