The Poet's Toolbox
Analyzing the Text
Purpose and Structure
Word Watchers
Poetry vs. Prose
100

This is a group of lines in a poem, often functioning like a paragraph in a story.

What is a stanza?

100

This is the central message or "life lesson" the poet or author wants the reader to take away.

What is the theme?

100

Unlike prose, poetry often uses these to force the reader to pause or to create a visual shape.

What are line breaks?

100

This is the literal, dictionary definition of a word, without any emotional "baggage."

What is denotation?

100

This is the main difference between a poem and a story: stories have paragraphs, while poems have these.

What are stanzas?

200

In the line "The wind whistled a lonely tune," the poet is using this specific type of figurative language.

What is personification?

200

When a reader uses "clues from the text" plus "what they already know" to find a hidden meaning.

What is an inference?

200

This type of poem tells a story and includes a plot, characters, and a setting.

What is a narrative poem?

200

This is the emotional feeling or "vibe" (positive, negative, or neutral) attached to a word.

What is connotation?

200

When comparing a poem and a video of that same poem, the video uses this element (which text cannot) to set the mood.

What is audio/sound/visuals?

300

This is the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words, such as "Deep, dark, and dismal."

What is alliteration?

300

This is the author’s attitude toward the subject matter, often conveyed through word choice.

What is tone?

300

Poets use this technique—repeating words or phrases—to emphasize a specific idea.

What is repetition?

300

Between the words "childish" and "youthful," this word has a negative connotation.

What is childish?

300

This term describes "free verse" poetry, which is a poem that does not use this common structural tool.

What is a rhyme scheme?

400

A poet uses this to create a "picture" in the reader's mind by appealing to the five senses.

What is imagery?

400

To find the meaning of a word using the words and sentences surrounding it.

What are context clues?

400

This is a direct comparison between two unlike things without using the words "like" or "as."

What is a metaphor?

400

A poet chooses the word "shriek" instead of "cry" to emphasize this specific quality of the sound.

What is intensity (or volume/piercing nature)?

400

To "paraphrase" a stanza means to do this to the poet’s words while keeping the meaning the same.

What is putting them in your own words?

500

This term refers to the rhythmic pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem.

What is meter?

500

This is the specific "feeling" or atmosphere a poet or author creates for the reader (e.g., eerie, joyful).

What is mood?

500

This is the name for the "voice" that talks to the reader in a poem (similar to a narrator in a story).

What is the speaker?

500

When a poet uses a word that suggests something else entirely, like using "winter" to represent "old age."

What is symbolism?

500

This is the process of looking at a poem and a historical fiction story about the same event to see how they portray the topic differently.

What is comparing and contrasting?