Today we will discuss the Pantoum Form and why a poet might decide to use it. Lastly, read and comment on pantoum poems. You will have some time to work on essays.
¥ou will also some study questions on a villanelle ("The Waking") due on Wednesday. Please find it and do the poems in your textbook on it.
You need to know a little bit about the PUNK movement in the 70s. You might want to listen to the following songs, "Anarchy in the UK" by the Sex Pistols; "London Calling" by The Clash; "I Wanna Be Sedated" by the Ramones; "Speak No Evil" by Television. You could also listen to Richard Hell's "Blank Generation" and Lou Reed's "Heroin". These songs could give you a backdrop for the poem. You could also read up on the PUNK movement on the web.
FORM: PANTOUM
A Malayan Form. A pantoum consists of an indefinite number of quatrain
stanzas with particular restrictions: lines 2 and 4 are repetons- the
become become lines 1 and 3 of the following stanza. The pantoum usually
ends with a quatrain whose repetons are lines 1 and 3 of the first
stanza in reverse order.
So the pattern might be:
Quatrains 1
1
2
3
4
Quatrain 2
2
5
4
6
Quatrain 3
5
7
6
8
Quatrain 4
7
9
8
10
Quatrain 5
9
11
10
12
Quatrain 6
11
3
12
1
According to poets.org "one
exciting aspect of the pantoum is its subtle shifts in meaning that can
occur as repeated phrases are revised with different punctuation and
thereby given a new context." Also, "an incantation can be created by a
pantoum's interlocking pattern of rhyme and repetition; as the lines
reverberate between stanzas, they fill the poem with echoes."
When you read the poem play close attention to each image and think
about what the image can mean. How does the meaning of the image change
with the repetition of the image in the next stanza?
https://poets.org/poem/balance-0
POETRY TEST: THINGS TO KNOW
Elements: Know both definitions and examples
Imagery,
denotation, connotation, irony – verbal, situational, dramatic,
sarcasm, metaphor, personification, metonymy, apostrophe, synecdoche,
symbol, allegory, paradox, overstatement, understatement, allusion,
tone, alliteration, assonance, consonance, internal rime, slant rime,
end rime, approximate rime, refrain, meter, iamb, trochee, anapest,
dactyl, spondee, monosyllabic foot, line, stanza, cacophony, caesura,
enjambment, onomatopoeia
Forms/Structure:
Structure, line breaks, how the poem looks, rhyme and rhythm and how it is created
Blues,
Sestina, Villanelle, Pantoum, Sonnet (English, Italian, Spenserian, and
hybrid), haiku, quatrain, tercets, couplets, litany, ballad.
Poems:
“Love
Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” “Home Burial” “Heights of Machu Picchu”
“The Flea” “My Last Duchess” “The Wastelands” “To His Coy Mistress”,
“The Waste Lands” “Nani” “The Colonel” “One Art” “Fern Hill” “The
Waking” “My Mistress’ Eyes” “The Second Coming”

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