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Poetry

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Illustration from Lewis Carroll's poem 'The Hunting of the Snark' showing characters on an adventurous journey.

Poetry is a special kind of writing. It uses beautiful words and rhythm to share feelings and ideas. Poems make us think in new ways. They use sounds, patterns, and clever comparisons. Poems are written by people called poets. Each poem is a small piece of art.

Poets use many tricks to make their words sound nice. They might repeat sounds, use rhymes, or arrange words in special patterns. These tricks help the poem feel musical and have deeper meanings.

Poetry has been around for a very long time, from ancient times in Africa to today. Some of the oldest poems are from places like Sumer and China. They talk about nature, love, and big adventures. Poets all over the world keep creating new kinds of poetry. They mix old traditions with new ideas.

History

Main articles: History of poetry and Literary theory

Early works

Aristotle

Some people think poetry started before we learned how to write. It may have begun with stories told out loud. The oldest poem we still have is the Epic of Gilgamesh. It comes from around 3000 BCE in Sumer (in Mesopotamia, which is now Iraq). It was written on clay tablets using a special way of writing called cuneiform.

Other old poems include the Greek Iliad and Odyssey, the Persian Avestan books, and the Indian stories Ramayana and Mahabharata. Poems were often made to help people remember stories.

Western traditions

John Keats

In the past, people in Europe thought about different kinds of poetry. They talked about big stories (epics), funny or sad plays (tragedies), and shorter poems that share feelings (lyric poetry). These ideas came from a Greek thinker named Aristotle.

Later, during a time called the Renaissance, people kept using these ideas. They thought poetry was different from regular writing because it didn't just tell a story in a straight line.

Archibald MacLeish

20th-century and 21st-century disputes

In the 1900s, some writers started to ignore old rules about how poems should look. They tried new ways to write poems. Today, poets mix ideas from many places and times.

In the 2020s, computers learned to make poems too. Some people think these computer poems sound very nice and easy to read.

Elements

Prosody

Main article: Meter (poetry)

Prosody is the study of rhythm and patterns in poetry. Rhythm and meter are related but different. Meter is the pattern set for a verse, like iambic pentameter, while rhythm is the actual sound from a line of poetry. Prosody can also look at how lines are scanned to show meter.

Rhythm

Main articles: Timing (linguistics), tone (linguistics), and Pitch accent

How rhythm is made in poetry changes between languages and traditions. Languages are often described by how they set timing, like by accents, syllables, or moras. Japanese is a mora-timed language. Latin, Catalan, French, Leonese, Galician and Spanish are syllable-timed languages. Stress-timed languages include English, Russian and German. Intonation also affects rhythm. Languages can use pitch or tone. Some languages with pitch accents include Vedic Sanskrit or Ancient Greek. Tonal languages include Chinese, Vietnamese and many Subsaharan languages.

Metrical rhythm usually arranges stresses or syllables into repeated patterns called feet within a line. In Modern English, the pattern of stresses mainly defines feet, so rhythm based on meter often uses stressed and unstressed syllables. In classical languages, vowel length defines meter instead of stresses. Old English poetry used a pattern with varied syllables but a fixed number of strong stresses in each line.

The main device in ancient Hebrew Biblical poetry, including many psalms, was parallelism. This is when lines reflect each other in structure, sound, or meaning. Biblical poetry often creates rhythm with larger sound units like lines and phrases instead of metrical feet.

Classical Chinese poetics recognized level and oblique tones. Certain poetry forms had rules about which syllables must be level or oblique.

Modern English poetry often uses free verse, where rhythm is organized by looser cadence rather than regular meter. Poets like Robinson Jeffers, Marianne Moore, and William Carlos Williams rejected strict accentual meter.

Robinson Jeffers

Meter

Main article: Scansion

In Western poetry, meters are usually grouped by metrical foot and the number of feet per line. The number of feet is described with Greek terms: tetrameter for four feet, hexameter for six feet, and so on. For example, iambic pentameter has five iamb feet per line. This system started in ancient Greek poetry and was used by poets like Pindar and Sappho, and the tragedians of Athens. Dactylic hexameter, with six dactyl feet per line, was the traditional meter of Greek epic poetry, used by Homer and Hesiod. Iambic pentameter and dactylic hexameter were later used by poets like William Shakespeare and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Common metrical feet in English include:

  • iamb – one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable
  • trochee – one stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable
  • dactyl – one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables
  • anapaest – two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed syllable
  • spondee – two stressed syllables together
  • pyrrhic – two unstressed syllables together

There are many other types of feet, up to the choriamb, a four-syllable foot with a stressed syllable, two unstressed, and another stressed syllable. Languages using vowel length or intonation, like Ottoman Turkish or Vedic, have similar concepts to iamb and dactyl.

Each type of foot has its own feel, alone or with others. The iamb is natural in English and creates a subtle, stable verse. Scanning meter shows the basic pattern but not varying stresses, pitches, or syllable lengths.

Sanskrit poetry is organized by chhandas, which continue to influence South Asian languages' poetry.

