Poetry Process - Element 1: Close Reading and Analysis

The writing desk never looked
this clean again
In my post, Reinvigorating My Poetry Process or Year of Poetry 2.0, I mentioned the four elements of my process; Writing Poetry, Studying Poetic Technique and Theory, Close Reading & Analysis and Reflection.

I begin with Close Reading & Analysis because it takes the pressure of youYou can get straight on with up-skilling your craft and you don't have to worry about writing the greatest poem ever(yet).

So how do you Close Read and Analyse a Poem?

Anyway you want to...

but it helps to have some guidance until you develop your own style/preference.  

I began by using The Close Reading of Poetry - A Practical Introduction and Guide to Explication, by Kim Blank & Magdelena Kay.  It's from the English Department of University of Victoria.

I used Print Friendly to create a .pdf copy that I could print or carry on an offline device. (Aside: I actually prefer doing most of my writing and study in long-form i.e. hand written in journals)

The document breaks down into the following topic headings:

My beginning process was to basically follow this list from point 1 to 10, writing down my observations and findings for each topic.

As the year progressed  I began to "bolt on" some extra's as I went, picking up bits and pieces.

Early on I developed a rule that I should read the poem at least 3 times before sitting down to analyse it. So...

Reading


  1. Read first for meaning, viewing the poem as a whole.
  2. Read out loud and be conscious of the way the words sound (it's also a good idea to get in practice at reading aloud, your poems or other's)
  3. Read by the line i.e. slow your reading right down.
I didn't follow this process 100% of the time but certainly in the earlier stages.  After awhile I think your brain just begins to do several of these things at once.

Writing

The poem you are close reading and not your own obviously.  

Within the first couple of Close Readings I just found it practical to write the poem out.  It would have been easier to print poems (especially those online) and stick them in, but I amassed a reasonable sized collection of poetry in book form that I didn't want to deface with my scrawl (that and it's very frustrating holding the book open for an hour while you are completing your analysis.

The added benefit to writing out the poem was that I believe it got me closer to the words, allowed me to pick up on things that didn't seem apparent after three readings.  It was actually quite a pleasurable experience for me. 


Optional extras

I think you could easily start with the resources above Reading, Writing out the Poem and using the Guide but I wanted to mention a couple of things I added. Now again, I didn't apply these all of the time, sometimes I forgot and sometimes they weren't relevant.

Scansion and Stress/Syllable Counts (under Word Order heading)

I'd usually scan a poem and break it down into feet, even if it wasn't an obviously metered poem, just to observe patterns.  I'd sometimes alternate this type of investigation with simply recording in different coloured pens, the basic syllable count and the number of hard stresses in each line, in two columns at the end of the line.  

I'd also note enjambment or end stopped lines in a similar fashion, so that I could see at a quick glance how the poem varied its line endings and examine the effect that groupings of say, end stopped lines had on the sound of the poem. 

Sentence Lengths/ Sentence Endings/ Line endings (under Word Order heading)

I think I may have picked up the importance of sentence lengths from reading Richard Hugo's, The Triggering Town. So in analysing a poem I found it interesting to note how long the sentence was in comparison to its fellows(what was the effect of alternating short and long sentences or stringing similar sized sentences together), whether it ended with the stanza or ran across it. 

I also noted how a sentence ended. In Hugo's essay, Nuts and Bolts, he suggested that you should:

End more than half your lines and more than two thirds of your sentences on words of one syllable. 
It was interesting to see the effect of a short, hard stress, sans other line end attention grabbers like rhyme, at the end of a line and the effect produced by having more or less than 50 % of your lines ending in this fashion.



In Summary


  • Read the poem- for meaning, sound(read out loud), and by single line
  • Write the poem out long hand with space for marking it up
  • Apply the topics in A Practical Introduction and Guide to Explication
  • Summarise main discoveries ( to help with reflection journal later) in dot point form.

This process was fairly detailed and depending on the poem it could take 1-2 hours.  I firmly believe it's time well spent and will pay you back in your own writing. A list of the poems that I applied this process to can be found here.

The next post in this series will be on developing a reading list for study in Studying Poetic Technique and Theory.  Feel free to comment or ask questions.  Do you follow a similar process?



In Magpie Tales Australian poet SB Wright reveals a keen eye for capturing both people and places, his deft imagery transports the reader effortlessly from rural Australia and beyond. The pieces within explore a changing inner landscape too, where the contested terrain of small town identities and national issues are played out in clear, lyrical verse.
Magpie Tales is his first poetry collection.

Available in print: Amazon Aus, US / Book Depository / Booktopia / Bookworld / Barnes & Noble / Fishpond

Signed Copies: On request

Comments

  1. I am curious if you read ALL poems this way, or if this is the way you read only when you are in a kind of "analysis" mode for the sake of developing your craft? I admire your analytic mind, but wonder if there isn't a value in reading a poem the same way you would stroke a cat, and doing free-association of metaphors and images-as-metaphors to deepen the connection that has nothing to do with technique, but more to do with content?

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    Replies
    1. This is more what I do when I am developing my craft(and to be honest its not as straight forward or clinical as the post might suggest) and on reflection perhaps the post is only really describing the more clinical aspects because they are easier to quantify/write about.

      I'd never get through my TBR list if I did it for every poem but the training does bleed over into, say, more relaxed reading and what I found yesterday was that my brain was doing several things at once, including something similar to "cat stroking".

      I was reading Nye's Bees Were Better and its a poem that resists in someways a clinical/technical approach to appreciation.

      Thanks for the comment ren. You have made me think about how I weight my approach to appreciation/analysis.

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