“Poetry Out Loud” Assignment

Due Date:Monday, November 24 (A Day)/ Tuesday, November 25 (B Day)

Point Value:20 points for recitation (rubric below)

50 points for written poetry analysis (rubric and model attached)

RECITATION

Students will recite a selected poem to the class. The poem does not need to be memorized unless a student is participating in the national contest, but the student does need to show evidence of multiple rehearsals of and familiarity with the poem. The recitation will be judged using this rubric. **

WRITTEN POETRY ANALYSIS

Students will write an analysis of their selected poem.

Requirements:2 paragraphs

250-500 words

Typed, double-spaced, standard margins, 12-pt font

This paper is to present YOUR explanations and understanding of the poem and YOUR connection to it. THIS IS NOT A RESEARCH PAPER. DO NOT USE ANY OUTSIDE SOURCES, EITHER IN PREPARING TO WRITE OR IN THE PROCESSOF ACTUALLY WRITING YOUR ANALYSIS. In other words, it is NOT okay to go online to “read about” your poem to “help you understand it.” I want to know YOUR understanding of the poem.

Paragraph One: Explanation and Understanding

  • Begin by naming the title, in quotation marks, and the author of the poem

Then, include answers to these questions if they apply to your poem. If a question doesn’t apply, then skip it. Don’t take up space listing literary devices your poem doesn’t include; simply talk about what it does include.

  • How many lines does the poem contain?
  • Does it have a rhyme scheme?
  • Who is the speaker in the poem?
  • What is going on in the poem? Is the speaker telling a story (narrative poem) or sharing feelings (lyric poem)?
  • What is the poem’s theme or message?
  • What is the poem’s tone? What specific words (diction) does the poet use to give the poem this tone?
  • Does the poem contain figurative language (similes, metaphors, personification)? If so, how does it add to the poem’s meaning?
  • Does the poem use sound devices (alliteration, onomatopoeia, internal rhyme)? If so, how does it add to the poem’s meaning?
  • How does the title of the poem relate its meaning?
  • Are there any symbols or allusions? If so, how do they add to the meaning?

Paragraph Two: Your Connection

Simply put, why do you find this poem interesting? Here are questions you can ask yourself (and answer in your paper).

  • Does the poem’s theme relate to something you’ve thought a lot about?
  • Does the poem describe an experience similar to an experience you’ve had or feelings similar to feelings you’ve had?
  • Did the poem move you in some way?
  • Does the poem pose a question you find interesting in some way?
  • Do you agree (or disagree) with the poem’s point for some reason?

Please attach a copy of the poem to the BACK of your analysis. Please don’t just print the entire page right off the Poetry Out Loud website. Copy and paste it into a separate word document.

Poetry Out Loud assignment – Due November 24th/25th

Assignment: Choose a poem – Find 3 poems you like on the site: and answer the questions in regards to each one. Then, circle your selection on this paper. Be sure that you like this poem because you are going to be analyzing it, writing about it and reciting it to the class for a grade.

Your poem must be at least 14 lines long.

Poem #1: Title ______Author: ______

Theme – what lesson might one learn from reading this poem? If you don’t know, are you going to be able to figure out the theme?

Voice – who is the speaker in the poem? How do you know? How would you portray this voice if you were reading it aloud?

Vocabulary – Are there any words you don’t know? Write them down here so that you are sure to understand the entire meaning of the poem.

Figurative Language

Is there alliteration that helps you hear repetition of similar sounds? List it here:

Is there any imagery that helps you to SEE what the author is talking about? List it here:

Are there any similes or metaphors that help you to understand any comparisons? List them here:

Are there any allusions that the author makes to outside events from history, literature, etc.? List them here:

Does the author use any symbolism to represent ideas?

Poem #2: Title ______Author: ______

Theme – what lesson might one learn from reading this poem? If you don’t know, are you going to be able to figure out the theme?

Voice – who is the speaker in the poem? How do you know? How would you portray this voice if you were reading it aloud?

Vocabulary – Are there any words you don’t know? Write them down here so that you are sure to understand the entire meaning of the poem.

Figurative Language

Is there alliteration that helps you hear repetition of similar sounds? List it here:

Is there any imagery that helps you to SEE what the author is talking about? List it here:

Are there any similes or metaphors that help you to understand any comparisons? List them here:

Are there any allusions that the author makes to outside events from history, literature, etc.? List them here:

Does the author use any symbolism to represent ideas?

Poem #3: Title ______Author: ______

Theme – what lesson might one learn from reading this poem? If you don’t know, are you going to be able to figure out the theme?

Voice – who is the speaker in the poem? How do you know? How would you portray this voice if you were reading it aloud?

Vocabulary – Are there any words you don’t know? Write them down here so that you are sure to understand the entire meaning of the poem.

Figurative Language

Is there alliteration that helps you hear repetition of similar sounds? List it here:

Is there any imagery that helps you to SEE what the author is talking about? List it here:

Are there any similes or metaphors that help you to understand any comparisons? List them here:

Are there any allusions that the author makes to outside events from history, literature, etc.? List them here:

Does the author use any symbolism to represent ideas?

Poetry Analysis—“Altruism” by Molly Peacock

The poem “Altruism” by Molly Peacock consists of one 16-line stanza. In the first three sets of four lines, every other line rhymes, but in the last four lines the rhyme scheme changes so that lines 13 and 14 form a rhyming couplet, as do lines 15 and 16. The speaker in the poem wonders aloud what the world would be like if we “got outside ourselves,” which is part of what the word “altruism,” taking action that benefits someone other than oneself, means. To represent the idea of “getting outside ourselves,” the speaker talks about looking from one’s own back yard into the neighbor’s back yard and seeing the smoke emanating from the neighbor’s backyard grill. The smoke is a symbolic reminder of the presence of someone else in the world besides oneself. The speaker then takes the point to a less literal and more figurative level and talks about how important altruism is if one is going to have an ability to truly love someone else. In order to be able to make the “decision” to love, one must “endure the endless walk through self.” Walking through the neighbor’s yard to get to his grill, to see where the smoke is coming from, becomes a metaphor for taking the time to really get to know another person. Perhaps this is why the rhyme scheme at the end of the poem is tighter than it is at the beginning; the speaker is in better unity with his neighbor.

This poem appeals to me because I like the unique imagery and metaphors the poet uses. I’ve often heard the phrase “where there’s smoke, there’s fire,” but I never really considered that one could use the image of smoke as a metaphor for another person. In my own experience, I have found that many people do not look past their own back yards when they are entering into a relationship; they approach another person’s “backyard grill,” but it is almost as if they are too busy looking back towards their own grill, making sure whatever they left on it is not burning, to really care about the other person. Maybe the poet is suggesting that when you want to get to know another person you should make sure you are finished with what you are cooking on your own grill. Or maybe she is suggesting that you should take it with you and share it with your neighbor. Sharing is part of altruism too, after all.

“Altruism” By Molly Peacock

What if we got outside ourselves and there

really was an outside out there, not just

our insides turned inside out? What if there

really were a you beyond me, not just

the waves off my own fire, like those waves off

the backyard grill you can see the next yard through,

though not well -- just enough to know that off

to the right belongs to someone else, not you.

What if, when we said I love you, there were

a you to love as there is a yard beyond

to walk past the grill and get to? To endure

the endless walk through the self, knowing through a bond

that has no basis (for ourselves are all we know)

is altruism: not giving, but coming to know

someone is there through the wavy vision

of the self's heat, love become a decision.