What Are the Sounds of Poetry? Linda Rief

by Linda Rief
What Are the Sounds of Poetry?
What is it that makes remembering the hundreds of lyrics to
your favorite songs so easy? It’s the rhythm, the beat, the way the
words flow. It’s powerful words arranged in the best order. It’s the
strongest line—repeated again and again for emphasis. It’s the
feeling you get as you slip under the spell of poetry!
Rhythm
Rhyme
Rhythm is a musical quality produced by
repeated sound patterns. All language has
rhythm, but it’s especially important in poetry.
Words rhyme when they end with the same
vowel or vowel/consonant sound, as in the words
clown and noun (both have an ow sound followed
by an n sound). In poetry, rhymes can be simple
(moth with cloth) or more complicated (antelope
with cantaloupe). Rhyme adds a musical quality
to poetry, making it easier to memorize lines,
stanzas (groups of lines that express a complete
idea), or an entire poem.
Meter The most obvious kind of rhythm is the
regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in the words poets put together. This regular pattern, or beat, is called meter. When poets
decide on a regular beat, they make all the lines
about the same length. Lines with an equal number of stressed syllables produce the same beat.
Scanning To find a poem’s meter, read the
poem aloud. Mark each stressed syllable you hear
with the symbol and each unstressed syllable
with the symbol . Marking this pattern is called
scanning. Read these marked lines aloud, and
listen for the beat:
End Rhyme Most rhymes are end rhymes: The
last word in one line is paired with the last word in
the next line. In the excerpt from “The Sneetches”
on the left, stars and thars are end rhymes.
Internal Rhyme Sometimes the last word in
one line will be echoed by a word placed at the
beginning or in the middle of the following line.
This is called an internal rhyme. Listen for internal rhymes in these lines:
Now, the Star-Belly Sneetches
Had bellies with stars.
The Plain-Belly Sneetches
Had none upon thars.
from “The Sneetches” by Dr. Seuss
644 Unit 3 • Collection 7
The rumbling, tumbling stones,
And “Bones, bones, bones!”
from “The Sea” by James Reeves
SKILLS FOCUS Literary Skills Understand rhythm and
meter; understand rhyme and rhyme scheme; understand
repetition and refrain; understand sound effects in poetry.
Rhyme Scheme The pattern of rhyming
Alliteration The repetition of consonant
sounds at the ends of lines in a poem is the rhyme
scheme. In addition to marking the meter in a
poem, you can also mark the rhyme scheme. To
mark rhyme scheme, identify words that rhyme
by labeling them with the same letter. This rhyme
scheme from “The Sea” is a-b-b-b-a. Listen:
sounds in words that are close together is called
alliteration. Alliteration often occurs at the beginning of a word, but sometimes it is within or at the
end of a word. Hear the repetition of wh sounds in
these lines. Can you also hear the s sounds?
Hour upon hour he gnaws
The rumbling, tumbling stones,
And “Bones, bones, bones!”
The giant sea dog moans,
Licking his greasy paws.
a
b
b
b
a
Free Verse Not all poems rhyme, nor do all
poems have a regular meter. A poet may decide
not to use a regular meter and rhyme scheme,
writing instead in loose groupings of words and
phrases. This style is known as free verse. Like a
conversation, free verse does not have a regular
beat, and it usually does not rhyme. Here’s the
beginning of a poem written in free verse:
Fifty cents apiece
To eat our lunch
We’d run
Straight from school
Instead of home
from “Good Hot Dogs”
by Sandra Cisneros
Other Sound Effects
Repetition and Refrain Poetry relies on repetition, the recurrence or repeating of something.
Rhymes are created by ending sounds that repeat.
Rhythm is created by beats that repeat. A poet
may repeat a word, phrase, line, or group of lines
to make a refrain. A poem’s refrain, like a song’s
chorus, may be the part that sticks in our minds.
It laughs a lovely whiteness,
And whitely whirs away.
from “Cynthia in the Snow”
by Gwendolyn Brooks
Onomatopoeia The use of a word whose
sound suggests its meaning—such as buzz or
sniff—is called onomatopoeia (ahn uh mat uh
PEE uh). The word meow is another example.
With a meow
Like the rusty latch
On a gate.
from “Ode to Mi Gato” by Gary Soto
Your Turn Analyze Sounds
of Poetry
1. Why might a poet want to write in free verse
instead of using a regular rhyme and meter?
2. Give an example of the following sounds
from a poem or song, or make up your own:
Sound
Rhyme
Alliteration
Onomatopoeia
Example
Learn It Online
Try the PowerNotes version of this lesson at:
go.hrw.com
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Literary Focus 645