G12. Critical Reading Identify the letter of the choice that best answers the question.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "G12. Critical Reading Identify the letter of the choice that best answers the question."

Transcription

1 G12 Critical Reading Identify the letter of the choice that best answers the question. 1. What is the basic form of a sonnet? a. fourteen lines b. eight lines c. twelve lines d. six lines plus a rhyming sestet 2. In Spenser's Sonnet 1, the speaker says the pages in his love's hands are Like captives trembling at the victor's sight. What theme does this line support? a. The speaker's poem is not worthy of his love. b. The speaker is a hopeless captive at the mercy of his love. c. The speaker's beloved is cruel to treat him the way she does. d. The speaker's beloved is a better poet than he is. 3. In Spenser's Sonnet 75, the speaker writes his love's name in the sand. What is his main message to his love in this poem? a. He will love her forever. b. His poem will make their love immortal. c. Their love has survived great suffering. d. The pleasures of love end with death. 4. What are the leaves in these lines from Spenser's Sonnet 1? Happy ye leaves when as those lily hands, / Which hold my life in their dead doing might, / Shall handle you. a. tree leaves the woman is holding b. the woman's hair c. the pages containing the speaker's poems d. the speaker's hands 5. These lines are from Spenser's Sonnet 1: When ye behold that angel's blessed look, / My soul's long lacked food, my heaven's bliss. Restating this thought in a simpler way is an example of what? a. predicting b. inferring c. paraphrasing d. summarizing 6. Which is the best paraphrase of this line from Spenser's Sonnet 35?

2 All this world's glory seemeth vain to me. a. The things world considers great in life seem meaningless to me. b. The world is a great place to live. c. I have not received the glory and honor I have earned. d. The wonders of this world are too great to enjoy in a short life. 7. In Sidney's Sonnet 31, the speaker addresses the moon. In Sonnet 39, the speaker talks about sleep. What theme do both of these sonnets share? a. the sorrow of being alone b. the hopelessness of love c. human suffering d. the fulfillment of love 8. In Sidney's Sonnet 31, what does the moon symbolize? a. lost chances b. natural beauty c. all life on earth d. his feelings 9. In Sidney's Sonnet 39, the speaker asks sleep to make in me those civil wars to cease. What does he mean by civil wars? a. a quarrel between the speaker and Stella b. the speaker's anger toward society c. the war going on in England between the common people and the king d. the conflict and despair he feels because of his love for Stella 10. In Sidney's Sonnet 31, the speaker addresses the moon. In Sonnet 39, the speaker addresses sleep. What characteristic of a sonnet sequence do these two poems display? a. Each poem leaves the love unfulfilled. b. Each poem uses the heavens symbolically. c. Each poem presents realistic people who share their feelings. d. Each poem presents a speaker who is not sure if he is in love. 11. How is a Spenserian sonnet different from a Petrarchan sonnet? a. A Spenserian sonnet was always written as part of a sequence. b. A Spenserian sonnet deals with love and the natural world. c. A Spenserian sonnet has a different rhyme scheme. d. A Spenserian sonnet has a different number of lines. 12. Which characteristic of Shakespearean sonnets is found in Sonnets 29, 106, 116, and 130? a. fourteen lines plus a rhymed couplet b. an idealized view of love and life c. a conclusion in the final two lines d. an irregular rhyme scheme

3 13. What is the theme of Sonnet 29? a. The speaker must learn to live with his disappointments. b. The memory of the speaker's beloved makes up for all of life's troubles. c. Life's greatest disappointment is to live alone. d. Even a hopeless love is better than any other experience. 14. How do the speaker's feelings change between the beginning and the end of Sonnet 29? a. They change from hopeless to thankful. b. They change from fearful to courageous. c. They change from joyful to sorrowful. d. They change from hopeful to grateful. 15. What is the speaker's problem that is revealed in the three quatrains of Sonnet 29? a. His beloved has left him. b. His beloved does not return his love. c. He is absorbed in feelings of self-pity. d. He is a frustrated artist. 16. In Sonnet 106, Shakespeare talks about his beloved's beauty. What does he mean when he says we lack tongues to praise? a. We do not like to make complements. b. We do not have the skill to describe her beauty. c. We are no longer able to say romantic things. d. We do not say certain things out loud. 17. How does the sonnet form affect the content of the poem? a. It uses chronological order in the first three quatrains. b. It follows the same rhyme scheme throughout. c. It shortens ideas so they fit into four-line quatrains. d. It requires that its content be about romantic love. 18. Where does the rhymed couplet appear in Shakespearean sonnets? a. at the end of each quatrain b. at the beginning of each quatrain c. in the first two lines of the poem d. in the final two lines of the poem 19. How does Shakespeare describe love in Sonnet 116? a. Love is eternal. b. Love is humorous. c. Love is brief. d. Love is harsh. 20. What does the speaker mean in Sonnet 116 in these final lines?

4 If this be error, and upon me proved, / I never writ, nor no man ever loved. a. If you think I am mistaken in this, then you also won't believe that I am a writer or that men fall in love. b. What I've said is not a mistake because I am a writer and men have fallen in love. c. I may be mistaken in what I've said, but I am still a writer and men still fall in love. d. You don't have to believe me, but you must believe I am a writer and that men fall in love. 21. Which lines rhyme in each Shakespearean sonnet? a. lines 1 and 2; lines 3 and 4 b. lines 1 and 4; lines 2 and 3 c. lines 1 and 3; lines 2 and 4 d. lines 3 and What is the tone of Sonnet 130? a. hopeful and happy b. anxious and sad c. serious and angry d. humorous and realistic 23. What does the speaker do in each quatrain of Sonnet 130? a. He praises his beloved. b. He makes fun of his beloved. c. He speaks to his beloved. d. He laments the loss of his beloved. 24. In The Passionate Shepherd to His Love, what does the speaker urge his love to do? a. forgive him for loving another b. run away with him to the city c. come live with him in the country d. help him feed his flocks 25. In The Passionate Shepherd to His Love, what is the speaker's attitude toward the woman he loves? a. anxious b. adoring c. confident d. considerate 26. Which word best describes the setting in The Passionate Shepherd to His Love? a. imperfect b. primitive c. harmonious d. idealized

5 27. What are two things the shepherd says he will do for his beloved in The Passionate Shepherd to His Love? a. build her a house and start a garden b. sing songs and give her a feast c. make a bed of roses and a gown of wool d. give her jewels and silken skirts 28. Why does the nymph reject the shepherd in The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? a. Time will pass and the joys of youth will fade. b. She has no desire to live in the country. c. She loves another and will not leave him. d. She grew tired of waiting and married another. 29. What is the speaker's attitude in The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? a. agreeable b. passionate c. realistic d. insulted 30. What is the speaker's attitude toward love and youth in The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? a. Youth never experiences true love. b. Youth is the only time for love. c. Love and youth are endless. d. Love and youth are brief. 31. What does the speaker mean in these lines from The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? Thy gowns, thy shoes, thy beds of roses, / Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies / Soon break, soon wither, soon forgotten, / In folly ripe, in reason rotten. a. None of these things matter if love is true. b. All of these things wear out in time, as does love itself. c. The reasons for these things have changed. d. Those are foolish and illogical ideas. 32. What is the speaker describing in these lines from The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? Time drives the flocks from field to fold, / When rivers rage and rocks grow cold, / And Philomel becometh dumb. a. the coming of winter b. the end of love c. a new pleasure to experience d. marriage 33. What does the speaker in The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd think of the shepherd's offer?

