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Free Verse Poetry

Free Verse Poetry

Assessment

Presentation

English

9th - 11th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

CCSS
RL.9-10.10, RL.9-10.9, RL.8.10

+3

Standards-aligned

Created by

Carrie Deel

Used 40+ times

FREE Resource

6 Slides • 4 Questions

1

Free Verse Poetry

by Carrie Deel

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2

​Meter

Meter--Basic rhythmic structure of a line of poetry that is determined by two things: number of syllables and the pattern of emphasis on those syllables.

  • ONCE upON a MIDnight DREary, WHILE I PONdered WEAK and WEary.

    • ​Written in TROCHAIC OCTAMETER-8 syllables per line/each foot (pair) is written in a stressed/unstressed pattern

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3

​What is Free Verse?

  • ​​Poetry that does NOT conform to a regular meter or rhyme scheme

  • Free verse poets attempt to reproduce the natural​ of spoken language

  • ​Free verse uses many traditional poetic devices, such as rhyme, but it is done without a strict pattern

This is Just to Say

​William Carlos Williams

​I have eaten

​the plums

​that were

​in the ice box

​and which

​you were probably

​saving

​for breakfast

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4

​Cadence

​Natural rhythmic rise and fall of language as it is normally spoken

  • ​Different from meter, in which the stressed and unstressed syllables of a poetic line are carefully counted to conform to a regular meter

  • ​Free verse poets depend on their own sense of balance, proportion, and timing when deciding when to end a line in poetry--not a predetermined, traditional pattern

5

​Common Elements of Free Verse

  • ​Imagery--use of language to appeal to the five senses

  • Alliteration--repetition of similar consonant sounds at the beginning of words

  • ​Assonance--repetition of similar vowel sounds

  • ​Onomatopoeia--words that echo the sounds they make

  • ​Parallel Structure--repetition of the same or similar words, clauses, phrases, or sentences

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6

What shapes free verse?

Free verse is NOT entirely "free" or without rules. Free verse ​poets organize their poems using the following:

  • ​the natural, unstructured rhythms of spoken language

  • ​important images and patterns of images

Fog by Carl Sandburg

​The fog comes

​on little cat feet.

​It sits looking

​over harbor and city

​on silent haunches

​and then moves on.

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7

Multiple Choice

What type of figurative language is most evident in the example?

"With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;"

Pied Beauty~~Gerald Manley Hopkins

1

Imagery

2

Assonance

3

Alliteration

4

Onomatopoeia

8

Multiple Choice

What type of figurative language is most evident in the example?

"Hear the mellow wedding bells,

Golden bells!"

Bells~~Edgar Allan Poe

1

Imagery

2

Alliteration

3

Assonance

4

Onomatopoeia

9

Multiple Choice

What type of figurative language is most evident in the example?

"Does it stink like rotten mean?

Or crust and sugar over--

like a syrupy sweet?"

Harlem~~Langston Hughes

1

Imagery

2

Alliteration

3

Assonance

4

Onomatopoeia

10

Multiple Choice

What type of figurative language is most evident in the example?

"From somewhere the beat of drums

Steady rhythms piercing my senses

Persistently thump, thumping a bass

Thump, thump, thump, thumping"

1

Imagery

2

Alliteration

3

Assonance

4

Onomatopoeia

Free Verse Poetry

by Carrie Deel

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