Class 10 Poetic Devices
Class 10 Poetic Devices
Class 10 Poetic Devices
Metaphor:
New coins
The big drops are ten cent pieces and the little ones are fives
A curtain of rain
New silver coins.
Frozen pearls
Lencho was an ox of a man
Simile:
The field was white, as if covered with salt.
This seems like a total loss
Working like an animal in the fields
A plague of locusts would have left more than this.
Antithesis:
It requires such depths of oppression to create such heights of character.
Courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it.
Man‘s goodness is a flame that can be hidden but never extinguished.
That transformed a frightened young man into a bold one, that drove a law-abiding
attorney to become a criminal that turned a family-loving husband into a man without a
home that forced a life-loving man to live like a monk.
Simile:
In a country like South Africa
Who looked like I did.
Live like a monk
Imagery:
Sliding through the grass… deer pass
He should be snarling …. Terrorising the village
Enjambment:
He stalks .... of his cage
Sliding through …. deer pass
He should be snarling ... jungle‘s edge,
And stares ... brilliant stars.
Assonance:
His vivid stripes
His brilliant eyes
Consonance:
Stalks his stripes
His white fangs, his claws
Quiet – Repetition
Quiet rage – Oxymoron
Brilliant – Repetition
Snarling – Onomatopoeia
His First Flight
Young seagull & his family – Personification
Onomatopoeia:
Shrilly
Cackle
The Ball
Anaphora
What is the boy .... What, What ....I saw it go
Merrily bouncing ... Merrily over ... in the water
Merrily bouncing –Personification
Ball - Metaphor
Assonance:
What is the boy now, who has lost his ball
He is learning, well behind his desperate eyes
Merrily bouncing, down the street, there it is in the water – Imagery
Balls, balls will be lost – Repetition
Onomatopoeia
Plunked
Quaked
Ramble
Quack
Teachers are the most unpredictable creatures on earth. – Metaphor
My mother talked as much as I did – Simile
Mr Keesing was trying to play ... the joke was on him. – Irony
Amanda
Don‘t bite .... Don‘t hunch ... Amanda! – Anaphora
Stop, slouching, sit, straight – Sibilance, - Consonance
Emerald sea – Metaphor
Languid, emerald sea – Personification
Did you ... Did you .... Amanda? – Anaphora
Hushed – Onomatopoeia
The silence is golden, the freedom is sweet – Metaphor
Rapunzel – Allusion
Tower, tranquil, rare – Consonance
Simile :
It looked like her
It really looked like her own mouth.
It really looked like her own self!
This picture did look like Peggy.
Like thin kittens
The air smelled like Christmas
Animals
Animals & They – Personification
I think I live with animals – Assonance
they are so placid and self-contained – Personification
long and long – Repetition
They do not – Anaphora
Duty to God – Allusion
Tokens – Metaphor
Did I pass that way huge times ago and negligently drop them? – Rhetorical Question
Rhetorical Question :
Was it for the love of the loaf?
And why should we? Who would take the trouble of plucking the mango-leaf for the
toothbrush? And why was it necessary at all?
Simile :
Like a pader
Jackfruit-like physical appearance
The tiger never brushed his teeth – Personification
Coorg
This land of rolling hills – Personification
Midway between Mysore …. Kingdom of God – Metaphor
The air breathes – Transferred Epithet
Tree canopy – Metaphor
Kingfishers …. In the river by their mahouts. – Imagery
Birds, bees and butterflies give company – Personification
Birds, bees ….. tree canopy – Imagery
Searching for the heart and soul of India – Personification
Assam
It was green, green everywhere. – Repetition
Then the soft green paddy fields gave way to tea bushes. – Personification
a sea of tea bushes – Metaphor
Doll-like figures – Simile
This is tea country – Metaphor
You will see enough gardens to last you a lifetime!‖ – Hyperbole
Proposals
Repetition:
Don‘t go round and round
Simile:
Like a lovesick cat
Like a lunatic
Like your grandfather
As ugly as a worn-out cab-horse.
A dog as good as Squeezer
Like a partridge
Apostrophe:
The stuffed sausage!
The wizen-faced frump!
Jesuit!
Onomatopoeia:
Tfoo
Ouf
Devil take him – Allusion
Weight off my shoulders – Synecdoche
Metaphor:
He‘s a first-rate dog.
The dog is a bad hunter
He‘s half-dead
Scarecrow
Monster
Blind hen
Turnip-ghost
Old rat
The Necklace
Transferred Epithet :
Delighted air
Irritated eye
Shabby air
Modest wraps
Miserable money
―What is the matter? What is the matter?‖ – Rhetorical Question & Repetition
Oh! The good potpie! – Apostrophe
She danced with enthusiasm, intoxicated ... and sweet to her heart. – Climax
The modest they had carried .... the ball costume – Contrast
Still young, still pretty, still attractive – Repetition
The Hack Driver
Simile :
Like a cheap private detective
Like a box of eggs
Quick as a cat
As though I were a bright boy of seven
I felt that if he had been a policeman, he would have caught Lutkins respectfully. – Irony
The office did – Metonymy
Bholi
If girls go to school, who will marry them? – Rhetorical Question
Only then did she begin to believe that she was being taken to a place better than her home. –
Irony
Simile :
Like the horse
Like the goat
Like the parrots
Like their Lakshmi
Like a dumb cow
Like a streak of lightning
Transferred Epithet ;
Helpless flood
Triumphant smile
Cold contempt
Smiling eyes
Bholi felt as if suddenly all the bells in the village temple were ringing and the trees in front
of the school-house had blossomed into big red flowers. – Imagery
Heartless creature – Metaphor
Ramlal stood rooted to the ground – Chremamorphism
Light of a deep satisfaction that an artist feels when contemplating the completion of her
masterpiece – Metaphor