6 a. She thinks he has offered too little. b. She thinks it is appealing. c. She thinks it makes no sense. d. She thinks he loves her too much. 34. What does the speaker mean in this line from The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd? But could youth last and love still breed. a. As people get older, love fades. b. Young people do not know the meaning of love. c. Love will outlast time. d. Only young people are able to love completely. Vocabulary and Grammar 35. Which word best completes this sentence? The poet had worked all night to complete the sonnet, but at dawn it remained unfinished. Defeated, his spirit at his desk. a. deigned b. devised c. assayed d. languished 36. Which word in this sentence is a subordinating conjunction? Because the ocean washed his love s name away, the speaker is pained. a. washed b. Because c. love s d. speaker 37. Which sentence uses the underlined vocabulary word correctly? a. He applied an assay to the burn on his hand. b. Sick from love, the young man grew wan. c. She would not devise to greet him at the door. d. In despair, the handsome young man deigned at home. 38. Which word in this sentence is a subordinating conjunction? The speaker feels the Moon is sad although she is in love. a. speaker b. feels c. sad d. although 39. The word deign means.

7 a. to lower oneself b. to make plans c. to govern d. to heal 40. Which of these sentences includes a subordinating conjunction? a. The speaker talks to the Moon, but the Moon does not answer. b. The Moon looks sad as she climbs the night sky. c. The speaker believes that the Moon can judge lovers. d. Although the speaker talks to the Moon, he does not expect an answer. 41.Which of these sentences includes a subordinating conjunction? a. The speaker longs for sleep because he does not want to think of his love. b. The speaker wants to sleep, but he cannot, and it torments him. c. The speaker loves Stella, and he sees her even when she is not there. d. The speaker thinks of sleep as a balm for his sore heart. 42. Which word or phrase is closest in meaning to the word wan? a. wit b. to grow weak c. pale d. soothing 43. According to Sidney in Sonnet 39, sleep is a for sorrow. a. languor b. balm c. spright d. deign 44. Which of the following sentences uses sullen correctly? a. The audience gave a sullen gasp as the play began. b. The necklace was sullen, and he could not afford it. c. A sullen look came over his face, and he shook with laughter. d. He sat with a sullen expression after his beloved told him good-bye. 45. Which word is closest in meaning to impediments? a. statues b. obstacles c. arguments d. violations 46. Which sentence uses the underlined vocabulary word correctly? a. Time alters everyone's looks. b. Her beauty was no chronicle to his feelings for her. c. He knew that in the impediments of history, there had been no one more lovely. d. In prefiguring the history of love, he knew she had no equal.

8 47. Which word is most nearly the same in meaning as sullen? a. bright b. dull c. dismal d. shy 48. The word scope means. a. record b. Range c. obstacle d. prediction 49. By merely coloring his hair, he completely his appearance. a. prefigures b. remedies c. Alters d. impedes 50. In Sonnet 106, the speaker claims that earlier praise has prefigured, or, his love. a. molded b. created c. destroyed d. suggested 51. In Sonnet 116, when the speaker says he does not want impediments to love, he means. a. answers b. acceptance c. refusals d. obstacles 52. Which words are participles that can be used as adjectives in the blanks of this sentence? Poets are known for their hearts and souls. a. searching; tortured b. warm; colorful c. big; sensitive d. expansive; tragic 53.Which sentence uses a vocabulary word incorrectly? a. The Philomel sings one of the most melodious songs of any bird. b. The nymph warned of a reckoning when winter approached. c. Then the flowers will wither. d. The madrigals will dance every May. 54.Which word best completes this sentence?

9 The nymph feels that love turns to. a. madrigal b. reckon c. move d. wither 55. Which word is closest in meaning to wither? a. grow b. bloom c. darken d. fade 56. Which word best completes this sentence? The choir sang a at the concert. a. reckoning b. madrigal c. gall. d. melodious 57.Which word is a synonym for madrigals? a. mornings b. nightingales c. songs d. gowns 58.What does reckoning mean in these lines from The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd? wanton fields/to wayward winter reckoning yields. a. guessing b. accounting c. changing d. fading 59. Which of these details from the two poems are most likely to wither? a. a thousand fragrant posies b. melodious birds c. raging rivers d. coral clasps 60.Which word is a synonym for melodious? a. Tasty b. Humming c. Tuneful d. Loud

10 Critical Reading Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 61. Which is the best paraphrase for the following lines from Sonnet 1? Those lamping eyes will deign sometimes to look And read the sorrows of my dying spright, Written with tears in heart's close bleeding book. a. Those eyes that look like large lamps sometimes look like blood and tears. b. Those eyes sometimes look and see my sad spirit, tearful and full of sorrow. c. Those eyes see my sorrowful nymphlike self, covering my books with blood and tears. d. Those lamps that are like eyes sometimes give the illusion that the book in the corner is covered with blood and tears. 62. The message that the speaker of Sonnet 75 wishes to convey to his love is that a. he will love her for eternity. b. his verse will immortalize their love. c. the pleasure of love is worth its suffering. d. the pleasures of love must end with death. 63. One way to identify the form of a Spenserian sonnet is by its a. unrhymed iambic pentameter. b. four-beat line and aabb rhyme scheme. c. abab bcbc cdcd ee rhyme scheme. d. ababbcbcc rhyme scheme. 64. How does a Spenserian sonnet differ from a Petrarchan sonnet? a. The Spenserian sonnet contains a different number of lines. b. Spenser's sonnets were written as part of a sequence. c. The Spenserian sonnet sometimes has no break between the octave and the sestet. d. The Spenserian sonnet deals with love and the natural world. 65. The image of pages in love's soft bands, / Like captives trembling at the victor's sight from Spenser's Sonnet 1 reinforces the theme that a. his poetry is not worthy of her. b. his beloved has won the argument between them. c. his beloved is cruel. d. like the pages, he too is a hopeless captive at the mercy of his beloved. 66. The following lines come from Spenser's Sonnet 1:...that angel's blessed look, / My soul's long lacked food, my heaven's bliss. Restating these lines in simpler words is an example of

11 a. recognizing historical context. b. paraphrasing. c. predicting. d. recognizing speaker's situation. 67. The unifying theme of Sonnet 31 and Sonnet 39 is a. natural beauty. b. hopeless love. c. relief from pain. d. endless suffering. 68. Which of the following is a characteristic of Sidney's Sonnets 31 and 39? a. The speaker is engaged in an internal conflict. b. A heavenly body stimulates the speaker's thoughts. c. The speaker accepts that his love is lost. d. The speaker sees Stella's image in his sleep. 69. In Sonnet 31, Sidney uses the moon to a. explain life on earth. b. reflect his own feelings. c. emphasize his power. d. symbolize all people. 70. In the line Is constant love deemed there but want of wit? from Sonnet 31, Sidney is suggesting that a. true love leads to unhappiness. b. no love can live forever. c. love and intelligence are similar. d. only fools can hope to find true love. 71. Sidney's Sonnets 31 and 39 illustrate what characteristic of the sonnet sequence? a. The poet is scorned by his lover. b. Relationships are presented in a true-to-life way. c. The heavens are employed symbolically. d. The ultimate outcome is left unresolved. 72. Which of the following is the best paraphrase of these lines from Sidney's Sonnet 31? What, may it be that even in heavenly place / That busy archer his sharp arrows tries? a. Is it true that they practice archery in heaven? b. What kind of sharp arrows fly in heaven? c. Is it true that people fall in love in heaven? d. Does an archer fix his arrows in heaven? 73. In Sidney's Sonnet 39, the speaker asks sleep to make in me those civil wars to cease. Which of the following best describes the civil wars the speaker suffers?

