Types of Poems Ballad Songlike poem that tells
Types of Poems
Ballad ● Songlike poem that tells a story ● Often a sad story of betrayal, death, or loss ● Usually have a regular steady rhythm, a simple rhyme pattern, and a refrain ● Easier to memorize ● Maiden-Savin’ Sam (pg 644)
Epic ● Long narrative poem about the many deeds of a great hero ● Closely connected to a particular culture ● The hero of an epic embodies the important values of the society that he comes from (so far all heros of Epic poetry have been MALE!) ● Excerpt from Beowulf (pg 648)
Narrative Poem ● Poem that tells a story ● A series of related events ● Paul Revere’s Ride (pg 629)
Lyric Poem ● A poem that does not tell a story but expresses the personal feelings of the speaker
The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And both that morning equally lay And sorry I could not travel both In leaves no step had trodden black. And be one traveler, long I stood Oh, I kept the first for another day! And looked down one as far as I could Yet knowing how way leads on to way, To where it bent in the undergrowth; I doubted if I should ever come back. Then took the other, as just as fair, I shall be telling this with a sigh And having perhaps the better claim, Somewhere ages and ages hence: Because it was grassy and wanted wear; Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— Though as for that the passing there I took the one less traveled by, Had worn them really about the same, And that has made all the difference.
Ode ● A long lyric poem ● Usually praising some subject ● Written in dignified language ● Ode to Thanks (pg 658)
Sonnet ● 14 lines ● A type of lyric poem ● Follows strict rules of structure, meter, and rhyme ● On the Grasshopper and the Cricket (pg
Elegy ● A poem of mourning ● Mostly about someone who has died ● O Captain! My Captain! (pg 66)
Free Verse ● Does not mean without form or structure ● Do not follow a regular rhyme scheme or meter ● Poets have to rely on their own sense of balance and measure ● I Hear America Singing (pg. 671) ● I, Too (pg 672)
- Slides: 10