Sunday, April 11, 2010

36 Poetry Terms



Wiki defines Poetry as a form of literary art in which language is used for its aesthetic and evocative qualities in addition to or in lieu of its apparent meaning.






The following are some of the terms specific to the writing of the poetry:
1) Alliteration
       A repeated sound , usually applied only to consonants.
2) Anapest
       A metrical foot : two short/unstressed syllables followed by one long/stressed syllable (dee-dee-DUM -eg-energize).
3) Assonance
       A repeated vowel sound.
4) Ballad
       A narrative poem in short stanzas, especially one that tells a popular story.
5) Blank Verse
       Verse that doesn't rhyme.
6) Caesura:  
       A pause in the middle of the line, often indicated by punctuation.
7) Clerihew
       A witty, biographical poem of four lines( two rhyming couplets).
8) Couplet
         A pair of successive lines of verse, especially when riming together and of the same length.
9) Dactyl
         A metrical foot : one long/stressed syllable followed by two short/unstressed syllables (DUM-dee-dee – e.g. “poetry”).
10) Doggerel
         A word applied to verse of irregular rhythm, trivial content and inappropriate diction. Much comic verse is deliberately written as doggerel.
11) Elegy
        A poem mourning the dead.
12) Elision
        Deliberate omission of unstressed syllables, typically in order to maintain a rhythm – e.g. “o’er” for “over”.
13) Enjambment
        The lack of a pause between two lines of a poem
14) Foot
        The unit of poetic rhythm; a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.
15) Free verse
        Verse that follows no particular form, metre or rhyme scheme.
16) Haiku
         Seventeen syllable poems, generally split into three lines of five, seven and five syllables, often with a theme related to nature.
17) Half rhyme
         A rhyme where two words have similar consonant sounds but different vowel sounds – e.g. “hell” and “hill”. Also called a slant rhyme or an imperfect rhyme.
18)  Heroic couplet
       A rhyming pair of iambic pentameter lines.
19) Hexameter
       A poem in which the lines have six metrical feet. (And so forth : dimeter = 2 feet, trimeter = 3 feet, tetrameter = 4 feet, heptameter = 7 feet etc.)

20) Iamb
      A metrical foot : a short/unstressed syllable followed by a long/stressed syllable (dee-DUM – e.g. “today”).
21) Internal rhyme
      A rhyme within the words of a line.

22) Metre
      The rhythm of poetry; the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables
23) Ode
       A dignified, lyric poem expressing praise or some other elevated notion.
24) Pastoral
        Poetry dealing with rural life.
25) Pentameter
       A line that has five metrical feet.
26) Quatrain

       A four line stanza.
(And so forth : quintain, sestet, septain etc.)
27) Rhyme
      A repeated sound, usually at line endings.
28) Rhyme scheme
      The pattern of rhyming line-endings in a poem – e.g. “abab” means each stanza has four lines, with lines one and three rhyming with each other (rhyme “a”) and also lines two and four rhyming with each other (rhyme “b”)
29) Sonnet 

       A 14 line poem, of which there are various forms (Shakespearean, Spenserian etc.)
30) Spondee
       A metrical foot : two long/stressed syllables (DUM-DUM – e.g. “heartbreak”).
31) Stanza
       A a group of metrical lines or verses, usually no fewer than four, arranged in a certain pattern. A stanza is often called a “verse”.
32) Strong ending
       A stressed syllable at the end of a line.
33) Tercet
       A set or group of three lines bound by rhyme.

34) Trochee
       A metrical foot : a long/stressed syllable followed by a short/unstressed syllable (DUM-dee – e.g. “poem”).
35) Weak ending
       Ending a line on an unstressed syllable.

36) Wrenched rhyme
       A rhyming word whose pronunciation is altered in order to force it into a rhyme scheme
This is far from a complete list : an exhaustive glossary would fill many pages. But it does contain some of the main terms used by poets to discuss their work.

Friday, February 26, 2010

The God !!!

 
 Congrats Master .. So , this time its 200 !! Finally, after three unsuccessful attempts of breaching the 200-run barrier , Sachin has finally managed to do so. 186 vs NZ at Hyderabad, 163 vs NZ  at Christchurch and 175 vs Australia at Hyderabad -  each knock a jewel in itself , but ,all incomplete in one respect - that elusive 200 mark. What so great in this 200 mark , like all the records , this also will be broken with passage of time. Yes , it surely can be as records are made to be broken , but , one thing that cannot be erased till eternity , is the fact that Sachin Tendulkar was the first person to break this barrier. Mount Everest has been conquered a number of times by a number of mountaineers , but , the world still remembers the name of Edmund Hillary. Its about raising the bar even higher , taking the standards to the new heights. Man has to fight the tougher battles with his own inner-self rather than the outer world , in conquering these new peaks. The self-belief of doing something which no-body has done ever before , marks the hall-mark of the great personalities . My salute to them ... the likes of  Usain Bolt , Michael Phelps , Roger Federer , Michael Schumacher , Lance Armstrong , who achieved the milestones which were considered to be humanely impossible.This was one of those innings which got inducted into the Hall of the Fame automatically.

Achieving milestones, reaching pinnacles and shattering world records are something which  have becomes synonymous with Sachin."We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act , but , a habit " said Aristotle. Like Bradman,Tendulkar has not merely been a cricketer but a symbol of sustained excellence, not just a role model but a metaphor for  his country's aspirations , not just a sporting genius but a sociological phenomenon.These two are the players which has given hope to the nation . The mood of the nation , the swing of the stock market and the politics all seemed to be governed by the success of these players on the ground. They are the ones, who unite the nation .They are the hope , the smile. Such is the aura , that , the whole nation comes to stand-still while they bat .

   One thing , that such an innings has spurred is - now , the debate has grown across the horizontals and verticals. The arena of era and field of excellence has stretched to the infinity. This man stands tall amidst the likes of Bradman , Hobbs , Grace and Richards, might even the tallest among them, which am sure will be stamped when the Genius hangs his bat .