Ballad
Ballad
Ballad
From the first day I saw her, I knew she was the one
She stared in my eyes and smiled
For her lips were the color of the roses
That grew down the river, all bloody and wild
On the last day, I took her where the wild roses grow
She lay on the bank, the wind light as a thief
And I kissed her goodbye, said, "All beauty must die"
And I lent down and planted a rose between her teeth
Who is the speaker in the poem? The voice in the poem isnt necessarily the poet
himself poets often speaker through personas, real or imagined, personal or
impersonal though of course it can be. Is it in the first or third (or second)
person? Is there anything that reveals or implies anything about the speaker?
Who are they speaking to?
What is the poems setting? Where does the poem take place? A poem can be
set anywhere, in the past, present or future. How does this setting/location
influence the atmosphere of the poem?
What is the form of the poem? Poems can be written in various forms (see below
for summary of the most common) which dictate their length, their layout on the
page, the line length, whether they rhyme or not and how they rhyme (the
rhyme scheme), their meter (the rhythmic structure of the line.) Some forms are
associated with certain themes or genres sonnet form, for example, is
commonly used for love poetry; ballad form for narrative (story) poems. Poets
make deliberate decisions about which form to choose, and form always
interacts with content, whether to reinforce it or to work against it a sonnet
about the end of a relationship might have a particular poignancy, for example.
The best way to work out and begin talking about the form (and also a good way
to calm exam nerves) is to start counting. Count the number of stanzas, the
number of lines, the number of syllables in the lines if they are regular or there is
a pattern. Mark the rhymes and the stresses (see below for summary of common
stress patterns). This should help show up any patterns, and crucially, where the
poem deviates from or tries to break away from the pattern. Thinking about
rhyme for example are all the rhymes full/perfect rhymes? (i.e. night/light,
sky/high) or are there some variations?
Subject matter what is the poem about? If you arent sure, try to describe
exactly what is happening in the poem. Its absolutely fine to express a difficulty
in understanding as the poet has probably made it intentionally complex,
reflecting something about what theyre trying to say.
Look at the imagery used in the poem. Poets often use figurative and
metaphorical language that take words beyond their literal meanings, and
attempt to do so in novel ways. Perhaps choose a couple of the most interesting
images in the poem and comment on them. Why are they interesting? What is
the poet doing? What does the choice of a particular word do to our
understanding, or how does an image create an atmosphere in the poem?
Finally, what does the poem mean? You can write an excellent essay covering all
of the previous points and ignoring this one, but if you can its a good idea to end
with a summary of what the poem means; what the poet was trying to say, and,
perhaps, whether you think they were successful in saying it.
Common poetic forms and literary terms
Alliteration: the repetition of consonants at the beginning of words e.g. the lazy
languid line. When consonant sounds are repeated within words it is called
consonance e.g. some mammals are clammy
Assonance: the internal rhyming of vowel sounds e.g. on a proud round cloud in
white high night (ee cummings)
Ballad: A poetic form mostly written in four line stanzas (quatrains) of alternating
lines of iambic tetrameter (four pairs of unstressed-stressed syllables) and
iambic trimeter (three pairs). Usually, only the second and fourth lines are
rhymed (abcb), although there is considerable variation in the form.
Blank verse: A type of poetry with a regular meter (generally iambic pentameter)
but no rhyme.
Clich: a saying, expression or idea that has been overused to the point of losing
its original meaning; a stereotype.
Free verse or vers libre: A form of poetry without any regular patterns, rhymes or
meters. Its form is its irregularity.
Heroic couplet:Commonly used for narrative poetry, heroic couplets are rhymed
iambic pentameter pairs of lines.
Hyperbole: exaggeration
Metaphor: an analogy between two words or ideas where one stands for the
other e.g. his smile was the sun not to be confused with the simile.
Simile a kind of metaphor which uses the words as or like e.g. he fights like a
lion
Sonnet: A poetic form. Fourteen lines long. Can be rhymed in a number of ways,
but the most common are Shakespearean and Petrarchan. Shakespearean
sonnets are rhymed in three groups of four lines rhymed alternately, followed by
a couplet i.e. abab cdcd efef gg. The closing rhyming couplet often sums up the
sonnet. Petrarchan sonnets are divided into a group of eight lines, called the
octave and a group of six lines called the sestet. The octave is usually rhymed
abba abba, and the sestet cde cde. Usually there is a turn or volta - a change
of direction or mood between the octave and the sestet. Traditionally, the octave
put forward a proposition and the sestet offered a solution.
Terza rima: A rhyming verse stanza form consisting of an interlocking three line
rhyme scheme aba bcb cdc ded etc - Acquainted With The Night by Robert
Frost
Describing meter
We often talk about meter as the sequence of feet in a line, with each foot a
group of syllable types. The most common syllable groupings are:
Lines are named for the kind of feet (whether they are iambic or dactylic etc) and
then for the number of feet. If there are three it is trimeter, four is tetrameter,
five is pentameter, six is hexameter etc.
Structure
While of an indeterminate length, ballads are usually written in four-line stanzas
or quatrains. These have a rhyme scheme of ABAB. Another feature of ballads is
a repeating chorus or phrase that gives the poem cohesion.
The narrative structure, or what parts of a story are told where, is loose.
Generally, there is very little background or introduction given to the characters.
This is partly because ballads are plot driven, and partly because the audiences
of traditional ballads would already have known the story in general. The success
of a traditional ballad within its time would have been the success of the
balladeer choosing to elaborate upon the parts of the story that would appeal to
a particular audience. Add to this the fact that ballads were often passed on
orally. As a result, parts of the stories would have been forgotten and other parts
added in.
Meter
Iambs are used in the quatrains of a ballad. An 'iamb' (pronounced eye - am) is
known as a foot. This foot consists of an unstressed and a stressed syllable.