Poetic Devices in Poetry
Poetry has emotion, imagery, significance, beauty, dignity, rhythm, sometimes rhyme, a distinct arrangement which can include inversion, and concreteness in its images.
Poetic Devices in Poetry
One way to attain the qualities so needful to production words poetic is through the use of poetry devices. We won't begin to cover all the known poetic devices or terms. Rather we'll discuss and use some of the more ordinarily known and used ones.
Below are the more ordinarily used poetic devices and terms. Hopefully, with the examples given, every person can great understand some of the ways to make poetry, well, more poetic. The examples used are my own poetry and are copyrighted in my name.
Poetry devices (a major sampling):
alliteration: the repetition of a starting sound.
Rain reigns almost through the day.
Raging anger from the sky
Partners prattle of tormented tears
From clouds wondering why
Lightning tears their souls apart.
In the first two lines, the r sound is repeated. In the third line p starts two adjoining words.
allusion: a casual reference to man or something in history or literature that creates a reasoning picture.
A common Woman
No Helen of Troy she,
Taking the world by war,
But a woman in plain paper wrapped
With a heart of love untapped,
She waits, yearning for her destiny
Whether it be a he on a charger white
Or one riding behind a garbage truck.
Perhaps instead a room of students
Lurks in the shadows of her life
Needing her interest to be shown.
Yet other concerns may call
No, no Helen of Troy she,
But a woman set the world to tame
Wherever she may be.
Helen of Troy brings to mind a woman so gorgeous that two countries went to war over her.
analogy: the comparison of two things by explaining one to show how it is similar to the other.
Day's Journey
The day dawns as a journey.
First one leaves the center on a train,
Rushing past other places
Without a pause or stop,
Watching faces blur through the window,
No time to say goodbye.
On and on the train does speed
Until the line's end one sees,
Another sunset down
Without any continuing memories.
The whole poem creates analogy, the comparison of a day and a train journey.
caesura: the pausing or stopping within a line of poetry caused by needed punctuation.
Living, breathing apathy
Saps energy, will, interest,
Leaving no desire to win.
All that's left are ashes,
Cinders of what might have been.
The punctuation within the lines (in this case, all commas) are the caesura, not the punctuation at the ends of the lines.
enjambement: the continuation of understanding from one line of poetry to the next without punctuation needed at the end of the old line(s).
Looking through the eyes
Of wonder, of delight,
Children view their world
With trust, with hope
That only life will change.
Enjambement is found at the end of lines 1, 3, and 4 because punctuation was not needed in those places.
hyperbole: ultimate embroidery for effect.
Giants standing tall as mountains
Towering over midgets
Bring eyes above the common ground
To heights no longer small.
Arms of tree trunks wrap
In relax gentle, softness
Unthought of due to size,
Yet welcomed in their strength.
Giants aren't truly tall as mountains, nor are arms tree trunks, but the use of the embroidery helps generate the image wanted.
metaphor: the comparison of two unlike things by saying one is the other.
Sunshine, hope aglow,
Streams from heaven's store
Bringing smiles of warming grace
Which lighten heavy loads.
Clouds are ships in full sail
Racing across the sky-blue sea.
Wind fills the cotton canvas
Pushing them added away from me.
In the first stanza, sunshine is compared to hope while in the second, clouds are compared to ships.
metonymy: the substitution of a word for one with which it is intimately associated.
Scandals peep from every window,
Hide behind each hedge,
Waiting to pounce on the unwary,
As the White House cringes in dismay.
White House is used in place of the President or the government, and readers understand what is meant without exactly who is being directly addressed.
onomatopoeia: the sound a thing makes
Roaring with the pain
Caused by flashing lightning strikes,
Thunders yells, "Booooom! Craaaashhhh! Yeow!"
Then mumbles, rumbling on its way.
Grrrr, the lion's cry echoes
Through the jungle's den
Causing creatures small
To scurry to their holes.
Roaring, rumbling, cry are not examples of onomatopoeia, but are verb forms. Boooom, craaaashhh, yeow, and grrrrr are examples of onomatapoeia.
oxymoron: the use of contradictory terms (together) for effect.
Freezing heat of hate
Surrounds the heart
Stalling, killing kindness,
Bringing destruction to the start.
Freezing and heat are contradictory, opposites, yet the two together generate a reasoning image.
personification: the giving of human traits to non-human things incapable of having those traits.
Anger frowns and snarls,
Sending bolts of fire from darkest night
That bring no brilliance,
Rather only added blackness of sight.
Frowning and snarling are human traits that anger cannot experience; however using them as traits for anger creates the imagery needed.
simile: the comparison of two unlike things by saying one is like or as the other.
Sunshine, like hope aglow,
Streams from heaven's sky
Bringing smiles of warming grace
On zephyr whispers like a sigh.
Clouds are like ships in full sail
Racing across the sky-blue sea.
Wind fills the cotton canvas
Pushing them added away from me.
These two stanzas of poetry and those for metaphor are nearly identical. Both metaphor and simile are comparisons of unlike things, but metaphor states one thing is the other while simile says one is like the other, or as the other.
symbol: something which represents something else also itself.
The dove, with olive subject in beak,
Glides over all the land
Searching for a place to light.
Storms of war linger on every hand,
Everywhere the hawk does fight.
The dove is a stamp of peace, and the hawk is a stamp of war. Using them in poetry gives an image without having to explicate in detail.
Other terms:
elegy: a poem of lament (extreme sorrow, such as caused by death)
free verse: a poem without whether a rhyme or a rhythm scheme, although rhyme may be used, just without a pattern.
blank verse: un-rhymed lines of iambic pentameter (ten syllables with all even numbered syllables accented)
imagery: the use of words to generate a reasoning picture
mood: the emotional corollary of a poem or a story
Understanding and using these devices and terms can help enhance and progress poetry. Imagery is needful for vivid poetry, and devices help establish imagery.
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