Poetry speaks figuratively, using language artfully in order express “things oft thought but ne’er so well expressed,” as the poet Alexander Pope once said.The literal meaning of the words must be grasped and then taken in or felt inwardly as we allow them to play on our imaginations and emotions.Figures of speech called metaphors and similes compare suggested or implied possibilities to literal meanings, often stating truths that more literal language cannot communicate.These are some of the many poetic devices that make meaning happen in a poem. Like short stories, poems also devise speakers, settings, or themes to call attention to or emphasize something. See your textbook and the poetry worksheets associated with this unit for more information about the elements of poetry.
To write about a poem, you must first read it aloud to yourself. Open up your sense gates – see, sense and feel how the language makes things happen for you. Read it again.Then, do your best to summarize it. Who’s speaking, about what? Is there a topic? A scene? An audience? In a 1-4 sentence paragraph that opens with the author’s name and the poem’s title, summarize the poem’s literal meaning to the best of your ability. In the final sentence of the paragraph, make a claim (a thesis) about the overall meaning or impact of the poem, to your way of thinking. In a second paragraph, follow up on this point and compose a response to the poem that interprets how its images, poetic devices, form or tone enables you to interpret its meaning. Use quotes from the poem itself, where possible. What’s the poem’s take-away message or theme? Why do you think so? Keep these Summary/Responses short! Do not use the internet for this exercise. Find the three poems for this exercise HERE .
Compose a separate summary/response essay for each of the poems listed below. Then, combine the three assigned essays together into one document and submit them in fulfillment of the required Unit Three Lab Exercise.
1. “First Poem for You” by Kim Addonizio (1954-- )
Read the poem aloud to yourself, letting its images play over your imagination. Then compose a brief 300 word Summary/Response essay in which you consider the power of the images in the poem. In your response paragraph, consider how the images in the poem comment on the new and unfamiliar feelings the speaker may have about this apparently new relationship? Quote at least one image in your response, one that helps us understand how you see it. Do some of the images work as metaphors for the speaker’s uncertain exploration of this apparently new relationship?
2. “This is Just to Say” by William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)
For this poem, read the poem aloud to yourself at least twice before composing a brief 250 word Summary/Response essay. In the summary, consider the literal meaning of the poem. What happens? In a second paragraph, the response, consider the figurative (implied) meaning of the speaker’s words. In your response, concentrate on how the figurative meanings influence the literal meaning of the language? What’s the point the speaker is really trying to make? Why do you think so?
3. “Ozymandias” by Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)
For this poem, also read the poem aloud to yourself at least twice, letting its images play over your imagination. Then compose a brief 250 word Summary/Response essay in which you consider, first, the landscape described by the speaker to an unnamed audience. What specific landscape is this? Summarize the “where” of the poem and draw out a point (a thesis) about how its images create possible meanings. In a second paragraph, consider the tone or attitude the speaker takes towards this landscape. What is it and how does that shape the message you take away from the poem?
COMBINE ALL THREE MINI-ESSAYS into ONE DOCUMENT. Separate the three mini-essays by a double space and let the poet’s name and/or title of the poem precede each essay.
First Poem for You
BY KIM ADDONIZIO (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. (1964 -- )
I like to touch your tattoos in complete
darkness, when I can’t see them. I’m sure of
where they are, know by heart the neat
lines of lightning pulsing just above
your nipple, can find, as if by instinct, the blue
swirls of water on your shoulder where a serpent
twists, facing a dragon. When I pull you
to me, taking you until we’re spent
and quiet on the sheets, I love to kiss
the pictures in your skin. They’ll last until
you’re seared to ashes; whatever persists
or turns to pain between us, they will still
be there. Such permanence is terrifying.
So I touch them in the dark; but touch them, trying.
Kim Addonizio, “First Poem for You” from The Philosopher’s Club. Copyright © 1994 by Kim Addonizio. Used by permission of BOA Editions, Ltd, www.boaeditions.org.
Source: The Philosopher’s Club (BOA Editions Ltd., 1994)
This Is Just To Say
BY WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. (1883-1963)
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
William Carlos Williams, ''This Is Just to Say'' from The Collected Poems: Volume I, 1909-1939, copyright ©1938 by New Directions Publishing Corp. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.
Ozymandias
By PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. (1792-1822)
I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
This poem is in the public domain.