12 a. the inner turmoil caused by love b. the quarrel between the speaker and his beloved c. the anger the speaker feels toward society d. Stella's love for another man 74. In Sonnet 29, the speaker changes from a. fearful to confident. b. hopeful to resigned. c. bitter to defiant. d. despondent to thankful. 75. In Sonnet 29, what is emphasized in Shakespeare's three-quatrain form? a. his jealousy b. his feelings of love c. his self-pity d. his sense of hope 76. In Sonnet 106, all you prefiguring means a. ancestors' understanding. b. current writers' answering. c. past writers' foreshadowing. d. readers' guessing. 77.Which of the following phrases from Sonnet 106 best supports Shakespeare's purpose for writing the sonnet? a. So all their praises are but prophecies b. Of this our time c. In praise of ladies dead d. I see their antique pen would have express'd 78. Which of the following best describes the theme of Sonnet 116? a. True love is transient. b. True love never dies. c. Love guides its lovers. d. All love changes. 79. In Sonnet 116, Shakespeare describes love as. a. fickle b. unique c. humorous d. long-lasting 80. Which saying best describes the theme of Sonnet 130? a. Love conquers all.

13 b. Truth is beauty. c. Love is blind. d. Beauty is skin deep. 81. The tone of Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 is both a. serious and bleak. b. cheerful and optimistic. c. hopeful and exaggerated. d. lighthearted and realistic. 82.In each self-contained quatrain in Sonnet 130, the speaker the features of his beloved. a. praises b. examines c. compares to nature d. berates 83. What frequent characteristic of a Shakespearean sonnet is exemplified by Sonnets 29, 106, 116, and 130? a. a conclusion presented in the final couplet b. a hopeful and uplifting tone c. an idealized view of love and life d. an inconsistent rhyme scheme 84. Unlike the Petrarchan or Spenserian sonnet form, the Shakespearean sonnet form a. contains three quatrains and a couplet. b. is written in iambic pentameter. c. contains an initial octave and final sestet. d. concludes with an alexandrine. 85. The form of the sonnet influences its contents by a. shortening thoughts to fit quatrains and couplets. b. using chronological order. c. following a rhyme scheme. d. using the Petrarchan structure. 86. Which of the following is a characteristic of a Shakespearean sonnet? a. six iambic feet to the line b. a rhyme scheme of abab cdcd efef gg c. four quatrains d. groupings of eight and six lines 87. You can relate structure to theme by thinking of a sonnet as a. a fortune cookie. b. a gemstone in an elegant case. c. a symphony.

14 d. a tote bag. 88.Who is the speaker in Marlowe's poem? a. a simple shepherd b. a passionate poet c. a melodious bird d. an Elizabethan spy 89. What sort of pleasures does Marlowe's speaker offer? a. simple rural pleasures b. the exciting pleasures of a life of adventure c. the sophisticated pleasures of life at court d. all of the above 90. Which adjective most clearly describes the setting in Marlowe's poem? a. realistic b. idealized c. complex d. modern 91. Whom does the speaker in Marlowe's poem address? a. an Elizabethan actress b. a singer of madrigals c. a shepherdess that he loves d. Elizabeth, queen of England 92. Which of these modern readers is most likely to identify with the speaker in Marlowe's poem? a. a struggling farmer b. a nomadic shepherd in the Middle East c. a student of music and dance d. a young man proposing marriage 93.Which view of nature does Marlowe's poem present? a. Nature is a source of beauty and joy. b. Nature is a wild and dangerous force that must be tamed. c. Nature is full of scientific phenomena that must be studied. d. Nature is a harsh force indifferent to human suffering. 94. In what way does Marlowe's poem express the theme of carpe diem? a. It praises nature as a source of beauty and comfort. b. It accepts the concept of a paradise on earth. c. It promotes the idea of making the most of life while one can. d. It portrays an idealistic world, rather than a realistic one. 95. How is Raleigh's poem related to Marlowe's poem?

15 a. Raleigh's poem is a response to Marlowe's poem. b. Raleigh's poem was the inspiration for Marlowe's poem. c. Raleigh's poem is a modern translation of Marlowe's poem. d. Writing independently, Raleigh came up with a poem very similar to Marlowe's poem. 96. Who is the speaker in Raleigh's poem? a. the shepherd speaking in Marlowe's poem b. the passionate poet speaking in Marlowe's poem c. the shepherdess addressed in Marlowe's poem d. a nymph who overhears the Marlowe's speaker addressing his beloved 97. What does the speaker in Raleigh's poem point out about many of the details in Marlowe's poem? a. They are very pleasant. b. They are opinion, not fact. c. They never existed. d. They will not last. 98. Which word best describes the attitude of the speaker in Raleigh's poem? a. passionate b. idealistic c. cynical d. sad 99. In this final stanza from Raleigh's poem, what does the speaker mean? But could youth last and love still breed, / Has joy no date nor age no need, / Then these delights my mind might move, / To live with thee and be thy love. a. I will live with you if you swear your love is true. b. I will live with you if you become a success in life and can actually offer me all the things you promise. c. I will live with you if you agree that we can have a large family. d. I would live with you if the love and happiness you describe could endure but it cannot Which of these modern readers is most likely to identify with the speaker in Raleigh's poem? a. a successful farmer b. someone who collects and studies plants c. someone who is deeply in love d. someone who has fallen out of love 101. Which choice best states the relationship of the two poems to the pastoral tradition? a. Both are typical of poems written in the pastoral tradition. b. Marlowe's poem is typical of poems written in the pastoral tradition, while Raleigh's poem mocks aspects of that tradition.

16 c. Raleigh's poem is typical of poems written in the pastoral tradition, while Marlowe's poem mocks aspects of that tradition. d. Neither is typical of poems written in the pastoral tradition What does the nymph in The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd think turns to gall? a. lovers hearts b. winter winds c. flocks of sheep d. D. the flowers Essay 103. Both Spenser and Sidney write about hopeless and painful love. They use various images to express this theme for example, in Sonnet 39, Sidney creates an image of fierce darts thrown by Despair to describe the lover's pain. Choose two or three similar images from the sonnets. Then, write an essay explaining how these images help develop the theme During the time of Spenser and Sidney, poets commonly portrayed the beloved ladies in their sonnet sequences as wonderfully beautiful, but beyond reach. The lover might suffer the greatest pain and despair, but he would remain forever faithful to his beloved. In an essay, explain how these characteristics are developed in the sonnets you have read. Consider these questions: How do Spenser and Sidney present the mental and emotional state of their speakers? How do they describe their speakers' devotion to their beloved? How would you describe the beloved? What does she say, and how does she behave toward the speaker? Give examples from the sonnets to support your ideas Thinking About the Essential Question: Do writers gain more by accepting or by rejecting tradition? Spenser and Sidney use the traditional form of the sonnet to write about love. In an essay, explore how the sonnet s form helps their purpose. Are they able to create a strong image of love using the sonnet form? Use examples from the poems to support your response The common practice in sonnet sequences of the time was to portray the beloved lady as extraordinarily beautiful but unreachable, while the lover was portrayed as remaining faithful to his beloved even though he endured an agony of love. Write an essay discussing these conventions in the sonnets you have read. How do Spenser and Sidney depict themselves in the different sonnets? How do they characterize their beloveds? Use specific examples that reflect these conventions The three sonnets from Spenser's sonnet sequence each describe some aspect of the speaker's love for his lady, but each focuses on a different aspect or expression of that love. Write an essay discussing these sonnets. What is the subject of each? What are the dominant images? What is the overall impression these three sonnets considered together convey about the speaker, his beloved, and their relationship? 108. Spenser and Sidney use a variety of images in their sonnets to convey the theme of hopeless and painful love. Choose two or three images from the sonnets, and write an essay explaining how each image contributes to this theme. For example, in Sonnet 39 Sidney uses the image of fierce darts thrown by Despair to describe the pain the lover feels Thinking About the Essential Question: Do writers gain more by accepting or by rejecting tradition? Spenser and Sidney use the traditional form of the sonnet to write about love. In