Metrical patterns

Main article: Meter (poetry)

Marianne Moore

Different poetry traditions and genres use different meters, from Shakespearean iambic pentameter to Homeric dactylic hexameter and the anapestic tetrameter in nursery rhymes. Variations to established meters are common to add emphasis or avoid repetition. For example, stress in a foot may be inverted, a pause (caesura) may be added, or the final foot may have a feminine ending or be replaced by a spondee. Regularity varies between languages. Patterns often develop distinctively in different languages, so iambic tetrameter in Russian shows more regularity in accents than in English.

Common metrical patterns include:

Rhyme, alliteration, assonance

Main articles: Rhyme, Alliterative verse, and Assonance

Rhyme, alliteration, assonance and consonance create repetitive sound patterns. They can be used as a structural element, to reinforce rhythm, or for decoration. They can also carry meaning beyond sound. For example, Chaucer used heavy alliteration to mock Old English verse.

Rhyme has identical or similar sounds at the ends of lines or within lines (internal rhyme). Languages differ in rhyme richness; Italian has a rich structure, while English is less rich due to irregular endings. The richness of a language’s rhymes affects common poetic forms.

Alliteration repeats letters or sounds at the start of words close together. Alliteration and assonance were key in early Germanic, Norse, and Old English poetry. In modern European poetry, alliteration is often used as decoration rather than structure.

Assonance uses similar vowel sounds within words, used in skaldic poetry and Homeric epics. Consonance repeats consonant sounds without putting them at word starts, creating subtler effects than alliteration.

Rhyming schemes

Attic red-figure kathalos painting of Sappho from c. 470 BCE

Main article: Rhyme scheme

In many languages, poets use rhyme in set patterns for forms like ballads, sonnets, and rhyming couplets. However, not all modern poetry uses traditional rhyme schemes. Rhyme entered European poetry in the High Middle Ages, influenced by Arabic language poets in Al Andalus. Arabic poets used rhyme extensively from the sixth century onward.

Rhyme schemes are described with letters. For example, if the first, second, and fourth lines of a quatrain rhyme and the third does not, it is an AA BA scheme. An A BB A quatrain (enclosed rhyme) is used in Petrarchan sonnets. Complicated schemes have their own names, like ottava rima and terza rima. The main article discusses types and uses of rhyming schemes.

Form in poetry

Poetic form is more flexible in modernist and post-modernist poetry and less structured than earlier eras. Many modern poets avoid recognizable structures and write in free verse. Free verse is not formless but has subtle, flexible prosodic elements. All poetry, regardless of style, has some regard for basic formal structures.

Major structural elements in poetry include the line, the stanza or verse paragraph, and larger combinations like cantos. Visual presentation of words and calligraphy are also used. These units combine into larger poetic forms, like the sonnet.

Lines and stanzas

Main articles: Line (poetry) and Stanza

Poetry is often separated into lines on a page, a process called lineation. Lines may follow metrical feet or rhyme patterns. Lines can also separate, compare, or contrast ideas or highlight tone changes.

Lines are often organized into stanzas, groups of lines. A couplet has two lines, a triplet or tercet has three, and a quatrain has four. These lines may or may not relate by rhyme or rhythm.

Some poems use verse paragraphs, where regular rhymes and rhythms aren’t used, but poetic tone is set by rhythms, alliterations, and rhymes in paragraph form.

Homer: Roman bust, based on Greek original

In many forms, stanzas interlock, meaning the rhyme scheme or structure of one stanza determines the next. Examples include the ghazal and the villanelle, which use refrains. Stanzas can also separate thematic parts of a poem.

In longer epic poetry, stanzas follow strict rules and combine.

Visual presentation

Main article: Visual poetry

Even before printing, the visual appearance of poetry added meaning. Acrostic poems use initial letters to convey meaning. In Arabic, Hebrew, and Chinese poetry, finely calligraphed poems are important.

With printing, poets gained more control over visual presentation. Visual elements became a tool, used by Modernist poets to complement rhythm with visual caesuras, create juxtapositions, accentuate meaning, or simply create beauty. This can lead to concrete poetry or asemic writing.

Diction

Main article: Poetic diction

Poetic diction is how language is used, considering sound, meaning, and interaction with form. Many languages and forms have specific poetic dictions, sometimes with distinct grammars or dialects. Registers in poetry range from ordinary speech to highly ornate language.

Poetic diction can include rhetorical devices like simile and metaphor, and tones like irony. Aristotle said mastery of metaphor is key. Since Modernism, some poets have used diction that avoids rhetorical devices, focusing on direct presentation.

Allegorical stories are important in many cultures. Aesop's Fables are a rich source of allegorical poetry. Other examples include Roman de la Rose, William Langland’s Piers Ploughman, and Jean de la Fontaine’s Fables. Poems may also contain symbols or allusions to deepen meaning.

Another element is vivid imagery. Juxtaposing unexpected images is strong in surrealist poetry and haiku. Vivid images often have symbolism or metaphor. Poetic dictions use repetitive phrases, like Homer’s "rosy-fingered dawn" or "the wine-dark sea," or longer refrains, for effect. Repetition can add somber tone or irony as context changes.

