ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
4th Grade Videos 155 videos
Sticks and stones, right? Well...only sometimes. It's a good idea to make sure your words aren't going to hurt others. Let's look at some ways to d...
Learn to debate like a champ. It's way better than debating like a chimp. That just takes mudslinging to a whole new level.
Today we'll learn about biographies and autobiographies. And no, the second one has nothing to do with the lives of cars.
ELA 4: Verses and Stanzas 56 Views
Share It!
Description:
Verses vs. Stanzas. Personally, we're betting on the Stanzas to win. They're like four times as big.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
Today we'll be focusing on verses and stanzas, which are parts of poems. [Coop discussing parts of poems]
- 00:17
So…if you’ve ever got a poem on your operating table, you’ll know what it is you’re looking at
- 00:22
Let’s go ahead and take a look at an actual poem to show you what we mean.
- 00:26
Here’s the first section of Mary's Lamb.
Full Transcript
- 00:28
“Mary had a little lamb, Its fleece was white as snow, [Mary's lamb poem scribbled on paper]
- 00:31
And everywhere that Mary went The lamb was sure to go;
- 00:35
He followed her to school one day - That was against the rule,
- 00:38
It made the children laugh and play, To see a lamb at school.”
- 00:41
First of all, where was the teacher while all this was going on? Seems like grounds
- 00:45
for disciplinary action if you ask us…
- 00:47
Anyway, let's start with the term “verse”. [Dino talking about verse]
- 00:50
A verse is just a single line of a poem. So if we take a look at our sample from Mary's
- 00:54
Lamb, any time there's a line break – that is, the words stop on one line and start on
- 00:59
a new line – we identify a separate verse.
- 01:02
If it were all on ONE line, that would be a uni-verse…which would just be plain confusing. [A poem in the universe]
- 01:07
But…as written…if someone were to ask you to read one verse from this poem, you
- 01:12
could say, “Mary had a little lamb,” and be correct. Or you could go with “The lamb [Woman reading a poem]
- 01:16
was sure to go.” Pick your poison.
- 01:19
Next is a stanza, which isn't quite as simple. See, a stanza is a group of four or more verses
- 01:24
that all fit together with the same rhyming scheme.
- 01:27
So let's take a gander at our poem again, but this time we’ll look for rhymes. [Girl looking through binoculars]
- 01:31
The first four lines end with “lamb, snow, went, go.” Lamb and went don't rhyme, but
- 01:36
snow and go do.
- 01:38
In the next section, we have “day, rule, play, school.” Day and play rhyme, and so
- 01:43
do rule and school.
- 01:44
We can see that these two different sections are grouped together in order to rhyme, so
- 01:49
it's safe to say that the first four verses here are one stanza… [First stanza of poem highlighted]
- 01:52
…and the next four lines here are a stanza…
- 01:55
…because they are groups of at least four lines that rhyme with each other.
- 01:59
Great. So a verse is just another word for a line of poetry, and a stanza is a group
- 02:04
of verses that rhyme. [Dino summarizing verse and stanzas]
- 02:04
Of course, all of this goes out the window if we're talking about “Free Verse poetry”. [Man jumps out of a window]
- 02:11
Free Verse is another type of poem, like limerick, or haiku.
- 02:15
But unlike a limerick, which has set rules, free verse is a style that is basically a
- 02:19
total free-for-all, where the writer can make and break any rule in the book.
- 02:23
It can rhyme, but it doesn’t have to, and usually doesn’t. It can be short, or long, [Different types of poems on a PC screen]
- 02:27
or anywhere in between. It can make lots of sense and tell a story, or it can be a series
- 02:32
of totally random words.
- 02:33
Let’s be honest. It is utter chaos. [A cow mooing in a field]
- 02:36
Remember how Mary's Lamb had a rhyming structure and told a story about Mary and her little
- 02:40
lamb?
- 02:41
Well now take a look at this poem, which is a free verse poem, called Fog, by Carl Sandburg.
- 02:46
“The fog comes on little cat feet.
- 02:49
It sits looking over harbor and city
- 02:51
on silent haunches and then moves on.”
- 02:54
No rhyming there! No real structure. Hard to find any stanzas. And fog on little cat [Cat walks across a poem]
- 02:59
feet sure sounds strange. That right there is definitely a free verse poem.
- 03:03
What makes free verse poetry so much fun is that, because there are no rules, a writer [Girl taking selfie outside the White House]
- 03:08
can do anything they want.
- 03:11
Looking to spice up a shopping list? How about:
- 03:13
“Orange juice, milk and a dozen eggs
- 03:15
drop, drop, drop one by one into the cart [A free verse poem of a shopping list]
- 03:18
whoops shouldn’t have put the eggs in first.”
- 03:21
Not bad, right? Move over, Carl Sandburg. [Person shoves book off a table]
Related Videos
Sticks and stones, right? Well...only sometimes. It's a good idea to make sure your words aren't going to hurt others. Let's look at some ways to d...
Learn to debate like a champ. It's way better than debating like a chimp. That just takes mudslinging to a whole new level.
Today we'll learn about biographies and autobiographies. And no, the second one has nothing to do with the lives of cars.
In this lesson we'll subject you to some verbs and predicates. Each one is a necessary part of a complete breakfas—er...sentence.
Choosing words carefully is important. You may end up vexing the assemblage of citizens you're conversing with...or you might even just plain bore...