17 an essay, explore how the sonnet s form either helps or hinders their purpose. Are they able to create a strong image of love using the sonnet form? Use examples from the poems to support your response Sonnets 29, 106, 116, and 130 all deal with the subject of love. Write an essay in which you compare two of the sonnets and how they describe love. Answer these questions, and give examples to support your answers: How do they treat love the same? How do they treat it differently? Which presents love in the most realistic manner? Which presents love in the most idealistic manner? 111. In an essay, explain the main structure of the Shakespearean sonnet. Consider these questions: How many lines are in the sonnet, and how are they divided up? How is the line of a Shakespearean sonnet constructed? How many feet are in each line? What kind of feet are used? What is the typical rhyme scheme? How do the different parts of the sonnet work together to develop the main idea? 112. Thinking About the Essential Question: Do writers gain more by accepting or by rejecting tradition? Sonnets 29, 106, and 116 present love in traditional words and ideas, but Sonnet 130 is less traditional in its presentation of love. In an essay, explore the ways in which Sonnet 130 deviates from tradition. Cite examples from the poem to support your main points Although love is the basic theme of Sonnets 29, 106, 116, and 130, it is treated differently in each one. In an essay, discuss the different treatments of love in these sonnets. Which sonnet do you think presents the truest depiction of love? Why? Support your arguments with examples Sonnets 29 ( When in disgrace ) and 130 ( My mistress' eyes ) have ending couplets that differ in their meaning and function. Sonnet 29 ends with the lines For thy sweet love remembered such wealth brings / That then I scorn to change my state with kings. The closing lines of Sonnet 130 are And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare / As any she belied with false compare. Write an essay that explains how each couplet relates to the rest of its sonnet. How are these couplets different in this relationship? How effective is each couplet as an ending to its sonnet? 115. The idea of time plays a role in the themes of both Sonnet 106 ( When in the chronicle ) and Sonnet 116 ( Let me not to the marriage ). In an essay, contrast the very different concepts of time presented in these sonnets. What is the relationship of time to beauty in each poem? Use examples from the poems to support your ideas Thinking About the Essential Question: Do writers gain more by accepting or by rejecting tradition? Sonnets 29, 106, and 116 present love in traditional words and ideas, but Sonnet 130 is less traditional in its presentation of love. In an essay, explore the ways in which Sonnet 130 deviates from tradition and explain the effects. Do its differences make the poem more or less effective in conveying the speaker s love? Cite examples from the poem to support your main points Write an essay in which you explore the character of the speaker of one of the poems. Include a response to these questions: What is the speaker's attitude toward nature and love? What does either the shepherd think of his love or the nymph think of the shepherd? What does the speaker think is important? 118. The two poems, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love and The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd, present a kind of debate. In an essay, tell which writer, Marlowe or Raleigh, gives the more successful and convincing presentation. Give reasons for your choice and examples from the poems to support your opinion.

18 119. Thinking About the Essential Question: Does a sense of place shape literature or does literature shape a sense of place? Each of the two poems, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love and The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd, creates a sense of place through description. In an essay, describe the sense of place one of the poems creates. Use details from the poems to support your response Based on the worldviews presented in both poems, do you think the woman would be happy if she accepted the invitation? Explain your conclusions in a brief essay that cites details from both poems to support your ideas In a brief essay, explain how some of the details in both poems might support an argument for the carpediem theme Thinking About the Essential Question: Does a sense of place shape literature or does literature shape a sense of place? Each of the two poems, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love and The Nymph s Reply to the Shepherd, creates a sense of place through description. In an essay, describe the sense of place the poems create. Then explain which sense of place you feel is stronger and more convincing and why. Use details from the poems to support your response.

19

1 This is a Shakespearean sonnet. How many lines?

1 This is a Shakespearean sonnet. How many lines? A selection of renaissance poetry, with questions A Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Rough winds do shake the darling buds

More information

Sonnets. A sonnet by any other name would sound as sweet

Sonnets. A sonnet by any other name would sound as sweet Sonnets A sonnet by any other name would sound as sweet Pretest p p What is iambic pentameter? A.) A single file line of five people, each person with two feet. B.) A ten syllable line, consisting of five

More information

Sonnets. History and Form

Sonnets. History and Form Sonnets History and Form Review: history The word sonnet comes from the Italian word sonnetto, meaning little song The sonnet, as a poetic form, was created in Italy in the early 13 th Century Petrarch

More information

Free verse: poetry that does not have a regular meter or rhyme scheme.

Free verse: poetry that does not have a regular meter or rhyme scheme. Poetry Notes: Theme: A statement about life a particular work is trying to get across to the reader A theme is a sentence revealing the so what of the work A topic is one word Free verse: poetry that does

More information

Rhetorical Play between Marlowe and Ralegh. Alicia D. Fenney

Rhetorical Play between Marlowe and Ralegh. Alicia D. Fenney Rhetorical Play between Marlowe and Ralegh Alicia D. Fenney Course: English 313, Early Modern English Poetry Assignment: Compare two sixteenth-century English poems that use the carpe diem theme. Most

More information

Understanding Shakespeare: Sonnet 18 Foundation Lesson High School

Understanding Shakespeare: Sonnet 18 Foundation Lesson High School English Understanding Shakespeare: Sonnet 18 Foundation Lesson High School Prereading Activity 1. Imagine the perfect summer day. It is early summer with just the perfect mix of comfortable temperature

More information

The Sonnet Italian, Petrarchan octave octet sestet

The Sonnet Italian, Petrarchan octave octet sestet A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem in iambic pentameter with a carefully patterned rhyme scheme. Other strict, short poetic forms occur in English poetry (the sestina, the villanelle, and the haiku, for

More information

AP Lit & Comp 11/29 & 11/ Prose essay basics 2. Sonnets 3. For next class

AP Lit & Comp 11/29 & 11/ Prose essay basics 2. Sonnets 3. For next class AP Lit & Comp 11/29 & 11/30 18 1. Prose essay basics 2. Sonnets 3. For next class The Prose Essay We re going to start focusing on essay #2 for the AP exam: the prose essay. This essay requires you to

More information

Anne Hathaway By Carol Ann Duffy

Anne Hathaway By Carol Ann Duffy Anne Hathaway By Carol Ann Duffy Background and Narrative Voice Anne Hathaway was married to William Shakespeare. When Shakespeare died, despite being wealthy, all he left her in his will was his second

More information

Themes Across Cultures

Themes Across Cultures RL 4 Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in the text, including figurative meanings. RL 5 Analyze how an author s choices concerning how to structure specific parts of a text contribute