Forms

See also: Category: Poetic forms

Many cultures have special ways to write poetry. These ways have rules about rhymes, rhythms, and structure. Some rules are very strict, while others are easier to follow.

Sonnet

Main article: Sonnet

The sonnet is a popular kind of poem with fourteen lines. It has rules for rhymes and structure. One special part of sonnets is the “turn,” where the poem’s idea changes.

Sonnets often talk about deep feelings and love. Poets have used this form to write about many different topics.

Shi

Main article: Shi (poetry)

Shi is a major kind of poetry from China. It has different styles, but all need rhyming. Some styles have four lines, while others have eight. The lines often have five or seven characters each.

Villanelle

Main article: Villanelle

The villanelle is a nineteen-line poem with five groups of three lines and one group of four lines. It uses two lines that repeat throughout the poem.

Limerick

Main article: Limerick (poetry)

A limerick is a funny five-line poem. The rhythm matters, and the lines follow a special pattern of rhyming.

Tanka

Main article: Tanka

Tanka is a form of Japanese poetry with five lines that have thirty-one sounds altogether. It often changes tone or subject between the first three lines and the last two.

Haiku

Main article: Haiku

Haiku is a short form of Japanese poetry with three lines that have seventeen sounds altogether. It often includes a word that connects to a season.

Khlong

Main article: Thai poetry

The khlong is an old form of Thai poetry with special rules about syllables and tones. It is considered an advanced and elegant style.

Ode

Main article: Ode

Odes are serious poems that look at a subject from different angles. They often have three parts: a strophe, an antistrophe, and an epode.

Ghazal

Main article: Ghazal

The ghazal is a form of poetry from Arabic, Bengali, Persian, and Urdu cultures. It usually has several rhyming pairs of lines that share a repeated line at the end. Ghazals often talk about deep feelings or spiritual ideas.

JapaneseRomanjiEnglish
富士の風
や扇にのせて
江戸土産
fuji no kaze
ya oogi ni nosete
Edo miyage
the wind of Mt. Fuji
I've brought on my fan!
a gift from Edo

Genres

In addition to specific forms of poems, poetry is often thought of in terms of different genres and subgenres. A poetic genre is a tradition or classification of poetry based on the subject matter, style, or other broader literary characteristics.

Narrative poetry

Main article: Narrative poetry

Narrative poetry is a genre of poetry that tells a story. It may be the oldest type of poetry. Many scholars have concluded that famous ancient poems were made from shorter narrative poems.

Lyric poetry

Main article: Lyric poetry

Lyric poetry is a genre that does not try to tell a story but is more personal. Poems in this genre tend to be shorter and melodic, and thoughtful.

Epic poetry

Main article: Epic poetry

Epic poetry is a genre of poetry that is often long poems about events that are heroic or important to the culture of the time.

Satirical poetry

Poetry can be a powerful way to satire.

Elegy

Main article: Elegy

An elegy is a sad poem, especially a lament for someone who has died or a funeral song.

Verse fable

Main article: Fable

The fable is an ancient literary genre, often written in verse. It is a short story that features animals, legendary creatures, plants, objects, or forces of nature that show a moral lesson.

Dramatic poetry

Main articles: Verse drama and dramatic verse, Theatre of ancient Greece, Sanskrit drama, Chinese Opera, and Noh

Dramatic poetry is drama written in verse to be spoken or sung, and appears in many cultures.

Speculative poetry

Main article: Speculative poetry

Speculative poetry, also known as fantastic poetry, is a poetic genre that deals with subjects that are "beyond reality".

Prose poetry

Main article: Prose poetry

Prose poetry is a mix of prose and poetry.

Light poetry

Main article: Light poetry

Light poetry, or light verse, is poetry that tries to be funny. Poems that are "light" are usually short, and can be about silly or serious topics.

Slam poetry

Slam poetry as a genre began in 1986 in Chicago, Illinois, when Marc Kelly Smith organized the first slam.

Performance poetry

Main article: Performance poetry

Performance poetry, like slam, is done in front of an audience. It can mix many things in a performance of a text, such as dance, music, and other types of performance art.

Language happenings

The term happening became popular with the avant-garde movements in the 1950s for spontaneous, place-specific performances. Language happenings are events that focus less on poetry as a set literary genre, and more as a linguistic act and performance, often including other forms of performance art while poetry is read or made at that moment.

Images

A decorative illustration of an open book and scroll, perfect for learning about vintage book designs.
An ancient Sumerian tablet from Iraq, dating back to 2037-2029 BCE, showcasing the oldest known love poem.
Portrait of Alexander Pushkin painted in 1827 by Orest Kiprensky.
An ancient manuscript page showing Old English text from the epic poem Beowulf, preserved in the British Library.
Illustration of two books, perfect for learning about reading and literature.
Portrait of Confucius, the ancient Chinese philosopher and scholar.
An ancient Chinese manuscript from the Warring States Period, written on bamboo strips and housed in the Shanghai Museum.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Poetry, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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