| Read
with a pencil |
Read a poem with a pencil in your
hand.
Mark it up; write in the margins; react to it; get involved
with it. Circle important, or striking, or repeated words. Draw
lines to connect related ideas. Mark difficult or confusing words,
lines, and passages.
Read through the poem, several times if you can, both silently
and aloud.
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| Examine
the basic subject of the poem |
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Consider the title of the poem carefully.
What does it tell you about the poem's subject, tone, and
genre? What does it promise? (After having read the poem,
you will want to come back to the title in order to consider
further its relationship with the poem.)
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What is your initial impression of the poem's subject?
Try writing out an answer to the question, "What is this
poem about?"--and then return to this question throughout
your analysis. Push yourself to be precise; aim for more than
just a vague impression of the poem. What is the author's
attitude toward his or her subject?
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What is the poem's basic situation? What
is going on in it? Who is talking? To whom? Under what circumstances?
Where? About what? Why? Is a story being told? Is something--tangible
or intangible--being described? What specifically can you
point to in the poem to support your answers?
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Because a poem is highly compressed, it may help you to try
to unfold it by paraphrasing the poem aloud,
moving line by line through it. If the poem is written in
sentences, can you figure out what the subject of each one
is? The verb? The object of the verb? What a modifier refers
to? Try to untie any syntactic knots.
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Is the poem built on a comparison or analogy?
If so, how is the comparison appropriate? How are the two
things alike? How different?
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What is the author's attitude toward his
subject? Serious? Reverent? Ironic? Satiric? Ambivalent? Hostile?
Humorous? Detached? Witty?
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Does the poem appeal to a reader's intellect? Emotions? Reason?
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| Consider
the context of the poem |
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| Study
the form of the poem |
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Consider the sound and rhythm
of the poem. Is there a metrical pattern? If so, how regular
is it? Does the poet use rhyme? What do the meter and rhyme
emphasize? Is there any alliteration? Assonance? Onomatopoeia?
How do these relate to the poem's meaning? What effect do
they create in the poem?
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Are there divisions within the poem? Marked
by stanzas? By rhyme? By shifts in subject? By shifts in perspective?
How do these parts relate to each other? How are they appropriate
for this poem?
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How are the ideas in the poem ordered? Is
there a progression of some sort? From simple to complex?
From outer to inner? From past to present? From one place
to another? Is there a climax of any sort?
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What are the form and genre
of this poem? What should you expect from such a poem? How
does the poet use the form?
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| Look at
the word choice of the poem |
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One way to see the action in a poem is to list all its verbs.
What do they tell you about the poem?
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Are there difficult or confusing
words? Even if you are only the slightest bit unsure
about the meaning of a word, look it up in a good dictionary.
If you are reading poetry written before the twentieth century,
learn to use the Oxford English Dictionary, which can
tell you how a word's definition and usage have changed over
time. Be sure that you determine how a word is being used--as
a noun, verb, adjective, adverb--so that you can find its
appropriate meaning. Be sure also to consider various possible
meanings of a word and be alert to subtle differences between
words. A good poet uses language very carefully; as a good
reader you in turn must be equally sensitive to the implications
of word choice.
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What mood is evoked in the poem? How is
this accomplished? Consider the ways in which not only the
meanings of words but also their sound and the poem's rhythms
help to create its mood.
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Is the language in the poem abstract or
concrete? How is this appropriate to the
poem's subject?
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Are there any consistent patterns of words?
For example, are there several references to flowers, or water,
or politics, or religion in the poem? Look for groups of similar
words.
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Does the poet use figurative language? Are
there metaphors in the poem? Similes? Is there any personification?
Consider the appropriateness of such comparisons. Try to see
why the poet chose a particular metaphor as opposed to other
possible ones. Is there a pattern of any sort to the metaphors?
Is there any metonymy in the poem? Synechdoche? Hyperbole?
Oxymoron? Paradox? A dictionary of literary terms may be helpful
here.
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| Finishing
Up |
- Ask, finally, about the poem, "So what?" What does
it do? What does it say? What is its purpose?
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| For further information you may wish
to take the Writing Center class
entitled Literary
Analysis?: No Problem!. |