More information

O GOD, HELP ME TO HAVE A POSITIVE ATTITUE

O GOD, HELP ME TO HAVE A POSITIVE ATTITUE O GOD, HELP ME TO HAVE A POSITIVE ATTITUE A merry heart makes a cheerful countenance: but by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken. PROVERBS 15:13 Through humor, you can soften some of the worst blows

More information

Themes Across Cultures

Themes Across Cultures READING 3 Evaluate the changes in sound, form, figurative language, graphics, and dramatic structure in poetry across literary time periods. Themes Across Cultures Sonnet 90 Sonnet 292 Poetry by Francesco

More information

Sonnet - Billy Collins

Sonnet - Billy Collins Clinch 1 Poetry Explication Sarah Clinch Denise Howard Long English 301 Spring 2008 Love Procrastinated: A Study in the Use of Satire to Diminish a Sonnet Sonnet - Billy Collins All we need is fourteen

More information

Poem Structure Vocabulary

Poem Structure Vocabulary POETRY C How to Read a Poem 1. Show no FEAR! 2. Read the title. Then, stop 3. Read the whole poem. 4. Annotate. 5. Use a Dictionary 6. Identify the narrator. 7. Notice shifts or changes. 8. Figure out

More information

On Writing an Original Sonnet

On Writing an Original Sonnet On Writing an Original Sonnet If you're writing the most familiar kind of sonnet, the Shakespearean, the rhyme scheme is this: Every A rhymes with every A, every B rhymes with every B, and so forth. You'll

More information

Metaphor. Example: Life is a box of chocolates.

Metaphor. Example: Life is a box of chocolates. Poetic Terms Poetic Elements Literal Language uses words in their ordinary sense the opposite of figurative language Example: If you tell someone standing on a diving board to jump, you are speaking literally.

More information

Browse poets.org for more poetry or additional information

Browse poets.org for more poetry or additional information Poetry Packet: I Browse poets.org for more poetry or additional information HAIKU A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem with seventeen syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count. Often focusing

More information

Pastoral Poems and Sonnets KEYWORD: HML12-324A

Pastoral Poems and Sonnets KEYWORD: HML12-324A READING 3 Evaluate the changes in sound, form, figurative language, graphics, and dramatic structure in poetry across literary time periods. 7 Analyze how the author s patterns of imagery, literary allusions,

More information

Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet.

Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet. Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet. Pretest What is iambic pentameter? What are the main types of sonnets? A.) A single file line of five people, each person with two

More information

Exploring the Language of Poetry: Structure. Ms. McPeak

Exploring the Language of Poetry: Structure. Ms. McPeak Exploring the Language of Poetry: Structure Ms. McPeak Poem Structure: The Line is A Building Block The basic building-block of prose (writing that isn't poetry) is the sentence. But poetry has something

More information

Fitz s Sonnet Writing Rubric

Fitz s Sonnet Writing Rubric Fitz s Sonnet Writing Rubric It is a cruel task master who asks his or her students to "do" what he or she has not done themselves and so it is with the writing of strict sonnets but it is a task I will

More information

Romeo and Juliet: Introduction and Literary Terms

Romeo and Juliet: Introduction and Literary Terms Romeo and Juliet: Introduction and Literary Terms Plot Background: The Italian town Verona is beautiful, yet nothing can hide the ugliness of the feud between its two most prominent families. The Montagues

More information

RHYME. The repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in the poem.

RHYME. The repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in the poem. SONNETS RHYME The repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in the poem. End rhyme occurs at the ends of the line Rhyme scheme the pattern of rhymed

More information

5. Aside a dramatic device in which a character makes a short speech intended for the audience but not heard by the other characters on stage

5. Aside a dramatic device in which a character makes a short speech intended for the audience but not heard by the other characters on stage Literary Terms 1. Allegory: a form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. Ex: Animal Farm is an

More information

Here lies my wife: here let her lie! / Now she s at rest and so am I.

Here lies my wife: here let her lie! / Now she s at rest and so am I. Poetic Forms Form: the external pattern of a poem, which may not only give it an internal logical order, but also external symmetry. Stanzaic Form: Poetry written in a series of stanzas repeated units

More information

Poetry & Romeo and Juliet. Objective: Engage with the themes and conflicts that drive the play into Act III.

Poetry & Romeo and Juliet. Objective: Engage with the themes and conflicts that drive the play into Act III. Poetry & Romeo and Juliet Objective: Engage with the themes and conflicts that drive the play into Act III. Unit 5 QW #4 Write about a time that someone insulted you or did something to intentionally bother

More information

Terms to know from this M/C

Terms to know from this M/C AP Lit & Comp 3-9 17 1. Score full length M/C #1 and discuss some strategies 2. Sonnets 3. Poetry Overview Highlights 4. Prose prompt homework / read the remainder of Exodus before class on Monday. Terms

More information

Poetry 11 Terminology

Poetry 11 Terminology Poetry 11 Terminology This list of terms builds on the preceding lists you have been given at Riverside in grades 9-10. It contains all the terms you were responsible for learning in the past, as well

More information

Language Arts Literary Terms

Language Arts Literary Terms Language Arts Literary Terms Shires Memorize each set of 10 literary terms from the Literary Terms Handbook, at the back of the Green Freshman Language Arts textbook. We will have a literary terms test

More information

THE POET S DICTIONARY. of Poetic Devices

THE POET S DICTIONARY. of Poetic Devices THE POET S DICTIONARY of Poetic Devices WHAT IS POETRY? Poetry is the kind of thing poets write. Robert Frost Man, if you gotta ask, you ll never know. Louis Armstrong POETRY A literary form that combines

More information

Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary

Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary Drama Literature in performance form includes stage plays, movies, TV, and radio/audio programs. Most plays are divided into acts, with each act having an emotional peak, or

More information

Honors Literature and Short Stories Page 1 of 6. English 9 Semester 2 Week 17. Shakespeare

Honors Literature and Short Stories Page 1 of 6. English 9 Semester 2 Week 17. Shakespeare Page 1 of 6 English 9 Semester 2 Week 17 Shakespeare The Sonnet Shakespeare was a writer who wrote plays in verse form. The English sonnet form was used by other poets, however William Shakespeare seemed

More information

Sonnets English 2322: British Literature: Anglo-Saxon Mid 18th Century D. Glen Smith, instructor

Sonnets English 2322: British Literature: Anglo-Saxon Mid 18th Century D. Glen Smith, instructor 06.24.13 nglish 2322: ritish Literature: nglo-saxon Mid 18th entury. Glen Smith, instructor 1 dmund Spenser (12 199) moretti dmund Spenser crafted the Spenserian Sonnet combining the Italian sonnet with

More information

Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy

Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy Reading The Poem (3 MINUTES) Take out your poems from the last unit!!! Reflecting On The Poem (2 MINUTES) IOC (15 MINUTES) Activity! Just

More information

SOME KEY POETIC FORMS. English 4 AP Ms. Reyburn

SOME KEY POETIC FORMS. English 4 AP Ms. Reyburn SOME KEY POETIC FORMS English 4 AP Ms. Reyburn SPENSERIAN SONNET You have already reviewed Petrarchan sonnet (octave/sestet abbaabba-ccdeed) volta/turn generally at line 9 Shakespearean sonnet (3 quatrains/couplet

More information

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide William Shakespeare was born in the town of Stratford, England in. Born during the reign of Queen, Shakespeare wrote most of his works during what is known as the of English history. As well as exemplifying

