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Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early —Took my Dog —” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

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Page 1: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Today: Emily Dickinson!

Closer reading of “I Started Early—Took my Dog—”

How to read a Dickinson poem

#510-511

Page 2: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Emily Dickinson

Page 3: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Schedule/Notes Assignment

You will be able to use your notes for the final Passage Analysis test.

Page 4: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Ballad“A simple narrative poem, often of folk origin, bearing romantic and sentimental character, composed in short stanzas.”

French origin, means: "dancing song".

Traditional ballads were stories and romantic tales set to melody and rhyming, written to be sung to music.

Four-line stanzas (also known as a quatrain).

Normally, only the second and fourth lines rhyme in a Ballad stanza.

There is usually a refrain (repeated line or verse) linking everything together.

The tone of a Ballad is often tragic with the language being simple and impassive.

Source: http://www.writeawriting.com/poetry/ballad-poems/

Page 5: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Syntax• Definition: the way in which words and sentences

are placed together in the writing. Sentence structure.

• In English, syntax usually follows a pattern of subject-verb-object agreement (ex: “Ms. Gerrity spoke to us.”) but sometimes authors play around with this to achieve a lyrical, rhythmic, rhetoric or questioning effect (“To us spoke Ms. Gerrity”).

• Dickinson uses “inverted syntax” (ex. “No one he seemed to know-”)

Page 6: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Diction

Definition: The choice of a particular word or words, as opposed to others. The word choices a writer makes contribute to the author's style and determine the reader's reaction.

Ex.: a writer could call a rock formation by many words--a stone, a boulder, an outcropping, a pile of rocks, a cairn, a mound, or even an "anomalous geological feature."

When analyzing literature, we ask Why that particular choice of words? What is the effect of that diction?

Let’s just say Dickinson knew exactly what she was doing with word choice- so THINK ABOUT THEM!

Page 7: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

anaphora [a‐naf‐ŏ‐ră],

A literary device in which the same word or phrase is repeated in (and usually at the beginning of) successive lines, clauses, or sentences.

Example from Dickinson:Mine—by the Right of the White Election!

Mine—by the Royal Seal!

Mine—by the Sign in the Scarlet prison Bars—cannot conceal!

Page 8: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Types of Rhyme

SLANT RYHMEIdentical Rhyme- sane/insane

Eye Rhyme- through/though

Vowel Rhyme- see/buy

Imperfect rhyme- time/thin

Suspended Rhyme- thing/along

Exact Rhyme- see/tree

Internal Rhyme vs External Rhyme

Dickenson’s rhymes are infrequent, she chooses to use types of rhymes that were no accepted until the 19th century and are now used readily by modern poets.

Page 9: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Rules as we know it…think again

Dickinson eliminated inessential language and punctuation from her poems; she disregarded grammar rules thus creating incomprehensible or riddle like poems.

Dash- may emphasis a missing word or to replace a comma or a period; or a pause

Capitalization- for no apparent reason

Page 10: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Enamored with language…

Some of her lines are definitions

Hope is the thing with feathers

Pain has an element of blank

Renunciation is a piercing virtue

Page 11: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Reading Poetry

Literal Level

Analytical and Symbolic Level

Page 12: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Taking notes on “I Started Early”

Read through the poem, each time focusing your notes on the specific question

After reading it a few times, you will have a wider grasp of the style, themes, poetic choices and scope of analysis needed to begin an analysis of this poem

Page 13: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

#520 “I started Early—Took my Dog—”

Generate three questions you have about the poem.

Note any rhetorical devices we have spoken about today

anaphora, caesura, diction, syntax

Page 14: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

2nd Reading

Who is the speaker?

What is the speaker’s attitude toward the sea in the poem (identify where you see this)?

Does it change (mark where)? Which words or images suggest a shift in her thinking (mark as ‘shift’ in margin next to the shift)?

Page 15: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

What makes the sea recede at the poem’s end (find the motive and identify which words, punctuation, theme, style, etc. aid in this identification)?

Page 16: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Dickinson’s poem loosely adapts the ballad form. Like a song, it uses rhythm, rhyme, and repetition to tell its story. What effect do the rhymes (and later on in the poem, the slant rhymes) have on the story she tells here (mark the poem up for rhyme: both internal and end, and find the slant rhyme)?

Page 17: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

How does Dickinson’s use of dashes and capitalization help to create a sense of suspense in the sea’s growing danger (find these and mark them, then identify in margins the effect)?

Page 18: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Artistic Representation

How did the visual help, distract, change, or encourage your own understanding of the poem?

Page 19: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

Does the poem have more meaning, now, than when you first read it?

Literal Meaning

Symbolic MeaningLaws of Nature

Sexuality

Death

Something else???

Page 20: Today: Emily Dickinson! Closer reading of “I Started Early— Took my Dog—” How to read a Dickinson poem #510-511

With Vendler’s Guide by your side, go down the steps to annotate poem #510

Be sure to annotate:Speaker

Setting/Situation

Abstract/Real

Syntax

Meter

Rhyme Scheme

Imagery

Climactic moment

Rhetorical Devices