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Poetry (ancient Greek: ποιεω (poieo) = I create) is traditionally a written art form (although there is also an ancient and modern poetry which relies mainly upon oral or pictorial representations) in which human language is used for its aesthetic qualities in addition to, or instead of, its notional and semantic content. The increased emphasis on the aesthetics of language and the deliberate use of features such as repetition, meter and rhyme, are what are commonly used to distinguish poetry from prose, but debates over such distinctions still persist, while the issue is confounded by such forms as prose poetry and poetic prose. Some modernists (such as the Surrealists) approach this problem of definition by defining poetry not as a literary genre within a set of genres, but as THE very manifestation of human imagination, the substance which all creative acts derive from.

Poetry may use condensed form to convey an emotion or idea to the reader or listener, or it may use devices such as assonance, alliteration and repetition to achieve musical or incantatory effects. Furthermore, poems often make heavy use of imagery, word association, and musical qualities. Because of its reliance on "accidental" features of language and connotational meaning, poetry is notoriously difficult to translate. Similarly, poetry's use of nuance and symbolism can make it difficult to interpret a poem or can leave a poem open to multiple interpretations. Thus, there can rarely be a single definitive interpretation of a given poem. In fact perhaps a better definition is Carl Sandburg's: "Poetry is the synthesis of hyacinths and biscuits."

Contents

  • 1 Nature of poetry
  • 2 Tools
    • 2.1 Sound
    • 2.2 Form
    • 2.3 Rhetoric
  • 3 History
  • 4 Terms
  • 5 External links

Nature of poetry

Poetry can be differentiated from prose, which is language meant to convey meaning in a less condensed way, using more logical or narrative structures. This does not imply poetry is illogical. Poetry is often created from the desire to escape the logical, as well as expressing feelings and other expressions in a tight, condensed manner. English Romantic poet John Keats termed this escape from logic Negative Capability. Prose poetry combines the characteristics of poetry with the superficial appearance of prose. Other forms include narrative poetry and dramatic poetry, used to tell stories and so resemble novels and plays.

The Greek verb ποιέω [poiéō (= I make or create)], gave rise to three words: ποιητής [poiētḗs (= the one who creates)], ποίησις [poíēsis (= the act of creation)] and ποίημα [poíēma (= the thing created)]. From these we get three English words: poet (the creator), poesy (the creation) and poem (the created). A poet is therefore one who creates and poetry is what the poet creates. The underlying concept of the poet as creator is not uncommon. For example, in Anglo-Saxon a poet is a scop (shaper or maker) and in Scots makar.

Tools

Sound

Perhaps the most vital element of sound in poetry is rhythm. Often the rhythm of each line is arranged in a particular meter. Different types of meter played key roles in Classical, Early European, Eastern and Modern poetry. In the case of free verse, the rhythm of lines is often organized into looser units of cadence. Robinson Jeffers, Marianne Moore, and William Carlos Williams were three notable poets who rejected the idea that meter was a critical element of poetry, claiming it was an unnatural imposition into poetry.

Poetry in English and other modern European languages often uses rhyme. Rhyme at the end of lines is the basis of a number of common poetic forms, such as ballads, sonnets and rhyming couplets. However, the use of rhyme is not universal. Much modern poetry avoids traditional rhyme schemes. Classical Greek and Latin poetry did not use rhyme. Rhyme did not enter European poetry until the High Middle Ages, when adopted from the Arabic language. Arabs have always used rhymes extensively, most notably in their long, rhyming qasidas. Some classical poetry forms, such as Venpa of the Tamil language, had rigid grammars (to the point that they could be expressed as a context-free grammar), which ensured a rhythm. Alliteration played a key role in structuring early Germanic and English forms of poetry, alliterative verse. The alliterative patterns of early Germanic poetry and the rhyme schemes of Modern European poetry include meter as a key part of their structure, which determines when the listener expects instances of rhyme or alliteration to occur. Alliteration and rhyme, when used in poetic structures, help emphasise and define a rhythmic pattern. By contrast, the chief device of Biblical poetry in ancient Hebrew was parallelism, a rhetorical structure in which successive lines reflected each other in grammatical structure, sound structure, notional content, or all three; which lent itself to antiphonal or call-and-response performance.

Sound plays a more subtle role in free verse poetry by creating pleasing, varied patterns and emphasizing or illustrating semantic elements of the poem. Alliteration, assonance, consonance, dissonance and internal rhyme are among the ways poets use sound. Euphony refers to the musical, flowing quality of words arranged in an aesthetically pleasing way.

Form

Poetry depends less on linguistic units of sentences and paragraphs. The structural elements are the line, couplet, strophe, stanza, and verse paragraph.

Lines may be self-contained units of sense, as in the well-known lines from William Shakespeare's Hamlet:

To be, or not to be: that is the question.

Alternatively a line may end in mid-phrase or sentence:

Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer

this linguistic unit is completed in the next line,

The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.

This technique is called enjambment, and is used to create expectation, adding dynamic tension to the verse.

