Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Postal History of Barbados in Poetry with Comments
Barbados
postage stamps for you;
Single rhymes occur when one-syllable words rhyme. One syllable words are known as monosyllables. Here are examples from “Postal History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Plenty
facts stuck with glue;
These
sticky little squares do show;
Monarchy
you should know;
What
rates for the weights they must hold,
On
papers new or old?
Postage
stamps tell, tell true stories;
Not of
Whigs and Tories.
Revenue
sent to government
Stamps
legal document;
We make
love to sticky-paste squares
With
kisses, glue adheres.
Queen
Victoria days of yore;
Penny
Post at the door;
World's
first postmark known, who carved it?
Henry
Bishop made it.
Who
gave us the adhesive stamp?
Was
Rowland Hill, the champ?
Barbados
postage stamps left clues;
Of
kings and queens infuse.
On this
half penny stamp of green;
Historical
facts seen;
A crown
that floats above a head;
What
message does it spread?
In the Victorian
era,
He wore
no crown never;
A
consort he was her husband;
She
proposed to this man.
Strong
woman would make that occur;
He said
yes, yes after;
Acrostics
she did; he liked chess;
Both
them played with success.
Queen
Victoria on the throne;
Morality
enthroned;
To every
far flung colony;
Barbados,
so tiny;
Growing
sugar-cane island’s crop;
And
slaves working non-stop;
No wage
in pounds, shillings and pence;
Working
fields, heat intense.
Cutting
sugarcane filled dray-carts,
Feeding
mills, black-poor hearts;
Bedchamber
crisis in Palace;
Peel
resigned from office;
Interesting review on
this;
This postage stamp
depicts
Britannia, Roman
goddess,
Postage face does
impress.
What are the images
you see?
Neptune god of the
sea;
Which Britannia
personified;
And Romans canonized.
Female
personification;
Britannia’s passion;
Brave waves did splash
over England;
Britain, the great island.
Like Neptune she holds
a trident;
Three prongs so
evident;
Neptune rides waves
with seahorses
Well; Britannia does.
For crying out loud hear
this thing;
Barbados she acting
Like she is, Great
Britain's England;
Called self "Little
England".
Barbados stamps from
the outset;
Mirrored England's
stamp set;
Post photos alike during
the
Victorian era.
Look at postage stamp
one farthing;
Gives credence and
backing;
Much more is on this
postage plate;
So let's reiterate;
Barbados’ story of
money,
Few words stated
mintly;
Three and a half
centuries ago,
Crown's grip on it did
show.
Pounds shillings and
pence, changeable;
British money table;
Four farthings, one
penny it is;
Twelve pence one
shilling, Chris.
Imagery on the stamps
does say;
Victoria holds sway;
Eighteen thirty-seven
young queen;
On the throne at
eighteen.
How much those two
pees worth today?
A reckoning would say
In Barbados money, six
cents;
Inflation dents the pence.
Imperialist's grip on
Bimshire
Postage stamps, front
and rear;
Dubbed Barbados
Britannia
Bags mail with carrier.
Britannia has many
themes:
Sea, land, air, and
dog scenes
Celebrations, and so
much more;
Seen on each stamp
photo.
Look at Britannia
below,
And see how those
themes glow;
In this postage stamp
gallery;
Compiled for you
gladly.
Did the Bajan
Britannia
Suffer asthenia?
No, got too much power
to stir
The colonial air;
Feeding the lungs of
royalty,
And their entrenched
army,
The largest Empire on
earth;
With glory and
self-worth.
Two centuries these
British knaves;
Britannia ruled the
waves;
Politics play on
sticky squares;
Land owners
billionaires;
Hindsight sees the bad
and the good;
Sherwood hid Robin
Hood;
Empire and George VI
would die;
His daughter is not
shy.
In the year nineteen
sixty-six,
Elizabeth did fix
Imperial wrongs, she undressed;
Her Commonwealth
cleaned mess;
Bajan Britannia in the
dark;
Independence stamps
spark;
Britain no longer
holds this rock;
Forty-five years ticktock.
With the texture of an Afro,
The rock sat in Barrow;
Proudly
wrapped in Broken Trident;
Union
Jack silent.
A bold
shift in Bajan postage;
The
royal head abridge;
When
Queen Elizabeth gave back,
Her pen
did wave brave tact.
