РефератыИностранный языкSoSound In Poetry Essay Research Paper Poems

Sound In Poetry Essay Research Paper Poems

Sound In Poetry Essay, Research Paper


Poems usually begin with words or phrase which appeal more because of their


sound than their meaning, and the movement and phrasing of a poem. Every poem


has a texture of sound, which is at least as important as the meaning behind the


poem. Rhythm, being the regular recurrence of sound, is at the heart of all


natural phenomena: the beating of a heart, the lapping of waves against the


shore, the croaking of frogs on a summer?s night, the whisper of wheat swaying


in the wind. Rhythm and sound and arrangement ?the formal properties of


words?allow the poet to get beyond, or beneath the surface of a poem. Both


Gwendolyn Brooks? ?Sadie and Maud? (799) and Anne Bradstreet?s ?To My


Dear and Loving Husband? (784) emphasize poetic sound to express their themes.


Used to enhance sound in a poem, alliteration is the repetition of sound in


consecutive or neighboring words, usually at the beginning of words. Both Brooks


and Bradstreet make use of alliteration in their poems. ?Sadie stayed at home.


/ Sadie scraped life?? (2-3) the repetition of s is evident in these two


lines, reflecting the sassiness and independence that Sadie possessed. ?Then


while we live, in love lets [persevere]? (11) the slow musical repetition of


the l sounds reflect the romantic emphasis in the poem. Assonance?the


repetition of the same or similar vowel sound, especially in stressed


syllables?can also enrich a poem. Assonance can be used to unify a poem as in


Bradstreet?s poem in which it emphasizes the thematic connection among words


and unifies the poem?s ideas of the husband and wife becoming one. ?Compare


with me ye woman if you can? (4). In Brook?s poem, repeated vowel sounds


extend throughout. Brooks indirectly links certain words and by connecting these


words, she calls attention to the imagery that helps communicate the poems theme


of how different two people who grew up in the same household can be. ?Under


her maiden name/ Maud and Ma and Papa?? (10-11). In addition to alliteration


and assonance, poets create sound patterns with rhyme. The conventional way to


describe a poem?s rhyme scheme is to chart rhyming words that appear at the


ends of lines. In Brooks? poem the rhyme scheme is abcb, defe which reinforces


the way two things can begin the same, but change as time goes on. Naturally,


rhyme does not have to be subtle to enrich a poem. An obvious rhyme scheme like


the one in Bradstreet?s poem is aabb, ccdd can communicate meaning by forcing


attention on a relationship between two people that are not normally linked. The


poem?s theme speaks of the husband and wife becoming one, the poem?s rhyme


scheme is of two consecutive lines belonging together and having one sound.


Rhyme can also be classified according to the position of the rhyming syllables


in a line of verse. Bradstreet?s poem contains beginning rhyme, Brooks?


poem, on the other hand, contains only end rhyme. ?I prize thy love more than


whole mines of gold/ My love is such that rivers cannot quench/ Thy love is such


I can in no way repay?(5, 7, 9). ?Her girls struck out from home/ Her


fine-tooth comb? (14, 16). Poets, too, create rhyme by using repeated words


and phrases. ?Sadie scraped life/ with a fine-toothed comb? (3-4) and


?Sadie had left as heritage/ her fine-tooth comb? (15-16). The repeated


phrases ?Sadie? and ?Maud?, which shift from one subject to the other


and back again ?Maud went to college/ Sadie stayed at home? (1-2). The poem


has a singing rhythm that resembles a song that children play to. The


remembrance of carefree childhood ironically contrasts with the adulthood that


both Sadie and Maud now face as they grow up: Sadie stays home and has two


children out of wedlock; Maud goes to college and ends up ?a thin brown


mouse?. Repeated phrases in Bradstreet?s poem include ?if ever? and


?love?. ?If ever two were one then surely we. / If ever man were loved by


wife then thee? (1-2). ?My Love is such that rivers cannot quench, / Nor


ought but love from the give recompence? (9-10). With such recurrence, the


poem is like a slow romantic song and the repeated words are its rhythm. Meter,


the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables that govern a poem?s lines,


largely creates poetic rhythm. This gives readers the ?beat? of the poem and


approximates the sound of spoken language. The meter of Bradstreet?s poem is


iambic pentameter and it is evident throughout the poem. It contributes to the


overall effect of the poem because all of the words about one, we, thee, are


stressed or emphasized; thus reinforcing the theme of the poem. The meter of


Brooks? poem is anapestic dimeter, it contributes to the overall theme of the


poem like the comparison of the sisters, every other stanza is alike. A way of


varying meter is to introduce a pause in the rhythm often created by a


caesura–a ?cutting? within a line. Both Brooks and Bradstreet use caesuras


to complete individual thought and to add to the beat of the poem. Although the


end of a line may mark the end of a metrical unit, it does not always coincide


with the end of a sentence. Poets may choose to indicate a pause at this point,


or they ma continue, without a break, to the next line. Both Brooks and


Bradstreet use end-stopped lines?lines that have distinct pauses at the end.


?Thy love is such that I can in no way repay, / The heavens reward thee


manifold I pray.? (8-9). ?When Sadie said her last so long/ Her girls struck


out from home.? (13-14). These lines give he poem a more sharp, abrupt effect


like the lines in a song. With sound and rhythm being at the heart of our


everyday lives, we begin not to notice how much of an effect it has on us.


It?s in the beating of a heart, the movement of rush-hour traffic, and in the


way we walk. With this, what often attracts us to poetry is its sound and


movement. Poets use sound to express the themes of their poems and it allows


them to find a deeper meaning behind the poem. Both Brooks? and Bradstreet


made rhythm and sound evident in conveying the themes of their poems.


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