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Dr. Hodgin
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The Lake Isle of Innisfree
William Butler Yeats
Those Winter Sundays
Robert Hayden
Sir Patrick Spence
Anonymous
Out, Out—
Robert Frost
My Last Duchess
Robert Browning
My Papa’s Waltz
Theodore Roethke
The Author to Her Book
Anne Bradstreet
To a Locomotive in Winter
Walt Whitman
like to see it lap the Miles
Emily Dickinson
Speech to the Young. Speech to the Progress-Toward
Gwendolyn Brooks
Hate Poem
Julie Sheehan
The Golf Links
Sarah N. GleghomT
The Chimney Sweeper
William Blake
How do I love thee, let me count the ways
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Batter my heart, three-personed God, for You
John Donne
Aftermath
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Bread
Samuel Menashe
Grass
Carl Sandburg
London
William Blake
The Bean Eaters
Gwendolyn Brooks
Tears, Idle Tears
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Love Calls Us to the Things of This World
Richard Wilbur
the mother
Gwendolyn Brooks
The House that Built Me
Allen Shamblin and Tom Douglas
My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun
Emily Dickinson
O Captain! My Captain!
Walt Whitman
Humble and Kind
Lori McKenna
The splendor falls on castle walls
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Redemption
George Herbert
The Road Not Taken
Robert Frost
Verse
It refers to any single line of poetry or any composition written in separate lines of more or less regular rhythm, in contrast to prose
Paraphrase
The restatement in one’s own words of what one understands a poem to say or suggest.
Summary
A brief condensation of the main idea or plot of a work.
Subject
The main topic of a work, whatever the work is “about”.
Theme
A generally recurring subject or idea noticeably evident in a literary work. Not all subjects in a work can be considered this.
Lyric Poem
A short poem expressing the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker. Often written in first person, it traditionally has a song-like immediacy and emotional force.
Narrative Poem
A poem that tells a story. Ballads and epics are two common forms of this poetry.
Dramatic Poem
A poem written as a speech made by a character at some decisive moment. The speaker is usually addressing a silent listener.
Didactic Poem
A poem intended to teach a moral lesson or impart a body of knowledge.
Tone
The mood or manner of expression in a literary work, which conveys an attitude toward the work’s subject, which may be playful, sarcastic, ironic, sad, solemn, or any other possible attitude.
Satiric Poetry
Poetry that blends criticism with humor to convey a message, usually through the use of irony and a tone of detached amusement, withering contempt, and implied superiority.
Persona
Latin for “mask”, a fictitious character created by an author to be the speaker of a literary work.
Irony
In language, a discrepancy between what is said and what is meant. In life, a discrepancy between what is expected and what occurs.
Sarcasm
A style of bitter irony intended to hurt or mock its target.
Diction
Word choice or vocabulary.
Concrete Diction
Words that specifically name or describe things or persons.
Abstract Diction
Words that express general ideas or concepts.
Poetic Diction
Strictly speaking, poetic diction means any language deemed suitable for verse, but the term generally refers to elevated language intended for poetry rather than common use.
Allusion
A brief, sometimes indirect, reference in a text to a person, place, or thing. They imply a common body of knowledge between the reader and writer and act as a literary shorthand to enrich the meaning of a text.
Denotation
The literal, dictionary meaning of a word.
Connotation
An association or additional meaning that a word, image, or phrase may carry, apart from its literal denotation or dictionary definition. A word may pick up these from the uses to which it has been put in the past.
Image
A word or series of words that refers to any sensory experience (usually sight, although also sound, smell, touch, or taste. An image is a direct or literal recreation of a physical experience and adds immediacy to literary language.
Imagery
The collective set of images in a poem or other literary work.
Simile
A comparison of two things, indicated by some connective, usually like, as, or than, or a verb such as resembles. A simile usually compares two things that initially seem unlike but are shown to have a significant resemblance.
Metaphor
A statement that one thing is something else, which, in a literal sense, it is not.
Personification
The endowing of a thing, an animal, or an abstract term with human characteristics.