This
rock, her ancestors sliced up
Lapping
royal tea-cup;
In the
year sixteen twenty five;
Human
rights ere deprive;
More
than three hundred years preserved;
Before
new Queen observed;
Her
reign brings to Bajans new hope,
And a
new skipping rope.
Each
postage stamp bears Bajan craft;
Drives
postal photograph;
With
themes, and scenes of our land;
Sir
Garry from Bayland;
Cricketer
from Police Sports Club;
Queen
Elizabeth dubbed;
Sir
Garfield Sobers on the field;
Greatest
all-rounder kneeled.
Bajan's living hero
knighted;
Captaincy
accepted;
Sir
Frank Worrell ere his mentor;
At the
wicket we saw;
He
pleased crowds growing round the ground;
On him,
flowing around;
Sir
Garfield St Auburn Sobers;
Collie’s
death he ponders...
Traumatic
time indeed for him;
Drinking
tears kept him slim;
Hits
six sixes in one over;
Pleasing
crowds rolled-over.
Six
successive balls in cricket,
From powerful
wicket;
See him
on postage Sir Gary
Hones
cricket skillfully.
Pause
we must on October nine;
This
thought floods brain of mine
On
postal anniversary;
Postage
fraternity.
Eighteen
hundred and sixty four,
This I
recall and more;
The
arrival of World Post Day
Mail stubs are here to stay.
Reflect
we must on UPU;
Headquarters
for mail crew
Of the
Universal Postal;
A
problem-solving hull.
Union taken
for granted,
And
benefits charted;
The UPU
in zonal ways;
Hugs
Bajan postal trays.
With
pride and appreciation;
We in
this small nation;
Celebrate
World Post Day with hearts
In
Bern's postal ramparts;
Such Swiss'
confidence they instill
In our
postal mill;
Impacting
all living beings;
When
Nations Seek postings.
Stuck
on historic road’s outpost;
With alphabetic
host;
Forty-eight
quatrains count and score
Verses;
one eighty-four.
Wikipedia asserts that historical
poetry is a sub-genre of poetry that has its roots in history. Its aim is to
delineate events of the past by incorporating elements of artful composition
and poetic diction. Figurative devices such as alliteration, assonance,
metaphor, and simile are invariably used to layer historical poems with
expanding, enriching meanings.
This poem, “Postal History of Barbados
in Poetry” highlights the assertion that postage stamps from any country have many
functions besides their primary function. Stamp collectors, philatelists and historical
poets eagerly lap-up the historical underpinnings of these sticky pictorial
squares with corrugated edges.
Poets when writing historical poems
evoke to a large degree a tool referred to as narrative license referred to by
such names as artistic license, dramatic license, historical license, poetic
license, and licentia poetica. This license gives them a slightly different
responsibility than do historians. The historian is expected to present
factually correct narratives. A poet who
writes historical poems adheres to this but is free to inject mythical or
emotional truths in imagery mapping. Historical poets demonstrate the concern
with keeping the voices of historical persons alive when writing persona poems
or other intimate portrayals of persons who have passed on; no longer able to
speak for themselves.
Historical poems can be a bonding
agent because it is linked to poetic intention. The poet’s intention is what
matters in serving various ulterior motives. Such motives might include the
notions of:
Informing readers at the time of
present events, in order to draw parallels and make a political statement;
Having a connection to historical
events being recorded;
The relevancy of history to the
poet which then becomes an emotional tool of expression like any other form of poetry.
The rhyme scheme in this historical
poem is aabb. An aabb rhyme scheme is a poem in which the first two verses and
second two verses rhyme creating a pattern.
How is the rhyme scheme arranged with the other verses in subsequent
stanzas when the first two verses and second two verses in subsequent stanzas
do not rhyme with the end-rhymes in the first stanza? The specialized rhyme
scheme for this is to start each subsequent stanza with the alphabet letter
that follows as shown in Table below. If a poem has three stanzas the rhyme scheme
would be aabb ccdd eeff. If the poem has four stanzas the rhyme scheme would be
aabb ccdd eeff gghh. However, since the poem has forty-eight stanzas the rhyme
scheme would be very cumbersome indeed for all the letters of the alphabet to
be on display. Therefore, stop at the end of the fourth stanza, gghh48
and use the raised number forty-eight to indicate that the poem has forty-eight
stanzas, so there is no need to continue with the alphabetic letters.
