Poetic Devices
Poetic Devices
Poetic Devices
Rhyme
A Poem With The Perfect Rhyme - by Sylvia Chidi
If a poem could cost a dime
I will spend my ink and spend my time
Making the perfect rhyme
More than a million people may read it
Even if I have to sell it on credit
I will be the businesswoman with wit
Sit down! Think about it!
A penny for the perfect sentence
A penny for a poem glaring with essence
A penny for writing about the present and past tense
A penny for describing a situation that is intense
A penny if I write truthfully without pretence
As I turn away from crime
Making the perfect rhyme
If a poem could cost a pound
I will turn my life around
As I compose the perfect poetic sound
That rhymes against any background
My words will be sublime
Not just the perfect rhyme
They will be read both at teatime and during bedtime
My sentences will mature in their prime with time
As I turn away from crime
Making the perfect rhyme
Alliteration
These poems deploy a technique that use the same consonant at the beginning of each stressed syllable
in a line of verse. For example "behind the tree the befuddled beagle barked "..Remember, it is the
sound of the letter and not the letter itself that makes a poem alliterative. So, great and gigantic do
not alliterate, but joke and giant do.
Poetry by Natasha Niemi
http://www.mywordwizard.com/alliteration-poems.html
Fast Rabbits
Rabbits running so very fast
In the field of green, green grass.
Sniffing for scents of snack time treats,
Hippity Hopping on their happy bunny feet.
When carrots and other foods are found
The rabbits prance and pounce.
Curious Cats
Curious cats crouch on the window sill
Watching unwaveringly through the glass
As blue birds fly by.
Curious cats are
Almost two headed in a sensitive sense,
Still alert and aware
Of the running, rotten rats behind them.
The Wonderful Wind
The wonderful wind whistles
Repeated reminders throughout the day
Telling tales of what is coming
Predicting and preparing us to pray.
The wise wind sometimes whispers
The secrets that have been secretly hid.
Onomatopoeia
Onomatopoeia is when a words pronunciation imitates its sound. When you say an onomatopoeic word, the
utterance itself is reminiscent of the sound to which the word refers. Poets use onomatopoeia to access the
readers auditory sense and create rich soundscapes. It is one of many poetic devices dealing with the sounds of
poetry. Many people confuse onomatopoeia with interjections; however, they are two different and distinct
concepts. Interjections are one of the eight parts of speech. An interjection is a sudden outburst of emotion or
excitement, such as ouch or wow.
While some onomatopoeic words may be used as interjections, most interjections do not imitate sounds. Contrarily,
onomatopoeic words, such as buzz or boom, always mimic the noises to which they refer. Here are 101
examples of onomatopoeia:
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83. Mark tried sneaking in the house but the squeak of his shoes woke up Mom.
84. Jenna ran around the lunchroom squealing like a pig.
85. When he sat down, the young boy squished the unfortunate critter in his pocket.
86. The musician used a coin to strum the guitar.
87. Shaun loved the swish of the basketball net.
88. Michael gently tapped the ball into the hole.
89. Time just keeps on ticking.
90. Bobby threw his books down with a thud.
91. That thump made us jump.
92. If you see him, toot your horn.
93. The rain trickled down the gutter.
94. Birds tweeted long before Twitter did.
95. The lawyer chased after the wail of the sirens.
96. The bullet whizzed by his ear.
97. Bobs big dogs woofed at the unfortunate mail main.
98. Beths little dog would not stop yapping.
99. Spaceman Spiff zapped the alien with his ray-gun.
100. Ronald zipped up his sleeping bag.
101. The race car zoomed past the finish line.
Simile
A simile is the comparison between two unlike things using like or as
Life Without You
Me without you,
is like a leafless fall,
a snowless winter,
and a flowerless spring.
Me without you,
is like a colorless rainbow,
a sunless day,
and a starless night.
Me without you,
is like the ocean without a wave,
the beach without sand,
and a flameless fire.
Me without you,
is like a book without words,
a man without a face,
and a child with no name.
http://literatureguides.weebly.com/examples-of-poems-with-similes.html
Or does it explode?
http://www.familyfriendpoems.com/poem/life-without-you#ixzz3YdmhqoYx
Metaphor
A figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place
of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them (as in drowning in money)
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My Room by: Michelle Krebs, Eve Elsing, Sarah Duckert, and Maria Simental
My room is heaven
with its clouds on the walls
that are lit with a luminous glow
from the gentle morning sun.
That light is the key that opens my eyes.
The pillows on my bed are as fluffy as clouds
and as soft as a baby's bottom.
The birds' chirping is like angels singing in my ears.
I am a god in my room and nothing else matters.