Analyzing poetry isn’t about finding one “correct” meaning—it’s about understanding how the poem creates meaning and emotion. Here are clear, practical hints you can follow:
1. Read the poem more than once
First reading: get the general idea.
Second reading: notice details (words, tone, structure).
Poetry often reveals more on repeated readings.
2. Understand the literal meaning
Ask yourself:
- What is happening in the poem?
- Who is speaking?
- What is the situation?
Don’t jump to deep meanings before understanding the surface.
3. Identify the theme
The theme is the main idea or message.
Common themes include love, death, nature, time, struggle, identity.
-- Ask: What is the poet trying to say about life or human experience?
4. Look at language and diction
Pay attention to:
- Unusual words
- Repetition
- Strong or emotional vocabulary
--- Why did the poet choose these exact words?
5. Analyze imagery
Imagery appeals to the senses (sight, sound, smell, touch, taste).
--- Example: Descriptions of nature, colors, sounds
---- Ask: What pictures are formed in your mind?
6. Identify figurative language
These add deeper meaning:
- Simile (like/as)
- Metaphor
- Personification
- Symbolism
--- Ask: Is something representing a bigger idea?
7. Consider the tone and mood
- Tone = poet’s attitude (sad, angry, joyful)
- Mood = feeling created in the reader
---- What emotions do you feel while reading?
8. Examine the structure and form
Look at:
- Line length
- Stanzas
- Rhyme scheme
- Rhythm
---- Does the structure support the meaning?
9. Think about the speaker
The speaker is not always the poet.
--- Ask:
- Who is talking?
- To whom?
- Why?
10. Connect everything together
Finally:
- How do language, imagery, and structure support the theme?
- What is your interpretation?
Quick Tip
Don’t just say “the poet uses metaphor”—always explain why and what effect it creates.
No comments:
Post a Comment