Many poetic devices are found in
poems. Here is a partial list of what I have found in the poem, “Postal History
of Barbados in Poetry”:
Alliteration
Assonance
Consonance
Double
rhymes or disyllabic rhymes
Compound
rhymes
Falling
rhymes
Identical
rhymes
Masculine
rhymes
Mosaic rhymes
Rich rhymes
Rising rhymes
Single rhymes
Slant rhymes
Triple rhymes
Alliteration also called head rhyme or initial rhyme is
the repetition of the initial sounds, usually consonants of stressed syllables
in neighboring words or at short intervals within a verse, or passage usually
at word beginnings. Here is an example
from “Postal History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Plenty facts stuck with glue;
These sticky
little squares do show: (alliteration)
Alliteration has a gratifying effect on the sound and
gives reinforcement to stresses, and also can serve as a subtle connection or
emphasis of key words in the verse.
Assonance is the relatively close
juxtaposition of the same or similar vowel sounds, but with different end consonants. This device repeats vowel sounds in stressed
words place near each other rather than in vowel sounds that are unstressed.
Here are some examples found in “Postal History of Barbados”:
For
crying out loud hear this thing;
Britain
no longer holds this rock;
Hits six sixes in one over;
Stuck
on historic roads outpost;
Verses;
one eighty-four.
Consonance repeats consonant sounds
at the ending of words placed near each other, usually on the same or adjacent
verse. These consonant sounds should be in sounds that are stressed, rather
than in vowel sounds that are unstressed. Examples from “Postal History of
Barbados in Poetry” are shown below:
Who
gave us the adhesive stamp?
Was
Rowland Hill, the champ?
Barbados
postage stamps left clues
Of
kings and queens infused
Acrostics
she did; he liked chess;
Both
of them played with success.
Cutting
sugarcane filled dray-carts;
Feeding
mills, black-poor hearts;
Neptune
rides waves with seahorses;
Well;
Britannia does.
No,
got too much power to stir
The
colonial air;
The
largest Empire on earth;
With
glory and self-worth.
Hindsight
sees the bad and the good;
Sherwood hid Robin Hood;
Empire
and George VI would die,
Bajan
Britannia in the dark;
Independence
stamps spark;
Britain
no longer holds this rock;
Forty-five
years tick tock.
What is apparent here is that rhyme
is the combination of assonance and consonance as well as being the repetition
of similar sounds in two or more words.
Compound rhymes also known as multisyllabic rhymes are
rhymes that contain two or more syllables.
The examples here will feature two or more syllables taken from “Postal
History of Barbados in Poetry” as shown below:
Revenue sent to government Female personification On
postal anniversary;
Stamps legal document; Britannia’s
passion; Postage
fraternity;
Did the Bajan Britannia To
every far flung colony;
Suffer asthenia? Barbados, so tiny
Double or disyllabic rhymes form
when two final syllables of words have the same sound. Here are some examples
found in “Postal History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Postage
stamps tell, tell true stories;
Not
of Whigs and Tories.
Strong
woman would make that occur;
He
said yes, yes after;
Bedchamber
crisis in Palace;
Peel
resigned from office;
Brave
waves did splash over England
Britain,
the great island.
Look
at postage stamp one farthing;
Gives
credence and backing;
With
the texture of an Afro,
The
rock sat in Barrow;
Proudly
wrapped in Broken Trident;
Union
Jack silent.
A
bold shift in Bajan postage;
The
royal head abridge;
More
than three hundred years preserved;
Before
new queen observed;
Sir
Garfield St Auburn Sobers;
Collie’s
death he ponders...
Six
successive balls in cricket,
From
powerful wicket;
Union
taken for granted,
And
benefits charted;
Impacting
all living beings
When
Nations Seek postings.
Falling rhyme also known as feminine rhyme is when rhyme
falls on an unstressed (ˬ) final syllable as shown in these examples:
Identical rhyme uses the same word to rhyme with
itself. It should not be confused with
identical sounding words with different meanings. Here is an example:
World’s first postmark known, who carved it?
Henry Bishop made it
Masculine rhyme makes up the bulk of rhymes in English
Language poetry. It occurs in words of one syllable and in stressed final
syllables. Here are some examples:
These sticky little squares do show;
Monarchy you should know;
Imperial wrongs, she undressed;
Her Commonwealth cleaned mess.
