Infant Sorrow. Summer Reading: Poetry

Similar documents
AP Literature. Prerequisite Work for Summer Summer Reading: The Novel

Poetry Lover By Jessa R. Sexton

Note: take notes on the text in blue

"Hours Continuing Long" as Whitman's Rewriting of Shakespeare's Sonnet 29

How to do a Poetry Analysis

INNOCENCE, EXPERIENCE, AND AMBIGUITY: AMERICAN COMPOSERS WRESTLING WITH IN JUST- BY E. E. CUMMINGS (A FORMAL AND TEXTUAL ANALYSIS) KAYLEEN COX

BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP. S J Watson LONDON TORONTO SYDNEY AUCKLAND JOHANNESBURG

The Swallow takes the big red ruby from the Prince s sword and flies away with it in his beak over the roofs of the town. Glossary

Vocabulary. Liza Kleinman

boring sad uncertain lonesome

Evaluate texts critically (AO4) Evaluating a text

Give a playful oral reading of The Floorless Room by Gelett Burgess ( ):

Summer Reading AP Literature Students must obtain a physical copy of the books they read over the summer.

mr fox V5 _mr fox 13/04/ :32 Page 1

Word: The Poet s Voice

A textbook definition

How the Squirrel Got His Stripes

Abby T. LA P a g e

3/8/2016 Reading Review. Name: Class: Date: 1/12

Comic Weeklies. This Half Page Ad Space $75 NICE LOCATION RIGHT HERE ON THE FRONT PAGE WHAT COULD BE BETTER?

Dolch Pre-Primer Sight Vocabulary. I in is it jump little look make me my not one play red

What do Book Band levels mean?

Poetic Devices. LI: To identify and create a range of figurative language devices in poetry.

Hello. My name is Lyla Miklos. Robin Pittis and I knew each other since we were teenagers. A quarter century of friendship and memories.

By Jeffrey Paul. Illustrated by Gail Laba

I. A FAREWELL TO ARMS ERNEST HEMINGWAY. SENIOR DIVISION ENGLISH STUDY GUIDE FOR SUPER BOWL World War I

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

Words with Music. Even if you don t understand the content, the music still comes through. It takes work to make such a poem.

Fall Justin Rogers. The Body is a Literary Form

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

GREETINGS. When you enter a room, see someone you know or meet someone new, it is polite to greet him or her. To greet someone, you:

Experimental Justice. Rita Cooper

Sometimes you do sing, but you scorn my harmonies. (Why? Don t you know, Or are you yet to learn, The reason I submerge myself in thirds and fifths?

Synthesizing Poetry Teacher Overview

SUPPLY CHAIN. LOGLINE: A day in the life of an ordinary man who does extraordinary things that changes the lives of many.

Shakespeare paper: Romeo and Juliet

TIGHTEN UP YOUR WIG. From the 1968 release "The Second" Words and music by John Kay

pre-watching Look at these pictures. Talk about the pictures. Which words, feelings come to your mind?

Blue - 1st. Double Blue - Yellow. Double. Green - Double Green - Orange - Pink - Free - Reader

Homegrown Learners, LLC

Psalm 119:57 NIrV. The Lepers Luke 17: Only one man says thank-you to Jesus. Whoa I Have Life Praise the Lord Everyday Wherever/Whatever

able, alone, animal, become, call, catch, country, monkey, thin, word; baby, clean, eat, enjoy, family, fruit, jump, kind, man, parent

Homework Monday. The Shortcut

Literature Circle Guide to LOVE THAT DOG by Sharon Creech

not to be republished NCERT After a Bath UNIT Enjoy this poem New words Let s read

A smile makes everyone happy. Enjoy this poem.

LEVEL OWL AT HOME THE GUEST. Owl was at home. How good it feels to be. sitting by this fire, said Owl. It is so cold and

not to be republished NCERT I AM LUCKY Listen and recite this poem

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

Readers Theater for 2 Readers

AFTERLIFE STUDY GUIDE 2014

Predict Stable Positions

Readers Theater Adaptation of Edgar Allan s Official Crime Investigation Notebook by Mary Amato. Characters

Walt Whitman. American Poet

Copyright 2009 SWAN SONG

Activation. Eitan Loewenstein. M

READING CONNECTIONS MAKING. Book E. Provides instructional activities for 12 reading strategies

Reading Mastery Signature Edition, Grade K / Activity Page 1 (after Lesson 10)

Wild Swans at Coole. W. B. Yeats

TIPS FOR EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION. 1. Conversations should be a balanced two-way flow of dialogue.

FOR ME. What survival looks like... Created by ...

English (Standard) and English (Advanced) Paper 1 Area of Study Discovery!

Dandelion Dandelion yellow and bright Reaching to the sun Dandelion closed up tight When the day is done

Tuning In What is a Poem?

Name: Period Date. Grade 10, Unit 1 Pre-assessment. Read the following excerpt from The Chrysanthemums, by John Steinbeck:

ear ear ear ear Multiple Meaning Words: Grade 3 to 5 More Teaching Tools at the organ of hearing in people and some other animals

Two Unpublished Letters: Walt Whitman to William James Linton, March 14 and April 11, 1872

short long short long short long

INSTRUCT. Lexia Lessons. Comprehension

<em>how Many More of Them Are You?</em> by Lisa Lubasch

Tilda and her family. Read, write and draw

Task 3: The Star-crossed Lovers

In the following pages, you will find the instructions for each station.

Advanced Organizer Packet

Noses The Little Fir Tree

My Grandmother s Love Letters

Personification Adjective Alliteration Assonance Metaphor Onomatopoeia Hyperbole

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50

Cowboy Star. This is Cobweb the Cat by All About Learning Press, Inc.