Apostrophe
A direct address to someone or something. A speaker may address an inanimate object, a dead or absent person, an abstract thing, or a spirit.
Overstatement
Also called hyperbole. Exaggeration used to emphasize a point.
Understatement
An ironic figure of speech that deliberately describes something in a way that is less than the case.
Paradox
A statement that at first strikes one as self-contradictory, but that on reflection reveals some deeper sense.
Pun
A play on words often used for comedic effect
Stanza
From the Italian, meaning “stopping-place” or “room”. A recurring pattern of two or more lines of verse, poetry’s equivalent to the paragraph.
Rhyme Scheme
Any recurrent pattern of rhyme within an individual poem.
Refrain
A word, phrase, line, or stanza repeated at intervals in a song or poem.
Ballad
Traditionally, a song that tells a story.
Alliteration
The repetition of a consonant sound in a line of verse or prose. It can be used at the beginning of words, or internally on stressed syllables.
Assonance
The repetition of two or more vowel sounds in successive words, which creates a kind of rhyme.
Cacophony
A harsh, discordant sound often mirroring the meaning of the context in which it is used.
Euphony
The harmonious effect when the sounds of the words connect with the meaning in a way pleasing to the ear and mind.
Onomatopoeia
An attempt to represent a thing or action by a word that imitates the sound associated with it.
The longing for inner peace and spiritual renewal through nature.
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
Loyalty and obedience can lead to tragic consequences when authority is misguided.
Sir Patrick Spence
Human life is fragile and the world remains indifferent to individual suffering.
Out, Out—
Love expressed through sacrifice and duty is often unrecognized until later.
Those Winter Sundays
The destructive consequences of jealousy, pride, and the desire to control others.
My Last Duchess
The complicated blend of affection and fear within family relationships.
My Papa’s Waltz
Creative work feels deeply personal and flawed, revealing the vulnerability of artists.
The Author to Her Book
Industrial progress is both powerful and beautiful, symbolizing the strength of modernity.
To a Locomotive in Winter
Technology’s presence in the natural world is awe-inspiring and transformative.
I like to see it lap the Miles
Hope, perseverance, and living in the present sustain us through adversity.
Speech to the Young, Speech to the Progress-Toward
Intense emotions can overwhelm logic, revealing the absurdity of exaggerated hatred.
Hate Poem
Social inequality allows the privileged to enjoy leisure while the vulnerable labor.
The Golf Links
Innocence is exploited by society, yet children cling to hope and faith
The Chimney Sweeper
True love is profound, spiritual, and enduring beyond death.
How Do I Love Thee?
Spiritual transformation requires surrender and divine intervention.
Batter my heart, three-person’d God
Life’s later seasons involve harvesting what is imperfect, mixed, and marked by decline.
Aftermath
Work done with devotion becomes an act of love that nourishes both body and spirit.
Bread
Time erases the signs of war, and humanity forgets its own violent history.
Grass
Oppression, corruption, and suffering are rooted in society’s institutions and human behavior
London
Aging, poverty, and memory shape a quiet but meaningful life.
The Bean Eaters
Nostalgia reveals both beauty and sorrow in remembering what is lost forever.
Tears, Idle Tears
Human life requires embracing earthly duties despite yearning for spiritual purity.
Love Calls Us to the Things of This World
Abortion leaves lasting emotional scars of guilt, love, and grief.
The Mother
Returning to one’s roots can bring healing, identity, and emotional restoration.
The House That Built Me
Power without autonomy can be both fulfilling and dangerous.
My Life had stood—A Loaded Gun
The death of a beloved leader transforms triumph into grief.
O Captain! My Captain!
Life’s success should be guided by integrity, kindness, and humility.
Humble and Kind
Beauty, sound, and memory echo endlessly, creating emotional resonance across time.
The Splendor Falls on Castle Walls
True forgiveness and renewal are found not in high places but through Christlike sacrifice.
Redemption
Our life choices define us, even when their meaning is shaped by later reflection.
The Road Not Taken