More than three hundred years preserved;
Before new Queen observed;
Mosaic rhyme occurs when two or more words produce a
multiple rhyme, either with two or more other words, as go for/no more or in a
larger word, as cop a plea/ monopoly (Glossary of Poetic Terms from Bob’s Byway). Here some examples taken from “Postal
History of Barbados in Poetry”:
gave back;/ wave; brave tact (mosaic Rhyme)
When Queen Elizabeth gave back;
Her pen did wave; brave tact.
growing around ground;/ roving round. (mosaic Rhyme)
He pleased crowds growing around ground;
Loyal fans roving round.
zonal ways/ postal
trays
(mosaic rhyme)
The UPU in zonal ways
Hugs Bajan postal trays;
Rich rhymes also known as true rhymes, perfect rhymes and
exact rhymes. They have the same number of syllables and sound exactly alike
with the exception of one or more letters. Here are some examples taken from “Postal
History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Barbados
postage stamps for you;
Plenty
facts stuck with glue;
Who
gave us the adhesive stamp?
Was
Rowland Hill, the champ?
Barbados
postage stamps left clues;
Of
kings and queens infuse.
No wage in pounds, shillings and pence;
Working
fields, heat intense.
Cutting
sugarcane filled dray-carts,
Feeding
mills, black-poor hearts;
Brave waves did splash over England;
Britain, the great island.
Rising rhyme is the rhyming of rhymes that utilize rising
rhythm or masculine ending. This ictus (/) represents a rising rhythm. Here are
examples taken from “Postal History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Postal History of Barbados in Poetry with Comments
Single rhymes occur when one-syllable words rhyme. One syllable words are known as monosyllables. Here are examples from “Postal History of Barbados in Poetry”:
Her reign brings to Bajan new hope;
And a new skipping rope;
Sir Garfield Sobers on the field;
Greatest all-rounder kneeled;
Pause we must on October nine;
This thought floods brain of mine;
Slant rhymes are also known as near rhymes, approximate
rhymes, off rhymes, imperfect rhymes and half rhymes. This type of rhyme shows
consonance on the final letters of words. Here are examples taken from “Postage
History of Barbados in Poetry”:
These sticky little squares do show;
Monarchy you should know;
On this half penny stamp of green;
Historical facts seen;
A crown that floats above a head;
What message does it spread?
Triple rhymes are rhymes where the last three syllables
of words rhyme as shown in the following examples:
Yes indeed, the task of duopoly
Surely, it will drives down monopoly.
In many forms, it does operate;
Capital gang must cooperate;
He really; used the word incriminate!
No, his lips uttered recriminate.
When will they end this age of greediness?
It was all done with utter speediness.
References
Glossary of Poetic Terms from Bob’s Byway.
Mosaic Rhymes. Retrieve March 14, 2013 from Google Search. http://www.poeticbyway.com/gl-m.html
Historical Poetry. Wikipedia. Retrieved March
14, 2013 from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_poetrySaturday, March 9, 2013
Comments on Avian Christmas Dish
Avian Christmas Dish
Three
days before Christmas of twenty ten;
Strolling
as usual under cherry tree;
I was
on my wild hunting regimen;
Feline
behavior really sets me free.
Killer
instinct does dwell in feline mind;
Predatory
drives hunting daily sport;
Regardless
of how well fed, teeth must grind,
Domesticated
in home at Bridgeport...
On
boughs my four padded feet stood supreme;
Among
wet leaves and rising of the sun;
Birds
among the green, I plotted my scheme;
Poultry
dish wish my fearless plot was spun.
Through
cherry boughs I scaled through early morn,
With
every climb my wish grew out of sight;
"Come
down Ginger, you are no leprechaun";
That voice in my head was stern and polite.
A Whiskas
cat I am; I love to prey;
But
church bells bellowed time for midnight mass;
Trees
sang “Silent Night” and I had no sway;
Those
black-birds chirped cherry-berry Christmas.
“Avian Christmas Dish” is
structured around the terza rima. The terza rima
consists of tercet verses in iambic pentameter in English poetry. The Italian
poet Dante Alighiere invented the Terza Rima in the late 13th Century. Its
inventor offered a series of five options on how to conclude the Terza Rima poem as
follows:
1. Use a
one-line verse after each stanza in which its end-rhyme, rhymes with the second
verse of the preceding tercet;
2. Use a
one-line verse at the end of the last stanza with its end-rhyme rhyming with
the end-rhyme of the second verse of the preceding tercet;
3. Use a
rhyming couplet at the end of each stanza with their end-rhymes rhyming with
the second verse of the preceding tercet;
4. Use a rhyming couplet at the end of the last stanza, with the end-rhymes rhyming with the end-rhyme of the second verse of preceding tercet.