In many instances, the effectiveness of a poem derives from the tension between the use of linguistic and formal units. With the advent of printing, poets gained greater control over the visual presentation of their work. As a result, the use of these formal elements, and of the white space they help create, became an important part of the poet's toolbox. Modernist poetry tends to take this to an extreme, with the placement of individual lines or groups of lines on the page forming an integral part of the poem's composition. In its most extreme form, this leads to concrete poetry.

Rhetoric

Rhetorical devices such as simile and metaphor are frequently used in poetry. Aristotle wrote in his Poetics that "the greatest thing by far is to be a master of metaphor". Since the rise of Modernism, some poets have opted for reduced use of these devices, attempting the direct presentation of things and experiences. Surrealists have pushed rhetorical devices to their limits, making frequent use of catachresis.

History

Poetry as an art form predates literacy. Poetry was employed as a means of recording oral history, storytelling (epic poetry), genealogy, and law. Poetry is often closely identified with liturgy in pre-literate societies. Many of the scriptures currently held to be sacred by contemporary religious traditions with their roots in antiquity were composed as poetry rather than prose to aid memorization and help guarantee the accuracy of oral transmission in pre-literate societies. As a result many of the poems surviving from the ancient world are a form of recorded cultural information about the people of the past, and their poems are prayers or stories about religious subject matter, histories about their politics and wars, and the important organizing myths of their societies.

Manuscript of the Rig Veda, Sanskrit verse composed in the 2nd millennium BC.

The use of verse to transmit cultural information continues today. Many English-speaking Americans know that "in 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue". An alphabet song teaches the names and order of the letters of the alphabet; another jingle states the lengths and names of the months in the Gregorian calendar. Some writers believe poetry has its origins in song. Most of the characteristics that distinguish it from other forms of utterance—rhythm, rhyme, compression, intensity of feeling, the use of refrains—appear to have come about from efforts to fit words to musical forms. In the European tradition the earliest surviving poems, the Homeric and Hesiodic epics, identify themselves as poems to be recited or chanted to a musical accompaniment rather than as pure song. Another interpretation is that rhythm, refrains, and kennings are essentially paratactic devices that enable the reciter to reconstruct the poem from memory.

In preliterate societies, these forms of poetry were composed for, and sometimes during, performance. There was a certain degree of fluidity to the exact wording of poems. The introduction of writing fixed the content of a poem to the version that happened to be written down and survive. Written composition meant poets began to compose for an absent reader. The invention of printing accelerated these trends. Poets were now writing more for the eye than for the ear.

Bust of Homer, one of the earliest European poets, in the British Museum

The development of literacy gave rise to more personal, shorter poems intended to be sung. These are called lyrics, which derives from the Greek lura or lyre, the instrument that was used to accompany the performance of Greek lyrics from about the seventh century BC onward. The Greek's practice of singing hymns in large choruses gave rise in the sixth century BC to dramatic verse, and to the practice of writing poetic plays for performance in their theatres. In more recent times, the introduction of electronic media and the rise of the poetry reading have led to a resurgence of performance poetry. The late 20th-century rise of the singer-songwriter, Rap culture, and the increase in popularity of Slam poetry have led to a split between the academic and popular views.

Terms

Periods, styles and movements

For movements see List of schools of poetry.
  • American poetry
  • Arabic poetry
  • Australian Poetry
  • Automatic poetry
  • Black Mountain
  • British Poetry Revival
  • Canadian poetry
  • Chanson de geste
  • Chinese poetry
  • Concrete poetry
  • Cowboy poetry
  • Digital poetry
  • Epitaph
  • Erasure poetry
  • Found poetry
  • Imagism
  • Irish poetry
  • Italian poetry
  • Korean poetry
  • Japanese poetry
  • Libel
  • Limerick poetry
  • Lyric poetry
  • Martian poetry
  • Medieval poetry
  • Minnesinger
  • Modernist
  • Modernist poetry
  • The Movement
  • Narrative poetry
  • New York School
  • Objectivist
  • Parnassian
  • Pastoral
  • Performance poetry
  • Portuguese poetry
  • Post-modernist
  • Romanticism
  • Russian poetry
  • San Francisco Renaissance
  • Sound poetry
  • Symbolism
  • Troubador
  • Trouvère
  • Welsh poetry

Technical means

  • Accent
  • Accentual verse
  • Aleatory methods
  • Alliteration
  • Alliterative verse
  • Anacrusis
  • Aposiopesis
  • Assonance
  • Cæsura
  • Chain rhyme
  • Consonance
  • Dissonance
  • Enjambement
  • Foot
  • Half rhyme
  • Eye rhyme
  • Kennings
  • Onomatopoeia
  • Rhyme
  • Rhyme scheme
  • Rhythm
  • Sprung Rhythm
  • Stichomythia
  • Syllabic verse

Tropes

  • Metaphor
  • Simile
  • Irony
  • Metonymy
  • Synecdoche
  • Ellipsis

Measures of verse

Types of metre Types of line
  • Amphibrach
  • Anapaest
  • Choreus
  • Dactyl
  • Iamb
  • Pyrrhic
  • Spondee
  • Tribrach
  • Trochee
  • Monometer
  • Dimeter/couplet
  • Trimeter
  • Tetrameter
  • Pentameter
  • Hexameter/Alexandrine
  • Heptameter
  • Octameter
  • Poulter's measure