More information

Sonnet Project Scoring Guide. Written Requirements

Sonnet Project Scoring Guide. Written Requirements Sonnet Project Requirements Almost all requirements of the sonnet project should be typed, and each requirement on a new page. Exceptions include marking rhyme scheme and meter and highlighting and labeling

More information

The Taxi by Amy Lowell

The Taxi by Amy Lowell Assessment Practice DIRECTIONS Read the following selections, and then answer the questions. assess Taking this practice test will help you assess your knowledge of these skills and determine your readiness

More information

Unit 3: Renaissance. Sonnets

Unit 3: Renaissance. Sonnets Unit 3: Renaissance Sonnets Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar. Percy Bysshe Shelley What is poetry? Poetry

More information

ENG2D Poetry Unit Name: Poetry Unit

ENG2D Poetry Unit Name: Poetry Unit ENG2D Poetry Unit Name: Poetry Unit Poetry Glossary (Literary Devices are found in the Language Resource) Acrostic Term Anapest (Anapestic) Ballad Blank Verse Caesura Concrete Couplet Dactyl (Dactylic)

More information

ENG1501. Tutorial letter 201/1/2013 FOUNDATIONS IN ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES. Department of English Studies ENG1501/201/1/2013

ENG1501. Tutorial letter 201/1/2013 FOUNDATIONS IN ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES. Department of English Studies ENG1501/201/1/2013 /2013 Tutorial letter 201/1/2013 FOUNDATIONS IN ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES ENG1501 Department of English Studies FEEDBACK AND EXAMINATION GUIDELINES FEEDBACK ON ASSIGNMENT 01 Dear student Your first assignment

More information

Allegory. Convention. Soliloquy. Parody. Tone. A work that functions on a symbolic level

Allegory. Convention. Soliloquy. Parody. Tone. A work that functions on a symbolic level Allegory A work that functions on a symbolic level Convention A traditional aspect of literary work such as a soliloquy in a Shakespearean play or tragic hero in a Greek tragedy. Soliloquy A speech in

More information

08-SEP. 17:00-18:00 ENGLISH (FAL) PAPER 2: SHORT STORIES, NOVEL AND DRAMA

08-SEP. 17:00-18:00 ENGLISH (FAL) PAPER 2: SHORT STORIES, NOVEL AND DRAMA COMPETITION QUESTION In the Nov. 2011 English ((FAL)) Paper 3, what type of essay is question 1.3? Technology has changed the lives of teenagers. Do you agree? A Narrative B Reflective C Argumentative

More information

Writing Shakespearean Sonnets: A How-To Guide

Writing Shakespearean Sonnets: A How-To Guide Writing Shakespearean Sonnets: A How-To Guide What are Sonnets in a nutshell? 14 lines of poetry that have 3 quatrains, 1 couplet done in the meter of iambic pentameter and the rhyme scheme of ABABCDCDEFEFGG

More information

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA The theme of a story, poem, or play, is usually not directly stated. Example: friendship, prejudice (subjects) A loyal friend

More information

Research Scholar. An International Refereed e-journal of Literary Explorations

Research Scholar. An International Refereed e-journal of Literary Explorations ENRICHING LANGUAGE THROUGH LITERATURE IN UNDER GRADUATE CLASSROOM IN GUJARAT Maulik Ganshyambhai Barot Assistant Professor Deparment of English S. S. Patel Science & Commerce College, Visnagar, Gujarat

More information

Campbell s English 3202 Poetry Terms Sorted by Function: Form, Sound, and Meaning p. 1 FORM TERMS

Campbell s English 3202 Poetry Terms Sorted by Function: Form, Sound, and Meaning p. 1 FORM TERMS Poetry Terms Sorted by Function: Form, Sound, and Meaning p. 1 FORM TERMS TERM DEFINITION Acrostic Verse A poem that uses a pattern to deliver a second, separate message, usually with the first letter

More information

ENGLISH III, BRITISH LITERATURE MR. CHAFFIN/A-315 JUNE 2016 THE OBJECTIVES FOR THIS LESSON ARE:

ENGLISH III, BRITISH LITERATURE MR. CHAFFIN/A-315 JUNE 2016 THE OBJECTIVES FOR THIS LESSON ARE: LESSON PACKET FOR RENAISSANCE ENGLISH ENGLISH III, BRITISH LITERATURE MR. CHAFFIN/A-315 JUNE 2016 (ENGLISH RENAISSANCE LOVE POEMS) THE OBJECTIVES FOR THIS LESSON ARE: Students will comprehend, interpret,

More information

What is a Sonnet? Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet.

What is a Sonnet? Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet. What is a Sonnet? Understanding the forms, meter, rhyme, and other aspects of the sonnet. Sonnet Form A sonnet has 14 lines. A sonnet must be written in iambic pentameter A sonnet must follow a specific

More information

ENGLISH 2201: Poetry Unit

ENGLISH 2201: Poetry Unit ENGLISH 2201: Poetry Unit SONNET #1 When I do count the clock that tells the time, And see the brave day sunk in hideous night; 2 When I behold the violet past prime, And sable curls 1 all silver'd o'er

More information

100 Best-Loved Poems. Chapter-by-Chapter Study Guide. (Ed.) Philip Smith

100 Best-Loved Poems. Chapter-by-Chapter Study Guide. (Ed.) Philip Smith Chapter-by-Chapter Study Guide (Ed.) Philip Smith Learning objectives Study Guide with short-answer questions Background information Vocabulary in context Multiple-choice test Essay questions Literary

More information

Types of Poems: Ekphrastic poetry - describe specific works of art

Types of Poems: Ekphrastic poetry - describe specific works of art Types of Poems: Occasional poetry - its purpose is to commemorate, respond to and interpret a specific historical event or occasion - not only to assert its importance but also to make us think about just

More information

,, or. by way of a passing reference. The reader has to make a connection. Extended Metaphor a comparison between things that

,, or. by way of a passing reference. The reader has to make a connection. Extended Metaphor a comparison between things that Vocab and Literary Terms Connotations that is by a word apart from the thing which it describes explicitly. Words carry cultural and emotional associations or meanings, in addition to their literal meanings.

More information

Poetry Background. Basics You Should Know

Poetry Background. Basics You Should Know Poetry Background Basics You Should Know Types of Poetry Lyric subjective and reflective thoughts of a single speaker limited length regular rhyme scheme and meter single, unique impression Types of Lyrics

More information

1.The Heroic Couplet: consists of. two iambic pentameters ( lines of ten. 2. The Terza Rima: is a tercet (a. 3.The Chaucerian Stanza or Rhyme

1.The Heroic Couplet: consists of. two iambic pentameters ( lines of ten. 2. The Terza Rima: is a tercet (a. 3.The Chaucerian Stanza or Rhyme Stanza Forms 1.The Heroic Couplet: consists of two iambic pentameters ( lines of ten syllables) 2. The Terza Rima: is a tercet (a stanza of three lines) 3.The Chaucerian Stanza or Rhyme Royal: is a stanza

More information

c. the road to successful living. d. man s tendency to climb on others on his way to the top of success s ladder.

c. the road to successful living. d. man s tendency to climb on others on his way to the top of success s ladder. Lessons 6, 7 c. the road to successful living. d. man s tendency to climb on others on his way to the top of success s ladder. 21. According to The Jericho Road, technological advances have a. made us

More information

Mrs. Shirey - Shakespeare Notes January 2019 The Renaissance Theatre & William Shakespeare