5.Use a rhyming couplet at the end of the last tercet, with the rhyming couplet not rhyming with the end-rhyme of the second verse of the preceding tercet. The rhyming of this couplet is independent, as it were.
4. Use a rhyming couplet at the end of the last stanza, with the end-rhymes rhyming with the end-rhyme of the second verse of preceding tercet.
5.Use a rhyming couplet at the end of the last tercet, with the rhyming couplet not rhyming with the end-rhyme of the second verse of the preceding tercet. The rhyming of this couplet is independent, as it were.
“Avian
Christmas Dish” uses option 1 which uses a one line verse after each stanza in which its end-rhyme, rhymes with the second verse of the preceding tercet. The rhyme scheme
for this poem is aba b cdc d efe f ghg h iji j. As is evident in its rhyme
scheme, the poem has five tercet stanzas (a stanza of three verses is called a
tercet).
The substance, the impressions,
facts and ideas contained in poem “Avian Christmas Dish” or any other poem is
called content. The content of this poem falls in the category of a dramatic
monologue, dramatic poem as well as a narrative poem. Here are the reasons to
support the various categories into which the poem falls:
The poem reveals a one-way
conversation by the persona to a second person, or an imaginary audience
(dramatic monologue). Persona refers to the speaker or voice of literary work.
Persona is the “I” or implied speaker of narrative and lyric poetry. Narrative,
dramatic and lyric verses are the three main groups of poetry. It is possible
for a poem to combine the characteristics of narrative, dramatic and lyric
verses. “Avian Christmas Dish” is a dramatic poem because it portrays a story
of life, with a persona steep in conflict and emotions, in a miniature plot
evolving through action and dialogue. The poem is a narrative poem, because the
story keeps on evolving throughout the five stanzas and codas. Coda is a noun
and the singular form for codas. Coda refers to the additional section at the
end of the stanza. It is somewhat lyrical because the poem’s mood is emotional
and rhythmical.
Poets are limited in materials they
can use in their poems. All they have are words to express their ideas and
feelings. These words need to be precise on several fronts at once. Words
selected “must sound right; must have meaning which might have been unanticipated,
but seem to be the perfectly right one; must be arranged in a relationship and
placed on the page in ways that are at once easy to follow and assist reader in
understanding; they must probe the depths of human thought, emotions and
empathy, while appearing simple, self-contained, and unpretentious. The English
language contains a wide range of words from which to choose for almost every
thought, and they are numerous methods of arrangement of these English words,
called poetic devices” (Chaparral poets.org).
Chaparral Poets.Org arranged poetic
devices into four broad areas with headings like arranging the words, the
meaning of words, the images of words and the sound of words. The details of
headings arranged in alphabetical order are shown as follows:
Poetic devices are many and don’t
expect to find a poem depicting all them. Poets know this and only select those
poetic devices that assist in the development of cogent expressions pleasing to
readers and which are appropriate for shaping the imagery of the poem so essential
for the understanding of the poem’s content and message. To point this fact
out, the poem “Avian Christmas Dish” is revisited for the purpose of location
poetic devices used in the poem. Of significance in this probe is that the poem
utilizes all the four categories but shows only a few poetic devices taken from
each category as shown in these examples:
Various ways of arranging the words
in poems are to be found in certain terms poets apply to the process of
creating poetry. Here are examples taken from “Avian Christmas Dish”;
enjambment, form, fixed form, stanza form, stanza, verse, line, rhyme scheme,
point of view.
Enjambment
allows words to flow from verse to verse or stanza to stanza without any sort
of end-verse punctuation.
Example:
Three days before Christmas of twenty ten
Strolling as usual under cherry tee
I was on my wild hunting regimen;
On boughs my four padded feet stood supreme
Among wet leaves at the rising of the sun;
Form is the arrangement or method
used to convey content. It also means the details within the composition of the
poem. Generally, it is used in reference to the structural characteristics
shaping the poem as it compares to or differs from established modes of
conventional arrangements in poetry. This definition is incomplete without
giving examples in the following; open form, closed form, blank form, free
verse, the couplet, heroic couplet and the quatrain.
Fixed Form poetry is when the
structure of poems follows an established pattern of meter, rhyme scheme,
stanza form and refrain, if there is a refrain. Examples of poetic structures
which adhere to this definition are the ballad, ballade, concrete poetry,
epigram, epitaph, haiku, limerick, lyric verse, ode, pantoum, rondeau, sestina,
sonnet, terza rima, triolet and the villanelle.