Verse forms

  • Aisling
  • Acrostic
  • Ballad
  • Ballade royal
  • Blank verse
  • Breton lai
  • Chant royal
  • Chastushka
  • Cinquain
  • Clerihew
  • Couplet
  • Double dactyl
  • Dramatic poetry
  • Elegy
  • Englyn
  • Envoi
  • Epic
  • Epigram
  • Epyllion
  • Free verse
  • Ghazal
  • Grook
  • Haiku
  • Heroic couplets
  • Kimo
  • Kyrielle
  • Light Poetry
  • Limerick
  • Lyric
  • McWhirtle
  • Monostich
  • Narrative poetry
  • Nonsense verse
  • Ode
  • Onegin stanza
  • Ottava rima
  • Pantoum
  • Paradelle
  • Pantun
  • Quatrain
  • Quatorzain
  • Rapping
  • Renga
  • Rhyme royal
  • Rondeau
  • Rondel
  • Roundel
  • Rubaiyat
  • Sapphics
  • Senryu
  • Sestina
  • Shichigon-zekku
  • Sijo
  • Song
  • Sonnet
  • Tanka
  • Tercet
  • Terza rima
  • Terzanelle
  • Villanelle
  • Virelai ancien
  • Virelai nouveau

External links

Reference material and resources

  • Glossary of Poetic Terms, from Bob's Byway
  • Poetry Definitions from poetrymagic.co.uk
  • Library of Congress Poetry Resources
  • Poetry and Science Education
  • Favorite Poem Project

Poetry collections and anthologies

  • Poetry eTexts at Project Gutenberg
  • Representative Poetry Online
  • Bartleby Verse
  • Cosmoetica: Hundreds of poems, and essays on poetry
  • Vast Collection of Poems sorted by Subject and Poet
  • Plagiarist.com
  • Poetry X: 10,000+ classic and contemporary poems
  • AfroPoets Famous Black Writers
  • Starbuck:Classical Poetry

Poetry organizations and publications

  • Academy of American Poets
  • Poets & Writers: American poetry and writing magazine
  • Poetry Magazine
  • American Poetry Review
  • Contemporary Poetry Review
  • Miami Poetry Review
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Here's our top rated poetry links for the day:

Poetry Festival Feb. 22 at USD 

Sioux City Journal - Feb 12 12:37 PM
VERMILLION, S.D. -- The Vermillion Literary Project at the University of South Dakota will host the seventh annual VLP Poetry Festival Feb. 22. Most of the events will be on USD's main campus with a poetry reading and slam scheduled in the evening at the Coffee Shop Gallery in downtown Vermillion.
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'Poetry basic to human nature' 
The Times of India - Feb 12 11:44 AM
Poetry is very basic to human nature and all other forms of literature emanated from it.
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In Minn., a poetry slam with a twist 
AP via Yahoo! News - Feb 11 12:16 AM
Slam poetry got a fresh twist when three Victorian-era re-enactors read from such poets as William Wordsworth and Emily Dickinson in a setting that was fitting for the event a 19th-century stone mansion.
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Doha Urdu forum to hold poetry session 
Gulf Times - Feb 11 10:33 PM
ANJUMAN Muhibban-E-Urdu Hind, Qatar is to hold an All-India Urdu Mushaira (poetry session) in Doha on Thursday, February 15. Leading Indian poets, including some new faces, will take part along with local poets in the Mushaira, which is being organised to celebrate Indias 58th Republic Day.
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A cure-all for the love-struck? Call the 'poetry surgeons.' 
The Christian Science Monitor - Feb 12 2:46 PM
Sometimes, all you need to put love on paper is the help of a friendly poet.
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In Minn., a Poetry Slam With a Twist 
ABC News - Feb 11 12:35 AM
In Minnesota, a Unique Poetry Slam Puts a New Twist on Victorian Era Works
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Urbana attorney loves poetry ... and the law 
The Champaign News-Gazette - Feb 11 9:13 AM
URBANA You could call Carl Reisman a poet lawyerate. He's a poet who happens to put food on the table by practicing law. And he's a lawyer who likes to write poetry. "I don't think you can say either comes first. You can't separate out identities that way. People are complicated," said the 45-year-old Urbana resident, who wrote poetry long before he earned his law degree.
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Poetry Slam With A Victorian Twist 
WCCO Minneapolis/St. Paul - Feb 11 8:43 AM
The drawing room of a 19th-century mansion -- with its crystal chandelier twinkling, vanilla and cinnamon scents wafting and cream-colored walls subduing -- 'twas a fitting setting for some Victorian slam poetry. More Entertainment News
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Poetry, prose: Just the facts, m'am 
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Feb 10 9:17 PM
The literary facts are piling up so fast, I'm putting opinions aside for these updates, written live in the newsroom. Poetry in the news Readings
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New literary twist added to laundry cycle 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Feb 12 9:55 AM
Doing the laundry has taken on a new meaning for New Yorkers who can now watch their wash and spin cycles while listening to poetry and prose.
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Last Update: 2007-02-12 23:13:44

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