AP English Poetry Study Guide: Analysis Tips and Vocab
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Poetry Study Guide for AP English Language & Literature

Score higher on AP English Literature and Language exams with our poetry review, including essential literary terms and expert essay-writing strategies.

Trying to study for Advanced Placement (AP) Tests can be tedious…but if you’ve prepared and need a small refresher, or if you’re in search of a quick poetry history mixed with some review for the English Tests—both Literature and Language—here you go. Let’s begin. 

All about AP Literature

The AP Literature Test includes multiple choice and three types of essays to write. The multiple-choice section can focus on poetry or prose selections, and of the essay types, one will certainly include a poem. The grading scale for the essays ranges from 0–9.

Insider tips

According to long-time teacher of AP English Karri Landeis, the best way to score highly on the essays, particularly the prompt that asks you to analyze poetry, is to maintain focus. “Always read with a pen in hand,” Landeis says, adding that mere underlining often isn’t enough to constitute the beginnings of an essay. If the poem happens to be lengthy or difficult in content, chances are you won’t have enough time to read it multiple times for meaning or go back to a stanza and wonder what the author’s intent may have been.

Instead of simply underlining, Landeis recommends adding small notes, such as where you noticed a poetry device or how the device contributes to the meaning or perspective the prompt asks about. “It’s best to explicitly state the device,” says Landeis. While she acknowledges top essays can be written without doing so, AP readers prefer not to have to dig for your intended meaning when you write. As far as structure goes for the essay itself, a common form includes organizing the paragraphs by each poetic device. However, Landeis recommends that essays rich in complexity are born from chronological order—that is, analyzing the devices in the order they appear and building on previous paragraphs with more insight as the poem continues. 

In the essay’s conclusion, after a restatement of the thesis, Landeis maintains that the greater implications of the theme/perspective from the prompt should be addressed. “Find the one sentence that says it all, and end with that,” Landeis says, adding that doing so ties all the ends up nicely. ¨Write your last sentence like it’s the score you want to receive, because it’s the last thing [AP] readers will see.”

High school poet Zuyi Zhao has already taken both AP English courses. She’s prepared in the past for her exams by both reading and writing in quantity—a practice that has paid off in her eyes. "Analysis comes a lot more easily if you have experience on both sides of the process,” she says, although she adds that it’s important to keep an open mind about poetry as well. "You can’t analyze poetry without enjoying it,” she says.

Related: Inside Info on AP Courses: Which Ones Should You Take? 

Vocabulary

Both of the AP Tests often include vocabulary in the multiple-choice section, and it’s always important to know a variety of literary devices so you can explain them within any of the three essays, Landeis says. Some common terms she uses to prepare her students include:

  • Types of stanzas: A stanza is a segment of the poem, often where a line break occurs, and includes a variety of line measurements. Some common line names are given below: 

    Lines
      Name
    2          Couplet
    3          Tercet
    4          Quatrain
    5          Quintet
    6          Sestet (not sextet)
    8          Octave (not octet) 
     
  • Shakespearean/Petrarchan sonnet: These two terms are used interchangeably to describe the same poem. They refer to sonnets that are (as always) 14 lines, but include three stanzas of four lines each (a quatrain) along with a usually rhymed last 2-line stanza (couplet). Landeis uses “abab cdcd efef gg” as a song to remind her students of the common form.
  • Italian sonnet: The AP Test will commonly ask students to distinguish between the two. An Italian sonnet consists of a clear octave (8 lines) plus a sestet (6 lines) for the desired 14-line form. Poem identification is another topic the test on Literature often includes, Landeis says.
  • Narrative poem: Tells all or part of a story. Many song lyrics (particularly those of circle songs and country music) are narrative poems.
  • Lyric poem: Focuses on the individual and thoughts/feelings.
  • Metaphysical poetry: Often includes and can be identifiable by its bizarre metaphors (called conceits) and complicated diction.
  • Elegy: Lament for something; a poet’s ruminations on something, usually very solemn and dignified.
  • Ode: Celebratory poem. Can celebrate/commemorate even the most mundane of objects.