The poem, “Avian Christmas Dish” is
an example of a fixed form poem in stanza form. Stanza Form is the name given
to describe poems composed on the number of verses in a stanza. The stanza form is a factor in the
categorization of whole poems describes as following a fixed form structure. Examples
of stanza form types of poems are:
Couplet
(2 verses in a stanza)
Tercet
(3 verses in a stanza)
Quatrain
(4 verses in a stanza)
Quintet
(5 verses in a stanza)
Sestet
(6 verses in a stanza)
Septet
(7 verses in a stanza)
Octave
(8 verses in a stanza)
The poem “Avian Christmas Dish” is
also a stanza form type of poem because its stanzas are made of tercet verses. Stanza
is a division of a poem established by arranging lines into a unit (free
verse); arranging verses in metered poetry, in the same pattern of meter and
rhyme throughout the poem . So, a stanza in metered poetry is a group of
verses.
Verse is a single line of a poem
arranged in a metrical pattern. In free verse there is no such thing as
stanzas, this is replaced by units. Arranging lines in free verse is called a
unit. Units are separated by blank lines. Stanzas within a poem are separated
by blank lines as shown in “Avian Christmas Dish”, for example.
Line, therefore, is fundamental to
the perception of poetry, marking an important visual distinction from prose.
Poetry is arranged into a series of units or stanzas that do not necessarily
correspond to sentences, but rather to a series of metrical feet and cadences
as in the case of free verse or prose poetry.
Rhyme Scheme arranges rhyming words
at the end of verses in each stanza in
an established pattern .This arrangement uses letters of the alphabet, as shown
in this rhyme scheme aba b cdc d efe f ghg h iji j of
the Terza Rima stanza form for poem “Avian Christmas Dish”.
When rhyming words are repeated in
a rhyme scheme, capital letters are used. When words in a rhyme scheme do not
rhyme, the alphabet letters x and y are used.
Here is an example taken from the poem “Bajan Conkies” shown below:
In quatrains, the popular rhyme scheme abab is called alternate rhyme or cross rhyme as seen in poem “Angie” shown below:
Point of View is where the poet concentrates on the vantage point of the speaker or teller of the poem. The speaker of teller of the poem is referred to as the poem’s “voice”. Point of View is where the poet decides on whether to use a persona as the 1st person, the 3rd person limited or 3rd person omniscient. The 1st person is the speaker in the poem who tells it from the “I” perspective. The 3rd person limited is the speaker in the poem who tells about the other characters through the limited perceptions of one other person. The 3rd person omniscient is the speaker in the poem who is not part of the story, but is able to know and describe what all characters are thinking.
In poem “Avian Christmas Dish” it
is clear that the persona is the 1st person because of the many
references to the pronoun “I” as seen in these examples:
Three
days before Christmas of twenty ten;
Strolling
as usual under cherry tree;
I
was on my wild hunting regimen;
Feline behavior really sets me free.
On
boughs my four padded feet stood supreme;
Among
wet leaves and rising of the sun;
Birds
among the green, I plotted my scheme;
Through
cherry boughs I scaled through early morn,
With
every climb my wish grew out of sight;
"Come
down Ginger, you are no leprechaun";
That voice in my head was stern and polite.
A Whiskas
cat I am; I love to prey;
But
church bells bellowed time for midnight mass;
Trees
sang “Silent Night” and I had no sway;
Most words in the English Language
convey several meanings or shades of meaning. This is why poets search for
words in relation to other words to convey their innermost thoughts. Here are
examples; allusion, ambiguity, apostrophe, contrast, personification, and pun found
in poem “Avian Christmas Dish”:
Allusion
is a brief reference to some person, historical event, work of art, biblical or
mythological situation or character.
Example:
“Come
down Ginger, you are no leprechaun”;
Ambiguity
is a word or phrase that has multiple meanings, even in the surrounding
conditions in which it is used.
Example:
That
voice in my head was stern and
polite.
Apostrophe
occurs when the persona speaks directly to a real or imagined listener or
inanimate object, by calling out the name of the person or thing.
Example:
“Come down Ginger, you are no leprechaun”;
Contrast
is about things arranged closely, but with strikingly different features.
Example:
That
voice in my head was stern and polite.
Personification
accords human characteristics to objects, to non-humans and abstract ideas.
