Ode to a nightingale. A little background Ode to a nightingale is written by John Keats it was written May 1819. It written either in a garden of the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Advertisements

Cynthia “The moon goddess” A Thing of Beauty John Keats.
Ode on Melancholy John Keats.
Thinking & Writing about Poetry
Song for Last Year’s Wife By Brian Patten LO: To evaluate how Patten uses language, viewpoint and comparison to convey a sense of loss.
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis 1/09 Poetry Unit: TP-CASTT - Blume 1 repetition! onomatopoeia!
Literary Stylistics ENG 551.
PCQE An introduction. The Building Block Approach Literature essays are like: Lego models.
TYPES OF POETRY. NARRATIVE POEMS A Narrative Poem combines elements of fiction and poetry to tell a story Like short stories, they usually include characters,
Poems from Different Cultures
Analyzing songs for poetic value Lyric poetry consists of a poem, such as a sonnet or an ode, that expresses the thoughts and feelings of the poet. The.
Poetry.
Poets of the Romantic Age
Poetry Analysis Refugee in America.
“Ode on a Grecian Urn” by John Keats
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Romantic Era Terms Romantic Era Terms.
Hunter Booth and Natalie Goad. “TO A SKYLARK” PERCY B. SHELLEY.
Poetry Rhythmical composition, written or spoken, for exciting pleasure by beautiful, imaginative, or elevated thoughts. In today’s world it would be some.
Edgar Allen Poe and The Dark/Gothic Romantics
To Earthward By Aylah Cabrera, Selena Rodriguez and Tony Munoz.
The Solitary Reaper by William Words Worth
John Keats Ode to a Nightingale style of the poem This poem is written in disciplined 10-line stanza form which resembles the sonnet yet.
By: dezerea buchanan & takelia rayborn
PQP Poetry A Poem a Day!. PQP Simplified P- Praise…what do you like? Q- Questions…what didn’t you understand? P- Polish…what would you change?
Reading (into) Poetry Part I Rising Up. Reading the poem: a)Read a poem more than once. b)Keep a dictionary by you and use it. c)Read so as to hear the.
Understand Narrator, Voice, and Persona. Standard Reading Literature 3.9 –Explain how voice, persona, and the choice of narrator affect characterization.
Integrating Skills Reading, listening and writing SONGS AND POEMS Why read, and sometimes even write poetry? That question is not difficult to answer if.
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis 1/09 Poetry Unit: TP-CASTT - Blume 1 repetition! onomatopoeia!
 An American movement in literature and art   Marked by emotion and imagination  A rebellion against the Enlightment and a response to.
Story Elements Or Literary Elements Characters Characters are the people in a story. Characters can also be animals, birds, talking trees, sea creatures,
John Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale
No warm-up. Instead, get out poetry packet (first page)
Poetry Terms Poetry Terms Poetry Terms Scaffolding, Annabel Lee, The Highwayman.
Ode on a Grecian Urn Conlan Campbell, Andrew Brinkmann By John Keats.
Guidelines for Answering. You Must Know! Theme Techniques.
Introduction to Prose and Poetry A poem “begins in delight and ends in wisdom”. -Robert Frost.
GUIDELINES POET’S PURPOSE in writing and THEME the text deals withWHY has the poem been written? POETIC TECHNIQUES = literary conventions, how language.
“Ode to a Nightingale” John Keats ( ). Talk to the Text  With a lap top go to dictionary.com and look up any unfamiliar words  Look up any allusions.
How to Analyze Poetry…. Step 1 Read the poem & record any first reactions. What do you notice about the structure, what it says or anything else. Usually.
 Born October 31, 1795 in London  Raised in Moorfields, London  Keats was the oldest of four children  Both of his parents died when he was a child.
The Language of POETRY. A special form of literature that deals with FEELINGS and EMOTIONS by the use of the author’s WORDS and STYLE. What is it?
Warm-Up Have you ever been happy enough that you felt you could live in that moment forever?
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Ode to a Nightingale John Keats
The Wonderful World of Poetry…
Lines composed a few miles above Tintern abbey.
JOHN KEATS’ ODE TO A NIGHTINGALE
Lines composed a few miles above Tintern abbey.
JOHN KEATS’ ODE TO A NIGHTINGALE
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
On the next page of your notebook, set up your notes like this:
"Introduction to Poetry"
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TPCASTT Poetry Analysis
Guidelines for Answering
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Presentation transcript:

Ode to a nightingale

A little background Ode to a nightingale is written by John Keats it was written May It written either in a garden of the or, according to Keats' friend under a plum tree in the garden and a nightingale bird had built its nest near his home in the spring of The tone of the poem rejects the optimistic pursuit of pleasure found within Keats's earlier poems, and it explores the themes of nature, transience and mortality, the latter being particularly personal to Keats. The nightingale described in the poem experiences a type of death but it does not actually die. Instead, the bird is capable of living through its song, which is a fate that humans cannot expect. The poem ends with an acceptance that pleasure cannot last and that death is an unavoidable part of life. In the poem, he imagines the loss of the physical or the real world and sees himself dead—as a "sod“ (exact words) over which the nightingales The contrast between the immortal nightingale bird and mortal man, Sitting in his garden, his imagination. Becomes more present. The presence of weather is noticeable in the poem, as spring came early in 1819, which brought nightingales all over the heath or the land. Ode to a Nightingale use lots of figurative language and words that make you think.

Theme and Tone Ode to a nightingale has multiple tone and themes throughout the poem. Some different theme are death, version of reality, happiness, mortality, and mortality. The poem’s theme explores the themes of nature, transience and transitions and mortality, the latter being particularly personal to Keats. describes a series of conflicts between reality and the Romantic ideal of uniting with nature The nightingale is also the object of empathy and praise within the poem. The nightingale's song within the poem is connected to the art of music. One theme demonstrates his unhappiness with the real world and attempts to escape mentally into an ideal one. When his mental escape is disappointing, he returns to reality with a different understanding of life.

Figurative Language and Poetic Devices Our poet use different type of figurative language like alliteration, and metaphors and similes. He uses this figurative language to better explain and stretch your imagination as he did himself. Ex- simile –(Forlorn! The very word is like a bell) this means the word forlorn makes the author snap to reality as a bell wakes you in the morning. Alliteration- (with beaded bubbles winking at the brim)

What we think In our poem we believe that the author has drinks and has a vivid imagination. The speaker is speaking to the reader of the poem and the setting is both inside and outside the forest. The author is basically in and out of the real world and the thought of death to the nightingale’s song. The speaker or the author Is sort of obsessed or either emotionally attached to this nightingale bird. Some ways he tells us this by saying “Darkling I listen; and, for many a time I have been half in love with easeful death,” and “Call’d him soft names in many a mused rhyme, to take into the air my quiet breath.

Conclusion Ode to a Nightingale is basically about feeling, emotion and reality. The pain and beauty of life using the nightingale, and the ideal of the real and pretend world, the joy and the melancholy are all experienced as life goes on and as humans the broad spectrum of highs, lows and everything in between as if he were mental or had an mental illness.

Work sited The site we used to help us better annotate our poem is schmoop.com. All of our images were searched and found on Google images.