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GS197: Winter, 2013

Blackboard

(See also: Assignments and Updates )

(This page will be used for miscellaneous postings over the course of the quarter)

Contents

1. Poetic Terms

2. The Shapes of Leaves

 

Terms

Here we'll keep a list of the new terms we have used day by day (and maybe looking ahead just a bit). All but one or two are standard terms with standard meanings--you can easily search the internet for definitions if you can't remember what we said in class.

Tone (of poetic voice)
Rhyme
End rhyme
Internal rhyme
Rhyme scheme

Alliteration
Stanza

Free verse
Blank verse

Metaphor
Simile

Denotation
Connotation

Tenor
Vehicle

Semantic features
Semantic condensation

Symbol

 

The Shapes of Leaves

by Arthur Sze

 

Ginkgo, cottonwood, pin oak, sweet gum, tulip tree:
our emotions resemble leaves and alive
to their shapes we are nourished.

Have you felt the expanse and contours of grief
along the edges of a big Norway maple?
Have you winced at the orange flare

searing the curves of a curling dogwood?
I have seen from the air logged islands,
each with a network of branching gravel roads,

and felt a moment of pure anger, aspen gold.
I have seen sandhill cranes moving in an open field,
a single white whooping crane in the flock.

And I have traveled along the contours
of leaves that have no name. Here
where the air is wet and the light is cool,

I feel what others are thinking and do not speak,
I know pleasure in the veins of a sugar maple,
I am living at the edge of a new leaf.


 

 

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