Example:
But church
bells shouted time for midnight mass;
Trees sang
“Silent Night” and I had no sway:
Pun
also refers to as paronomasia is all about word play in which words with different
meanings have similar or identical sounds.
Example:
A Whiskas
cat I am, I love to prey;
The imaging of words relies on such
techniques as imagery, mood, tone and synesthesia; these techniques provide
strong visual and sensory impact for poets when writing their poetry. In any
poem, you are bound to come across imaging techniques in all types of poems
read. Imagery is the language of the senses. Imagery allows poets to add depth
and understanding of their creations. Imagery allows poets to use objects not
really there to create comparison between one that is, usually evoking more meaningful experiences
for readers as readers retrieve physical experiences which they may have from
sensory images. Imagery is a lot of things to a lot of different people;
through the senses, poets draw in readers by painting mind pictures in their
heads. What good is poetry without imagery? One would say a mere sounding brass
and a tinkling cymbal.
Synesthesia is a condition in which
one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another. Chaparralpoets define this condition as the
fusing of different senses by describing one kind of sense impression in words
normally used to describe another. As a poetic device, synesthesia attempts to
express a linkage between imagery sensors such as; visual, auditory, olfactory,
kinesthetic, organic, gustatory and tactile. An example of synesthesia taken
from “Avian Christmas Dish” is shown below:
Example:
Killer
instinct does dwell in feline mind;
Predatory
drives hunting daily sport;
Regardless
of how well fed, teeth must grind,
Through
cherry boughs I scaled through early morn,
With
every climb my wish grew out of sight;
It is amazing how these five verses
as shown above depict four imagery sensors (kinesthetic, organic, tactile and
visual) out of the seven types of imagery sensors.
Tone is about the attitude, feeling
or emotion one gets after reading poems. A poem’s tone points in three
directions; to the audience being addressed; he subject of the poem, and to the
general emotional climate of the poem;
In order to extract the tone of the
persona on the audience, the poem must be read as a whole. The persona’s
feeling or attitude is a combination of the poem’s structure, meter, images,
imagery, cadence, rhythm, figurative language, explicit meaning, implicit
meaning, symbolism, content, subject matter and the topic. Take for example;
poem “Avian Christmas Dish” the tone of the persona is polite and concise.
Obviously, this is very important because the persona’s goal is that of keeping
the audience motivated and not to drive away the audience. However, this does
not mean that the tone in poems is static. On the contrary, tone has a way of
shifting throughout the poem. The tone in the first stanza of a poem can shift
to a different tone in any of the remaining stanzas. Now let’s test this theory
on all the five stanzas of the poem, “Avian Christmas Dish” the results are
shown below:
Tone can also refer to the overall mood of the poem aimed to influence the readers’ emotional response and reactions to the poem’s content. However, tone and mood are two separate qualities. That said; how is mood defined?
Mood is created by the tone of the
poem filtered through the state of the mind. I like to say that it is the
atmosphere or feeling and is like a blanket cozily wrapped around tone. If the
tone is aggressive, the mood or state of mind is to attack or do harm. If the
tone is optimistic, then the mood will portray a positive attitude. If the tone
is low-spirited then mood will present an atmosphere of discouragement. The
overall mood of a poem is aimed at influencing readers’ emotional response and
reactions to the contents of the poem. Mood is influenced by the structure of
the poem; such as its imagery, words chosen, punctuations used, sound of words,
images of words, meaning of words and arrangement of words. If you have read
the poem “Avian Christmas Dish”; do you share this similar mood? I felt like a
weight had been lifted off my shoulders; for common sense had one the day; no
wanton killing was unleashed, and the joyous feeling of Christmas filled the
air.
Poets shape their creations around
imagery drawn from such broad areas as sound of words, meaning of words, the
arrangement of words and images of words. However, only a few poetic devices
from these broad areas are woven in each poem. This has been highlighted in
previous discourse with respect to the arrangement of words, the meaning of
words, and the images of words. Attention now is drawn to the sound of words
which is achieved when portions of words are clustered or juxtaposed to achieve
specific kinds of effects when they are spoken. Their sounds can be clever,
pleasing or soothing. Words that are not pleasing to the ears, poets often
avoid them. Of course, dark poetry writers cherish such words.
