HW 4-3 Reading notes



A lot of poetry has to come from the sounds of the words within the poetry.


Many poets play with the hard and soft sounds of consonants and vowels to make internal connections between lines

vowels: a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes w and y

w and y are consonants when it precedes a vowel ex. twine, wine, whine

mute- consonant that cannot be sounded at all without a vowel
I

Robert Frost's Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening

Frost most likely did not think about all the sounds (soft, hard noises) but he put down what sounded good to him because of his experience and knowledge for poetry

He interlocks lines with each other by using rhymes and the sounds of the vowels he uses and places them in strategic spots
ex. "think" has a hard k sound, "queer" echoes the k sound but it is way more mellow

stanza 4, is related to stanza 1 with "the woods are lovely"

The more people practice poetry the better they get at it

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Footloose Review of Winter Musical

My Love, My Love or The Peasant Girl

In class writing 5-7