Poetry speaks figuratively, using language artfully in order express “things oft thought but ne’er
so well expressed,” as the poet Alexander Pope once said.The literal meaning of the words must
be grasped and then taken in or felt inwardly as we allow them
to play on our imaginations and
emotions.Figures of speech called metaphors and similes compare suggested or implied
possibilities to literal meanings, often stating truths that more literal language cannot
communicate.These are some of the many poetic de
vices that make meaning happen in a poem.
Like short stories, poems also devise speakers, settings, or themes to call attention to or
emphasize something. See your textbook and the poetry worksheets associated with this unit for
more information about the
elements of poetry.
To write about a poem, you must first read it aloud to yourself. Open up your sense gates
–
see,
sense and feel how the language makes things happen for you. Read it again.Then, do your best
to summarize it. Who’s speaking, about what?
Is there a topic? A scene? An audience? In a 1
-
4
sentence paragraph that opens with the author’s name and the poem’s title,
summarize the
poem’s literal meaning to the best of your ability.
In the final sentence of the paragraph,
make
a claim (a thesis) about the overall meaning or impact of the poem
, to your way of thinking.
In a second paragraph, follow up on this point and
compose a response to the poem that
interprets
how its images, poe
tic devices, form or tone enables you to interpret its
meaning.
Use quotes from the poem itself, where possible. What’s the poem’s take
-
away
message or theme? Why do you think so?
Keep these Summary/Responses short!
Do not use
the internet for this exerci
se
. Find the three poems for this exercise
HERE
.
Compose a separate summary/response essay for each of the poems listed below. Then,
combine the three a
ssigned essays together into one document and submit them in
fulfillment of the required Unit Three Lab Exercise.
1.
“First Poem for You” by Kim Addonizio
(1954
--
)
Read the poem aloud to yourself, letting its images play over your imagination. Then compo
se a
brief
300 word Summary/Response essay in which you consider the power of the images in the
poem. In your response paragraph, consider how the images in the poem comment on the new
and unfamiliar feelings the speaker may have about this apparently
new relationship? Quote at
least one image in your response, one that helps us understand how you see it. Do some of the
images work as metaphors for the speaker’s uncertain exploration of this apparently new
relationship?
2.
“
This is Just to Say” by Willia
m Carlos Williams
(1883
-
1963)
Poetry speaks figuratively, using language artfully in order express “things oft thought but ne’er
so well expressed,” as the poet Alexander Pope once said.The literal meaning of the words must
be grasped and then taken in or felt inwardly as we allow them to play on our imaginations and
emotions.Figures of speech called metaphors and similes compare suggested or implied
possibilities to literal meanings, often stating truths that more literal language cannot
communicate.These are some of the many poetic devices that make meaning happen in a poem.
Like short stories, poems also devise speakers, settings, or themes to call attention to or
emphasize something. See your textbook and the poetry worksheets associated with this unit for
more information about the elements of poetry.
To write about a poem, you must first read it aloud to yourself. Open up your sense gates – see,
sense and feel how the language makes things happen for you. Read it again.Then, do your best
to summarize it. Who’s speaking, about what? Is there a topic? A scene? An audience? In a 1-4
sentence paragraph that opens with the author’s name and the poem’s title, summarize the
poem’s literal meaning to the best of your ability. In the final sentence of the paragraph, make
a claim (a thesis) about the overall meaning or impact of the poem, to your way of thinking.
In a second paragraph, follow up on this point and compose a response to the poem that
interprets how its images, poetic devices, form or tone enables you to interpret its
meaning. Use quotes from the poem itself, where possible. What’s the poem’s take-away
message or theme? Why do you think so? Keep these Summary/Responses short! Do not use
the internet for this exercise. Find the three poems for this exercise HERE.
Compose a separate summary/response essay for each of the poems listed below. Then,
combine the three assigned essays together into one document and submit them in
fulfillment of the required Unit Three Lab Exercise.
1. “First Poem for You” by Kim Addonizio (1954-- )
Read the poem aloud to yourself, letting its images play over your imagination. Then compose a
brief 300 word Summary/Response essay in which you consider the power of the images in the
poem. In your response paragraph, consider how the images in the poem comment on the new
and unfamiliar feelings the speaker may have about this apparently new relationship? Quote at
least one image in your response, one that helps us understand how you see it. Do some of the
images work as metaphors for the speaker’s uncertain exploration of this apparently new
relationship?
2. “This is Just to Say” by William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)