Mrs. Shirey - Shakespeare Notes January 2019 The Renaissance Theatre & William Shakespeare The Renaissance Theatre & William Shakespeare Eng IV MacBeth & Hamlet Mrs. Shirey William Shakespeare Biographical Information: Baptism April 26, 1564 -- no known birth-date Born in Stratford-upon-Avon

More information

Suppressed Again Forgotten Days Strange Wings Greed for Love... 09

Suppressed Again Forgotten Days Strange Wings Greed for Love... 09 Suppressed Again... 01 Forgotten Days... 02 Lost Love... 03 New Life... 04 Satellite... 05 Transient... 06 Strange Wings... 07 Hurt Me... 08 Greed for Love... 09 Diary... 10 Mr.42 2001 Page 1 of 11 Suppressed

More information

7. Terms, Verse Forms and Literary Devices

7. Terms, Verse Forms and Literary Devices 7. Terms, Verse Forms and Literary Devices Verse and stanza: Verse: a verse is a line in a poem Stanza: a stanza is a group of verses, many times with some sort of meter and order. A slant rhyme (also

More information

Chapter 9. NCERT Question Answers

Chapter 9. NCERT Question Answers StudyCBSENotes.com 1 Chapter 9 Not Marble nor the Gilded Monuments NCERT Question s 1. Look at the following picture carefully. Time has been portrayed as an emperor because it rules over everything. It

More information

Elements of Poetry. An introduction to the poetry unit

Elements of Poetry. An introduction to the poetry unit Elements of Poetry An introduction to the poetry unit Meter The stressed and unstressed syllables within the lines of a poem The stressed syllables are longer while the unstressed syllables are shorter

More information

Write the World s Glossary of Poetry Terms

Write the World s Glossary of Poetry Terms Write the World s Glossary of Poetry Terms TECHNIQUE Alliteration The repetition of sound in a series or sequence of words. And the silken sad uncertain rustling of each purple curtain (Poe) Dissonance

More information

Answer Key: Meanings of Figurative Language

Answer Key: Meanings of Figurative Language English 12A Unit 3 Answer Key: Meanings of Figurative Language Name Date Objectives In this lesson you will: rely on context to determine meanings of words and phrases such as figurative language expand

More information

Valentine by Carol Ann Duffy

Valentine by Carol Ann Duffy The title suggests a love poem so content is surprising. Valentine by Carol Ann Duffy Not a red rose or a satin heart. Single line/starts with a negative Rejects traditional symbols of love. Not dismisses

More information

The Second Coming: Intensive Poetry Study. Monday, July 20, 2015

The Second Coming: Intensive Poetry Study. Monday, July 20, 2015 The Second Coming: Intensive Poetry Study Monday, July 20, 2015 Poetry: The Key to Success on the Final Exam The ability to read an analyze poetry (including a passage from a play by Shakespeare) is essential.

More information

VOCABULARY MATCHING: Use each answer in the right-hand column only once. Four answers will not be used.

VOCABULARY MATCHING: Use each answer in the right-hand column only once. Four answers will not be used. VOCABULARY MATCHING: Use each answer in the right-hand column only once. Four answers will not be used. 1. Sonnet 2. Iambic Pentameter 3. Romeo 4. Juliet 5. Prologue 6. Pun 7. Verona 8. Groundlings 9.

More information

14. The extended metaphor of stanzas 1 4 compares love to A. an unwilling dieter B. an illness C. an unruly child D. a prisoner in jail E.

14. The extended metaphor of stanzas 1 4 compares love to A. an unwilling dieter B. an illness C. an unruly child D. a prisoner in jail E. . Read the following poem carefully before you begin to answer the questions. Love s Diet To what a cumbersome unwieldiness And burdenous corpulence my love had grown But that I did, to make it less And

More information

Location A. Poetry Analysis. Task: Critically examine and think about poetry. Practice answering HSA-style questions related to poetry.

Location A. Poetry Analysis. Task: Critically examine and think about poetry. Practice answering HSA-style questions related to poetry. Location A Poetry Analysis Task: Critically examine and think about poetry. Practice answering HSA-style questions related to poetry. Directions: 1. Read the following poems and answer the HSA-style questions.

More information

THE EXPRESSION OF SOME POETIC TERMS

THE EXPRESSION OF SOME POETIC TERMS УДК 17.51 Philological sciences Saidova M.U. senior teacher Bukhara State University THE EXPRESSION OF SOME POETIC TERMS Summary: The significance of poetic terms and information about the numerous methods

More information

Elements of Poetry and Drama

Elements of Poetry and Drama Elements of Poetry and Drama Instructions Get out your Writer s Notebook and do the following: Write The Elements of Poetry and Drama Notes at the top of the page. Take notes as we review some important

More information

United Arab Emirates AbuDhabi Department of. Education and Knowledge. Name:... Section :...

United Arab Emirates AbuDhabi Department of. Education and Knowledge. Name:... Section :... United Arab Emirates AbuDhabi Department of Education and Knowledge Name:...... Section :... \ Date:Grade:12 A/B/C 22/5/2018 Revision sheet 2017-2018 Subject: ENGLISH Required Materials for English Reading

More information

Reading Summary. Anyone sings his "didn't" and dances his "did," implying that he is optimistic regardless of what he is actually doing.

Reading Summary. Anyone sings his didn't and dances his did, implying that he is optimistic regardless of what he is actually doing. Page 1 of 5 "anyone lived in a pretty how town" by e. e. cummings From The Best Poems Ever, Ed. Edric S. Mesmer, pp. 34 35 Much like Dr. Seuss, e. e. cummings plays with words in his poems, including this

More information

Twelfth Night or what you will

Twelfth Night or what you will Name: Per. Twelfth Night or what you will This Packet is due: Packets will be graded on: Completion (50%): All spaces filled, all questions answered. Accuracy (25%): All answers correct and/or logically

More information

How Do I Love Thee? Examining Word Choice, Tone, and Meaning in Poetry

How Do I Love Thee? Examining Word Choice, Tone, and Meaning in Poetry How Do I Love Thee? Examining Word Choice, Tone, and Meaning in Poetry 1.1 Welcome Welcome to How Do I Love Thee? Examining Word Choice, Tone, and Meaning in Poetry. 1.2 Objectives By the end of this tutorial,

More information

Horace as model: vatic poet, to teach and delight! precision, clarity, neatness, smoothness!

Horace as model: vatic poet, to teach and delight! precision, clarity, neatness, smoothness! Typical forms: epigram, epistle, elegy, epitaph, ode Horace as model: vatic poet, to teach and delight precision, clarity, neatness, smoothness sensual, epicurean details SIMILARITIES WITH DONNE coterie

More information

Remember is composed in the form known as the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, rhymed abba abba cdd ece, traditionally associated with love poetry.

Remember is composed in the form known as the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, rhymed abba abba cdd ece, traditionally associated with love poetry. Remember is composed in the form known as the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, rhymed abba abba cdd ece, traditionally associated with love poetry. As with all Petrarchan sonnets there is a volta (or turn

More information

English 10 Mrs. DiSalvo

English 10 Mrs. DiSalvo English 10 Mrs. DiSalvo Alliterative Verse: uses alliteration as the primary structure device Sonnet: a lyric poem of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter Iambic pentameter: five sets of an

More information

Focused Journal: 5 min-5 pts. Imagine that you lived abroad for 10 years (any country). How do you think an experience like that would change you?

