Friday, November 30, 2012

UNKNOWN PERSON

I walked in the dark
I looked up in the sky shine so bright
As I feel the wind is strong and cold


I looked up in the sky shine so bright
I see the unknown person smiling on me

As I continue to walked and walked
The unknown person have now closer and closer
Then few distance on us I stop to walked
I see a two ways of street
The right and the left

You give me the reason to choose the right way
you just light the street on my way
then I saw your face clearly as a diamond
My heart beats on the beats
like a clock never gonna stop
The wind whispered then you blow away

"FREE VERSE"
is poetry written with rhymed or unrhymed verse that has no set meter to it.

CHOOSE

The darkness is black
The lightness is hard to catch
Which the right to choose
"haiku"

ELEMENTS OF POETRY

Stanza
•A unit of lines grouped together
•Similar to a paragraph in prose.

Couplet
•A stanza consisting of two lines that rhyme
Quatrain
•A stanza consisting of four lines.

Mood
•The feeling a poem creates for the reader
Tone
•The attitude a poet takes toward his/her subject.

Imagery
•Representation of the five senses: sight, taste, touch, sound, and smell
•Creates mental images about a poem’s subject
Example: “Continuous as the stars that shine and twinkle on the milky way”.

Metaphor
•An implied comparison between two objects or ideas
Example: “A poet could not but be gay [happy] in such a jocund [cheerful] company. I gazed and gazed but little thought what wealth the show to me had brought.”.

Personification
•Giving human traits or characteristics to animals or inanimate objects
Example: “When all at once I saw a crowd, a host of golden daffodils; beside the lake, beneath the trees, fluttering and dancing in the breeze.”.

Simile
•A direct comparison between two objects or ideas that uses the words “like” or “as”
Example: “I wandered lonely as a cloud that floats on high o’er vales and hills.”

Symbol
•A word or object that has its own meaning and represents another word, object or idea
Example: The daffodils represent happiness and pleasure to the author.

Alliteration
•The repetition of an initial (beginning) sound or consonant in two or more words next to each other in a line of a poem
Example: “What wealth …”

Assonance
•The repetition of a vowel sound in two or more words in the line of a poem
Example: “Which is the bliss of solitude”.

Onomatopoeia
•A word that imitates a noise or action
Example: “flutter”.

Repetition
•A word or phrase repeated within a line or stanza
Example: “gazed and gazed”.

Rhyme Scheme
•The pattern in which end rhyme occurs
Example:
Continuous as the stars that shine (A)
And twinkle on the milky way, (B)
They stretched in never-ending line (A)
Along the margin of a bay: (B)
Ten thousand saw I at a glance, (C)
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance. (C).