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Figures of Speech. Sound.

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Figures of Speech. Sound. Instruments of Poetry Figures of Speech (Tropes) Change the literal meaning of words to figurative. Serve to create imagery. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Figures of Speech. Sound.


1
Figures of Speech. Sound.
  • Instruments of Poetry

2
Figures of Speech (Tropes)
  • Change the literal meaning of words to
    figurative.
  • Serve to create imagery.
  • In literature, express ones unique vision.

3
Simile
  • An artistic comparison stressing similarity
    between objects, actions, persons, etc., in order
    to point to their special characteristics.
  • A is like B
  • A is as B
  • A as if B

4
William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616)
  • Sonnet 130
  • Will in Canada The Sanders portrait
  • Read by Alan Rickman
  • My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun
    (Ironic reading)
  • As any she belied with false compare. (Animation)

5
Metaphor
  • A figure of speech in which a term or phrase is
    applied to something to which it is not literally
    applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as
    in A mighty fortress is our God.
    http//dictionary.reference.com/browse/metaphor

6
Metaphor
  • Trite metaphor predictable, unoriginal.
  • Dead metaphor commonly used, creates no image.
  • Absolute metaphor an analogy that cannot be
    replaced or changed (Light for truth).
  • Extended metaphor (conceit)
  • developed at length (ex., throughout a poem).

7
John Donne. The Flea
  • John Donne (1574-1631)
  • English poet, lawyer, Anglican priest.
  • Famous for his elaborate metaphors (conceits) and
    paradoxes (ex. Who are a little wise the best
    fools be).
  • The most notable of the Metaphysical poets.

8
Robert Frost. Design
  •   I found a dimpled spider, fat and white,On a
    white heal-all, holding up a mothLike a white
    piece of rigid satin cloth --Assorted characters
    of death and blightMixed ready to begin the
    morning right,Like the ingredients of a witches'
    broth --A snow-drop spider, a flower like a
    froth,And dead wings carried like a paper
    kite.What had that flower to do with being
    white,The wayside blue and innocent
    heal-all?What brought the kindred spider to that
    height,Then steered the white moth thither in
    the night?What but design of darkness to
    appall?--If design govern in a thing so small.

9
Metonymy
  • A figure of speech that consists of the use of
    the name of one object or concept for that of
    another to which it is related, or of which it is
    a part, as scepter for sovereignty, or the
    bottle for strong drink, or count heads (or
    noses) for count people. http//dictionary.ref
    erence.com/browse/metonymy

10
Synecdoche
  • A figure of speech in which
  • a part is used for the whole (sail for ship)
  • or the whole for a part (buy some chicken)
  • container for its content (Have a glass!)
  • material for a thing it is made of (steel for
    sword)
  • a general class for a specific member (bug for
    any insect)
  • or a specific member for a general class (soda
    pop).

11
Hyperbole and Litotes
  • Hyperbole
  • Exaggeration that aims to create an emphatic
    effect.
  • Litotes
  • Emphatic understatement. Can involve a double
    negation (ex., Not bad).

12
Personification and Oxymoron
  • Personification
  • An artistic device of representing an inanimate
    object or an abstract idea as a living creature
    or a person.
  •  Oxymoron
  • A combination of seemingly contradictory words
    (Dry wine).

13
Sound Rhythm
  • A regular recurrence of sounds.
  • Can be created by repeated words, parallel
    constructions.
  • Can be maintained visually, with a chain of
    stanzas (groupings of lines within a poem
    separated by a space).

14
Rhythm
  • The most obvious function of the line-break is
    rhythmic it can record the slight (but
    meaningful) hesitations between word and word
    that are characteristic of the minds dance among
    perceptions but which are not noted by
    grammatical punctuation.
  • Denise Levertov

15
Poetic Rhythm
  • Repetition of stresses and pauses.
  • Created by metre the recurrence of regular units
    of stressed and unstressed syllables.
  • Stressed (accented) syllable emphasized more
    than another.
  • Foot a group of syllables with a fixed pattern
    of stresses.

16
Types of metrical feet
  • Rising metres
  • Iamb (unstressed stressed)
  • Anapest (two unstressed one stressed)
  • Falling metres
  • Trochee (stressed unstressed)
  • Dactyl (one unstressed two stressed)

17
Metrical Patterns
  • Measured by the number of feet in a line
  • Monometer (1)
  • Dimeter (2)
  • Trimeter (3)
  • Tetrameter (4)
  • Pentameter (5)
  • Hexameter (6)
  • Heptameter (7)
  • Octameter (8)
  • Iambic pentameter is the most common metre in
    English poetry, rhymed and unrhymed.
  • Metrical patterns can carry certain meanings of
    their own based on the way they sound and the
    memory of their usage in poetry.

18
Metrical Line
  • Caesura a pause in the rhythm within a line.
  • Ex. Two loves I have II of comfort and
    despair.
  • (Shakespeare)
  • End-stopped line ends with a pause.
  • Run-on line spills to the next line without a
    strong pause. This device is called enjambment.
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