Contributor: Erin Harris. Lesson ID: 11083
Have you ever read a poem and thought you were reading a whole other language? Poems are often written using figurative language. Learn how to analyze this poetic code!
Watch the video below.
You may wonder how Sally and Snoopy were able to easily understand this famous but complex poem.
Read "How Do I Love Thee? (Sonnet 43)" by Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
The first step to understanding and analyzing poetry is knowing the terms.
Literary Terms (also called Literary Elements)
simile
Comparing two unlike things, using the words like or as.
Example: She is like the morning sun. She and the sun are being compared.
metaphor
Comparing two unlike things NOT using the words like or as.
Example: She is the morning sun. She and the sun are being compared.
personification
Giving non-human things human traits or abilities.
Example: The trees waved as we passed. Trees cannot wave, but the wind can make them move.
irony
When one thing is thought to happen, but the opposite happens. (It is also called ironic.)
Example: You brag that you will get the best score on a test, and you get the worst.
foreshadowing
Hinting at what might come. This happens all the time in horror movies using music. You hear the scary music before the bad guy comes or before something bad happens.
Example: The night was dark but darker than usual. This hints that this night is different, and bad things might happen.
symbol
Represents more than what just is.
Example: A heart is a heart, but it also represents — or is — a symbol of love.
tone
The words an author chooses to create a certain mood.
Example: It was a dark and stormy night.
mood
The feeling created by the author's choice of words.
Example: It was a dark and stormy night. You might feel a little creeped out.
hyperbole
Using an over-exaggeration.
Example: I am so hungry, I could eat a horse.
onomatopoeia
The word pronounced sounds just like the sound it is describing.
Example: crash, boom, bang
alliteration
When a phrase has the same vowel or consonant sound that begins each word.
Example: Big blue balls bounce better.
assonance
When a phrase has the same internal vowel sound.
Example: The loud sound mounds the waves.
Continue on to the Got It? section for some practical poetry practice!