Poets of all persuasions draw from
the sounds of words by using poetic devices like; alliteration, assonance,
consonance, cacophony, euphony, onomatopoeia, repetition, rhyme and rhythm and
sibilance. Not all of these poetic devices associated with the sounds of words are to be found all at once in poems;
for there is the tendency for poets to select some of these poetic devices deemed
appropriate for each new poem created and is best suited for what the poem is
to achieve. Take for example in “Avian Christmas Dish” seven out of the ten
poetic devices are used such as; alliteration, assonance, consonance, sibilance,
rhyme, rhythm and scansion are shown below:
Alliteration repeats the same consonant
in any part of adjacent words.
Example:
With
every climb my wish grew out of sight;
But church bells bellowed time
for midnight mass;
Those black
birds chirped cherry-berry Christmas.
Assonance repeats vowel sounds in
stressed words placed near each other rather than in vowel sounds that are
unstressed.
Example:
Strolling
as usual under cherry tree;
Feline behavior really sets me free.
Regardless
of how well fed, teeth must grind.
Poultry
dish wish my fearless plot was spun.
Consonance repeats consonant sounds
at the ending of words that are stressed rather than in vowel sounds that are
unstressed.
Example:
Poultry
dish wish my fearless plot was spun.
But
church bells bellowed time for
midnight mass;
Trees
sang “Silent Night” and I had no sway;
We associate rhyme with poetry. It
is about words that have different beginning sounds but whose endings sound
alike, including the final vowel sound and everything following it.
Example:
Three
days before Christmas of twenty ten;
Strolling
as usual under cherry tree;
I
was on my wild hunting regimen;
Feline
behavior really sets me free.
Killer
instinct does dwell in feline mind;
Predatory
drives hunting daily sport;
Regardless
of how well fed, teeth must grind,
Domesticated
in home at Bridgeport...
On
boughs my four padded feet stood supreme;
Among
wet leaves and rising of the sun;
Birds
among the green, I plotted my scheme;
Poultry
dish wish my fearless plot was spun.
Through
cherry boughs I scaled through early morn,
With
every climb my wish grew out of sight;
"Come
down Ginger, you are no leprechaun";
That voice in my head was stern and polite.
A
Whiskas cat I am; I love to prey;
But
church bells bellowed time for midnight mass;
Trees
sang “Silent Night” and I had no sway;
Those
black-birds chirped cherry-berry Christmas.
Rhythm helps distinguish poetry from
prose. It is the metrical pattern mixed with rhymes fuelling the rhythmic beat
of poems. In order to provide examples of the rhythmic beat in poetry, it is
necessary to conduct to scan of verses in a poem as shown in the examples below
taken “Avian Christmas Dish”:
Scansion shows where the pattern of
stressed syllables and unstressed syllables occur in verses in a poem. Such
patterns are referred to as meter. Meter organizes voice patterns, in terms of
both the arrangement of stressed and unstressed as marked by ictus (/), the
breve (ˬ) and the meter counter (׀). Poetry is organized by
the division of each verse into “feet” metric units which consist of a
particular arrangement of strong and weak stresses as shown in the above
examples. Scansion, therefore, is the conscious measure of the pattern of
stressed and unstressed syllables in a verse of poetry. As seen in the examples
five metrical feet in English Language poetry is called an iambic pentameter
.If the five feet read only iambs, the meter gives off an unnatural rhythm or
monotonous rhythm. Hence, the reason why metrical feet of any length in English
Language poetry blend in other foot types like the trochee, spondee, dactyl,
pyrrhic and anapest to counteract monotonous rhythm.
References:
Poetic
Devices, Chaparralpoets. Retrieved March 9. 2003, from http://www.chaparralpoets.org/devices.pdf
Poetic
Form: Terza Rima, Poets.org Academy of American Poets. Retrieved March 9, 2013,
from Google search, http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/5794
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Haiti
Haiti Under Rubble from 7.0 Earthquake
Natural disasters whenever and wherever they occur impact on all of our lives. The Good Book says we are our brothers and sisters keepers lead by the Holy Spirit. Hence, we must do our part when disaster shows its ugly face. Any assistance, great or small, given from generous and loving hearts has equal weight. I'm passing on this information I received that Barbadians can go to First Caribbean Bank to donate to the Disaster Relief Fund for Haiti. The banking information is shown below:
First Caribbean Bank Account--2645374-- Cheques can be written to: HELP #2645374
For more information click on this link
My thoughts and prayers are with the people of Haiti.
First Caribbean Bank Account--2645374-- Cheques can be written to: HELP #2645374
For more information click on this link
My thoughts and prayers are with the people of Haiti.