Focused Journal: 5 min-5 pts. Imagine that you lived abroad for 10 years (any country). How do you think an experience like that would change you? Focused Journal: 5 min-5 pts Imagine that you lived abroad for 10 years (any country). How do you think an experience like that would change you? Sonnets Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday Sonnet Learning Goals

More information

English Literature Paper 2 Revision booklet. This paper is worth 60% of your total grade in English Literature

English Literature Paper 2 Revision booklet. This paper is worth 60% of your total grade in English Literature English Literature Paper 2 Revision booklet This paper is worth 60% of your total grade in English Literature It is 2 hours 15 minutes in length It has three sections: Section A An Inspector Calls Section

More information

TYPES OF POETRY. Are about. different methods of expressing personal feelings and opinions in writing.

TYPES OF POETRY. Are about. different methods of expressing personal feelings and opinions in writing. TYPES OF POETRY Are about different methods of expressing personal feelings and opinions in writing. LYRIC POETRY a poem that expresses the feelings or thoughts of a speaker rather than telling a story

More information

Test Review - Romeo & Juliet

Test Review - Romeo & Juliet Test Review - Romeo & Juliet Your test will come from the quizzes and class discussions over the plot of the play and information from this review sheet. Use your reading guide, vocabulary lists, quizzes,

More information

Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature

Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature irevise.com 2016 1 Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature. irevise.com 2016. All

More information

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION A. Background of the Study Studying English as a foreign language is in accordance with the meaning, found in the Koran (Ar-Rum: 22) as follows: Based on the verse above, God has

More information

Module 1 Unit 1.notebook. September 21, Aim: How does Marlowe's use of structure and figurative meaning develop the central idea of th e text?

Module 1 Unit 1.notebook. September 21, Aim: How does Marlowe's use of structure and figurative meaning develop the central idea of th e text? Module 1 Unit 1.notebook September 21, 2018 Aim: How does Marlowe's use of structure and figurative meaning develop the central idea of th e text? What will I know by the end of this unit? How would you

More information

Selection Review #1. Keeping the Night Watch. Pages 1-20

Selection Review #1. Keeping the Night Watch. Pages 1-20 47 Selection Review #1 Pages 1-20 1. The table below lists some of the analogies found in this section of poems. For each analogy, state the point of similarity between the two things, people, or situations.

More information

All the World Still a Stage for Shakespeare's Timeless Imagination

All the World Still a Stage for Shakespeare's Timeless Imagination All the World Still a Stage for Shakespeare's Timeless Imagination First of two programs about the British playwright and poet, who is considered by many to be the greatest writer in the history of the

More information

Poetry 10 Terminology. Jaya Kailley

Poetry 10 Terminology. Jaya Kailley Poetry 10 Terminology Jaya Kailley TYPES OF POEMS Ballad A poem that is typically long and tells a story. Often used for lyrics in a song. Ex: 'La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad' by John Keats "O what

More information

Poetry Analysis. Digging Deeper 2/23/2011. What We re Looking For: Content: Style: Theme & Evaluation:

Poetry Analysis. Digging Deeper 2/23/2011. What We re Looking For: Content: Style: Theme & Evaluation: 1 2 What We re Looking For: Poetry Analysis When we analyze a poem, there are three main categories we examine: 1. Content 2. Style 3. Theme & Evaluation 3 4 Content: When we examine the content of a poem,

More information

I. LITERARY TERMS: Be able to define each term and apply each term to the play.

I. LITERARY TERMS: Be able to define each term and apply each term to the play. ROMEO AND JULIET - Act I Reading and Study Guide I. LITERARY TERMS: Be able to define each term and apply each term to the play. Oxymoron bringing together two contradictory terms as in wise fool or feather

More information

Music. Lord, there are times when I need to be an island set in an infinite sea, cut off from all that comes to me but surrounded still by thee...

Music. Lord, there are times when I need to be an island set in an infinite sea, cut off from all that comes to me but surrounded still by thee... Music When I am slipping away from earth and drawing near to heaven, what sort of music would I like to hear? From earliest times, bards were called to play music at the bedside of a person in crisis or

More information

GLOSSARY FOR POETRY GCSE and A-Level.

GLOSSARY FOR POETRY GCSE and A-Level. GLOSSARY FOR POETRY GCSE and A-Level. TERMS ABOUT STRUCTURE Blank verse A poem written in iambic pentameter (10 syllables per line) but doesn t rhyme Caesura - A natural pause or break in a line of poetry,

More information

Selection Review #1. A Dime a Dozen. The Dream

Selection Review #1. A Dime a Dozen. The Dream 59 Selection Review #1 The Dream 1. What is the dream of the speaker in this poem? What is unusual about the way she describes her dream? The speaker s dream is to write poetry that is powerful and very

More information

Romeo and Juliet. Small group performance of a scene Value 20 (presentation date to be determined later)

Romeo and Juliet. Small group performance of a scene Value 20 (presentation date to be determined later) Romeo and Juliet This two three week section has been designed to cover the play in a way that allows for the greatest amount of student participation possible. All students will be required to participate

More information

101 Extraordinary, Everyday Miracles

101 Extraordinary, Everyday Miracles 101 Extraordinary, Everyday Miracles Copyright April, 2006, by Kim Loftis. All Rights Reserved. http://www.kimloftis.com 828-675-9859 Kim@KimLoftis.com Sharing and distributing of this document is encouraged!

More information

anecdotal Based on personal observation, as opposed to scientific evidence.

anecdotal Based on personal observation, as opposed to scientific evidence. alliteration The repetition of the same sounds at the beginning of two or more adjacent words or stressed syllables (e.g., furrow followed free in Coleridge s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner). allusion

More information

Page 1 of 5 Kent-Drury Analyzing Poetry When asked to analyze or "explicate" a poem, it is a good idea to read the poem several times before starting to write about it (usually, they are short, so it is

More information

Name Period Table Group. Act II Study Guide. WORD DEFINITION SENTENCE IMAGE My neighbor s house is Adjacent. adjacent to ours.

Name Period Table Group. Act II Study Guide. WORD DEFINITION SENTENCE IMAGE My neighbor s house is Adjacent. adjacent to ours. Name Period Table Group Act II Study Guide WORD DEFINITION SENTENCE IMAGE My neighbor s house is Adjacent adjacent to ours. Alliance Conjure Discourse An alliance quickly formed while they were on the

More information

SONNET 116 AND THE MANHUNT LINKS

SONNET 116 AND THE MANHUNT LINKS SONNET 116 AND THE MANHUNT LINKS Both of these poems discuss similar subject matter and come to the same conclusion despite there being over 5oo years between the times that they were written. Both poems

More information

Poetry. It is a composition in verse communicating. the sense of complete experience. It is a. literary form characterized by a strong sense

Poetry. It is a composition in verse communicating. the sense of complete experience. It is a. literary form characterized by a strong sense Poetry Definition: It is a composition in verse communicating the sense of complete experience. It is a literary form characterized by a strong sense of rhythm and meter and an emphasis on the interaction

More information

English 9 Romeo and Juliet Act IV -V Quiz. Part 1 Multiple Choice (2 pts. each)

English 9 Romeo and Juliet Act IV -V Quiz. Part 1 Multiple Choice (2 pts. each) English 9 Romeo and Juliet Act IV -V Quiz Part 1 Multiple Choice (2 pts. each) 1.Friar Laurence gives Juliet a potion that he says will A) make her forget Romeo and fall in love with Paris B) stop her

More information