Grade 9 Second Grading
Grade 9 Second Grading
Grade 9 Second Grading
Figurative Language
SYMBOLISM
• An object, word, or image that has deeper significance than just
literal meaning.
• Represent something than itself; another person, idea or
concept.
• Enhances the meaning of the story.
EXAMPLES:
• The color RED, BLUE, WHITE.
• Historical Allusion
• Classical Allusion
KINDS OF ALLUSION
• Biblical Allusion - uses words and/or situations that make direct
references to biblical stories, characters, places, or motifs within
a larger story/text.
• Example:
You are a Solomon when it comes to making decisions.
It has been raining so hard that we need to use an Arc soon.
She turned the other cheek after she was cheated out of a
promotion.
HISTORICAL ALLUSION
• A statement that refers to HISTORY
• Example
• I went to bed with my hair wet and I woke up like Medusa.
• Are you sure you did not cheat? Your nose is growing.
THINK ON YOU FEET
• Don’t act like a Romeo in front of her. Is an example of?
Task 2 Task 2
Task 3
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
(1564-1616)
• Hailed as the greatest of all Elizabethans
and of all the dramatists.
• Known as the “Bard of Avon”
• Lark
something done for fun,
especially something
mischievous or daring; an
amusing adventure or escapade.
used to suggest that an activity
is foolish or a waste of time.
TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING
His father made him feel
that he brought COMPLETE
(a)beweep (b)fortune THE
(disgrace) to the family FOLLOWING
because of the incident SENTENCES
BY
he was involved with. CHOOSING
THE
CORRECT
WORD.
It is (a) bootless
(b) beweep (c) lark COMPLETE
to argue with a THE
self-righteous FOLLOWING
person, they will SENTENCES
BY CHOOSING
never accept any THE
opinion. CORRECT
WORD.
The students
hid their COMPLETE
THE
teacher’s bike FOLLOWING
for a/an (a) SENTENCES
BY CHOOSING
beweep (b) lark THE
(c) bootless. CORRECT
WORD.
READ SONNET XXIX BY WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE ON PAGE 86
Answer page 87 in a ½ crosswise paper. You have 30 Minutes
to finish the Activity.
ADD A SLIDE TITLE -
2
THE EMOTIONAL STATE OF THE SPEAKER IN SONNET 29 IS ONE OF DEPRESSION: IN THE FIRST LINE, HE
ASSUMES HIMSELF TO BE "IN DISGRACE WITH FORTUNE," MEANING HE HAS BEEN HAVING BAD LUCK. HE ALSO
FEELS IN DISGRACE WITH "MEN'S EYES," IMPLYING THAT THE GENERAL PUBLIC LOOKS ON HIM UNFAVORABLY.
THIS COULD BE REAL OR IMAGINED, BUT IT IS ENFORCED IN LINE 2, WHEN HE BEMOANS HIS "OUTCAST STATE."
HERE, "STATE" REFERS TO A STATE OF BEING, AND IN THIS CASE, HE IS CAST OUT FROM SOCIETY.
LINES 3-4 MAKE ALLUSION TO JOB OF THE OLD TESTAMENT IN THE BIBLE, WHO WAS CAST OUT ONTO A DUNG
HEAP AND CALLED TO A GOD WHO DIDN'T LISTEN. THE POET FINDS HIMSELF IN THE SAME SITUATION: HEAVEN
PERSONIFIED IS GOD, AND IN THIS CASE HE IS "DEAF," MAKING THE POET'S CRIES "BOOTLESS," OR USELESS. THE
IDEA OF CURSING ONE'S FATE ALSO HEARKENS TO JOB, WHO CURSED HIMSELF AFTER FALLING OUT OF GOD'S
FAVOR.
THE SPEAKER FINDS HIMSELF ENVYING WHAT OTHERS HAVE, AND IN LINES 5-9 HE SEES ALMOST EVERYONE AS
HAVING SOMETHING HE LACKS. HE WISHES TO BE LIKE "ONE MORE RICH IN HOPE," PERHAPS MEANING
HOPEFUL OR LITERALLY WEALTHY; "FEATURED LIKE HIM," REFERS TO SOMEONE WHO IS HANDSOME, WITH
BEAUTIFUL FEATURES; AND ANOTHER IS "WITH FRIENDS POSSESSED," OR POPULAR, UNLIKE THE POET (AS HAS
BEEN ESTABLISHED IN THE FIRST TWO LINES). IN LINE 7, HE ENVIES THE ARTISTIC TALENT OF ONE MAN, AND
THE OPPORTUNITIES AFFORDED SOMEONE ELSE.
THE SIMILE OF A LARK IS DEVELOPED IN LINES 10-12, WHEN THE SPEAKER DESCRIBES THE EFFECT THAT A
THOUGHT OF HIS LOVE HAS ON HIS "STATE," OR EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING. THE FACT THAT THE LARK RISES
FROM THE "SULLEN EARTH" AT "BREAK OF DAY" IMPLIES THAT THE DAY IS MUCH HAPPIER THAN THE NIGHT;
DAY BREAK IS COMPARED TO THE DAWNING OF A THOUGHT OF THE BELOVED. AS THE LARK "SINGS HYMNS AT
HEAVEN'S GATE," SO THE POET'S SOUL IS INVIGORATED WITH THE THOUGHT OF THE FAIR LORD, AND SEEMS TO
SING TO THE SKY WITH REJUVENATED HOPE.
THE FINAL COUPLET OF SONNET 29 DECLARES THAT THIS JOYFULNESS BROUGHT ABOUT BY A THOUGHT OF THE
FAIR LORD IS ENOUGH TO CONVINCE THE SPEAKER THAT HE IS BETTER OFF THAN ROYALTY. HERE, "STATE" IS A
PUN: IT CARRIES THE MEANING OF EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING, AS IT DID EARLIER IN THE POEM, AND SUGGESTS
THAT THE LOVE OF THE FAIR LORD MAKES THE SPEAKER SO HAPPY THAT ALL THE WEALTH OF A KING WOULD
NOT BE BETTER. BUT IT ALSO REFERS TO A NATION, OR A KINGDOM.
RECOGNIZING THE SHAKESPEAREAN
SONNET
SHAKESPEAREAN SONNET / ENGLISH SONNET
is a 14-line poem containing a specific meter and rhyme scheme.
Each line of a sonnet is written in iambic pentameter, a meter
made up of five sets of unstressed-stressed syllable blocks, called
iambs.
ABABCDCDEFEFGG
BY: WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE
is a 14-line poem
Quatrains
meter
and Quatrains
rhyme
scheme.
Quatrains
Couplets
IAMBIC PENTAMETER
Iambs consist of an UNSTRESSED SYLLABLE followed by
STRESSED SYLLABLE resulting in a ba-BOOM rhythm.