Related: Fun SAT Vocab Prep With the Dictionary of Difficult Words

Poetic devices

Common poetic devices are relevant to both of the AP English Tests, and Landeis reminds students that each device must be identified, stated, and linked to the perspective the prompt asks you to consider. Devices include:

  • Alliteration: Repeated identical consonant sounds at the beginnings of words.
  • Allusion: A special type of reference to another work of literature, a symbol, an event, or a person. Allusions are commonly from well-known sources.
  • Apostrophe: This occurs when a character or speaker calls out to a person (either absent or dead) or inanimate object as if it could respond.
  • Caesura: Found exclusively in poetry, a pause in the middle of a line of poetry; often signified with a comma or period.
  • Diction: Word choice. The diction should nearly always be preceded by a descriptive adjective signifying its purpose to the work.
  • Enjambment: When a thought in poetry does not stop at the end of a line break; it merely continues on in the following line.
  • Hyperbole: Deliberate and ridiculous exaggeration. Can be meant seriously or in mockery.
  • Metonymy: Associating an object with another word very similar to it (e.g., referring to someone as a “Scrooge” due to their attitude).
  • Parallelism: Similar grammar structure between lines or sentences in poetry or prose. Whether a phrase is repeated, or the construction of the phrase is repeated, either works.
  • Rhyme and rhythm: Rhyme refers to the similarity or identical nature of sounds at the ends of lines. Rhythm is the pattern of stressed/unstressed syllables. Poetry can have either, while prose mainly concerns itself with rhythm.
  • Understatement: The antonym for hyperbole, an understatement is often meant as dry humor when a character or speaker says something is insignificant when it is truly not.  

Knowing these terms should help with the AP English Tests, and remembering to include them in your essay will help you earn a higher score. They can also assist you when writing your own poetry—after all, if you understand the devices and why an author uses them, you’re one step closer to doing so yourself.

Related: English Grammar Cheat Sheet for Students 

Writing poetry

To Zhao, who has been writing extensively for about three years—primarily poetry—she enjoys unrhymed free verse but sometimes likes to experiment with different structures. “I don’t write nearly as often as I would like to, but I can write at least for an hour or so a week,” she says, and she would recommend that others do at least some reading and writing as well, especially to help with the AP Tests. To go about writing a poem is a rather obscure process, even to the poet, Zhao says. “Sometimes the [ideas] just come to me,” she says. “Other times, though, the ideas sort of stem from brief phrases or lines that I think of first, kind of like working backward from a poem’s title to the poem’s content.” She recommends drawing from character archetypes for inspiration if you’re interested in writing but stuck. Common history also provides ideas: poems that incorporate famous historical figures like Helen of Troy, Cleopatra, or other historical events have inspired many poets in the past and present.

Once your poem has been written, it’s time for what Zhao calls her favorite part: revision. “Even though as I’m revising, I think I hate the experience, I enjoy the process of finding a clearer and more eloquent way of conveying a sentiment within a poem,” she says. It’s an important sentiment to remember for taking either AP English exam as well: keeping an open mind and ensuring the organization in your essay remains clear and precise makes for a high-achieving score.

Related: Study Tips to Help You Conquer AP Tests

There you have it—with these insider tips, you'll be ready to score high on your AP English Language and Literature Tests. Be sure to practice with this example of a full exam from the College Board. Good luck!

Find more general AP and other test-taking tips in our Test Prep section to make sure you're never underprepared for an exam again.

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About Faith Harron

Faith Harron studied in STEM at Stanford University after attending Century High School in North Dakota. She was also one of 80 students nationally to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's MITES (Minority Introduction to Technology, Engineering, and Science) program for six weeks. When not doing theater, participating in the Science Olympiad, working for Gateway to Science, or at band practice, she can be found volunteering or writing novels on napkins, in thunderstorms, and virtually everywhere else. In her future, she intends to learn more languages, conquer mountains, and continue to teach and help others.

 

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