A Veil of Water By Amy Boesky

being me AIMS To understand that we all have human rights To read and discuss poems about identity To celebrate and write about our identities

An Idiom a Day Will Help Keep the Boredom In Schooling Away #1. What are idioms?

LIFE Meeting Stress Relief December 7, 2016

The Moon Bowl. The Moon Bowl LEVELED READER BOOK SA. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

9.1.3 Lesson 19 D R A F T. Introduction. Standards. Assessment

not to be republished NCERT Why? Alice in Wonderland UNIT-4

SALTY DOG Year 2

FADE IN: A dimly lit, musty, basement. Water drips from old rusted pipes. Rats scurry across the room.

Walt Whitman Quarterly Review

Kate DiCamillo - Because of Winn-Dixie - Grade 3

Name Date Hour. Sound Devices In the poems that follow, the poets use rhyme and other sound devise to convey rhythm and meaning.

SPELD SA. Literacy Program. Module 4: Student Workbook. Name:

If you think sleeping rough's just a matter of finding a dry spot where the fuzz won't

The Complete Emotional Freedom Techniques Protocol

The Original Staging of Otello

OUT OF THE CRADLE ENDLESSLY ROCKING

Robert Frost Sample answer

NOTES FOR BROADSHEET POETS 2 HAVING A MENTOR

Y6 Literature Revision Worksheet

Objectives: 1. To appreciate the literary techniques used in two poems by Celia Thaxter.

Transcription:

Summer Reading: Poetry 1. Please print, read and annotate each of the five poems included here. By read, I mean more than once silently, aloud, to someone else, listen while someone reads to you. By annotate, I mean jot your thoughts and ideas all over them. Define terms that you think you know (and certainly those you don t). Write connections you make and questions you have. Talk to other people about the poems. Make notations about their thoughts. You may have called it talking to the text. Show me your thinking. At all costs, avoid searching through online sources for the answers. Those answers leak into your writing, and into your friend s, and his friend s, and... well, you know. The only answers are in your own interpretations. Trust yourself. After reading each poem, complete the statement: This poem is about. Fill in the blank with only a word or a short phrase. Force yourself to be concise and clear. When you have read all five poems, write a statement about what ideas seem to connect these pieces. Again, be concise. Make this one clear statement. Do all of the above work on the poems themselves, not in a notebook. Your poems should be littered with notes, ideas, definitions, connections. Messy. I love it. Enjoy! Again, I m excited to meet you! I know that we ll have a productive and successful year together. Sincerely, Mrs. Dignan Infant Sorrow My mother groaned, my father wept, Into the dangerous world I leapt; Helpless, naked, piping loud, Like a fiend hid in a cloud. Struggling in my father's hands, Striving against my swaddling bands, Bound and weary, I thought best To sulk upon my mother's breast. William Blake

The School Children by Louise Glück The School Children by Louise Gluck The children go forward with their little satchels. And all morning the mothers have labored to gather the late apples, red and gold, like words of another language. And on the other shore are those who wait behind great desks to receive these offerings. How orderly they are the nails on which the children hang their overcoats of blue or yellow wool. And the teachers shall instruct them in silence and the mothers shall scour the orchards for a way out, drawing to themselves the grey limbs of the fruit trees bearing so little ammunition.

[in Just-] By E. E. Cummings in Just- spring when the world is mud- luscious the little lame balloonman whistles far and wee and eddieandbill come running from marbles and piracies and it's spring when the world is puddle-wonderful the queer old balloonman whistles far and wee and bettyandisbel come dancing from hop-scotch and jump-rope and it's spring

and the goat-footed balloonman whistles far and wee Hours Continuing Long HOURS continuing long, sore and heavy-hearted, Hours of the dusk, when I withdraw to a lonesome and unfrequented spot, seating myself, leaning my face in my hands; Hours sleepless, deep in the night, when I go forth, speeding swiftly the country roads, or through the city streets, or pacing miles and miles, stifling plaintive cries; Hours discouraged, distracted--for the one I cannot content myself without, soon I saw him content himself without me; Hours when I am forgotten, (O weeks and months are passing, but I believe I am never to forget!) Sullen and suffering hours! (I am ashamed--but it is useless--i am what I am;) Hours of my torment--i wonder if other men ever have the like, out of the like feelings? Is there even one other like me--distracted--his friend, his lover, lost to him? Is he too as I am now? Does he still rise in the morning, dejected, thinking who is lost to him? and at night, awaking, think who is lost? Does he too harbor his friendship silent and endless? harbor his anguish and passion? 10 Does some stray reminder, or the casual mention of a name, bring the fit back upon him, taciturn and deprest? Does he see himself reflected in me? In these hours, does he see the face of his hours reflected? Walt Whitman

The Plain Sense of Things Wallace Stevens, 1879-1955 After the leaves have fallen, we return To a plain sense of things. It is as if We had come to an end of the imagination, Inanimate in an inert savoir. It is difficult even to choose the adjective For this blank cold, this sadness without cause. The great structure has become a minor house. No turban walks across the lessened floors. The greenhouse never so badly needed paint. The chimney is fifty years old and slants to one side. A fantastic effort has failed, a repetition In a repetitiousness of men and flies. Yet the absence of the imagination had Itself to be imagined. The great pond, The plain sense of it, without reflections, leaves, Mud, water like dirty glass, expressing silence Of a sort, silence of a rat come out to see, The great pond and its waste of the lilies, all this Had to be imagined as an inevitable knowledge, Required, as a necessity requires.