Listen and Download Poems STD - 1 to 8
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Here is the list of All Poems for Std 1 to 8 for Gujarat Primary Schools.Click on the link below for Listening Poems. Poetry is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and often rhythmic qualities of language, such as phonetics, sound symbolism, and metrics, to evoke meanings in addition to the ostensibly prosaic meaning.
Here is the list of All Poems for Std 1 to 8 for Gujarat Primary Schools.Click on the link below for Listening Poems. Poetry is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and often rhythmic qualities of language, such as phonetics, sound symbolism, and metrics, to evoke meanings in addition to the ostensibly prosaic meaning.
Poetry has a long history, dating back to prehistoric times with hunting poetry in Africa, and poetry of a panegyric and elegiac nature from the empires of the Nile valleys, Niger, and the Volta River.
Some of the earliest poetry written in Africa are among the pyramidal texts written during the 25th century BC. The first surviving West Asian epic poetry, the Epic of Gilgamesh, was written in Sumerian.
The first poems on the Eurasian continent evolved from popular songs like the Chinese Shijing; or because of the need to recount oral epics, as with the Sanskrit Vedas, Ancient Greek attempts to define poetry, like Aristotle's poetics, focused on the uses of discourse in rhetoric, drama, song, and comedy.
Later attempts concentrated on features such as repetition, verse form, and rhyme, and emphasized the aesthetics that distinguish poetry from more objectively informative prosaic writing.
Poetry uses forms and conventions to suggest differential interpretations of words or to evoke emotional responses. Devices such as assonance, alliteration, onomatopoeia, and rhythm can transmit musical or enchanting effects.
Similarly, rhetorical figures such as metaphor, simile, and metonymy establish a resonance between otherwise disparate images: an overlapping of meanings, forming connections that were previously not perceived. There may be related forms of resonance, between individual verses, in their rhyme or rhythm patterns.
Some types of poetry are specific to particular cultures and genres and respond to the characteristics of the language in which the poet writes. Readers accustomed to identifying poetry with Dante, Goethe, Mickiewicz or Rumi may think that it is written on lines based on rhyme and the regular meter.
However, there are traditions, such as biblical poetry, that use other means to create rhythm and euphoria. Much of modern poetry reflects a critique of the poetic tradition, testing the principle of euphony itself or renouncing rhyme or the established rhythm.
In an increasingly globalized world, poets often adapt forms, styles, and techniques from diverse cultures and languages. A western cultural tradition associates the production of poetry with inspiration, often by a muse.
The oldest surviving epic poem, the Epic of Gilgamesh, dates from the third millennium BC in Sumer and was written in cuneiform script on clay tablets and later on papyrus.
An ECB tablet describes an annual rite in which the king symbolically married and mated with the goddess Inanna to ensure fertility and prosperity; Some have called it the oldest love poem in the world.
Other ancient epic poetry includes the Greek epics, the Iliad, and the Odyssey; the Avestan books, the Gathic Avesta and the Yasna; the Roman national epic, the Aeneid of Virgil and the Indian epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata.
Epic poetry, including the Odyssey, the Gathas, and the Indian Vedas, appears to have been poetically composed as an aid to memorization and oral transmission in prehistoric and ancient societies. Other forms of poetry were developed directly from popular songs.
The first entries in the oldest collection of Chinese poetry, the Shijing, were initially song lyrics. Some ancient societies, such as China through its Shijing, developed canons of poetic works that had ritual as well as aesthetic significance.
More recently, thinkers have struggled to find a definition that could encompass formal differences as large as those between Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Matsuo Bashō's Oku no Hosomichi, as well as differences in content encompassing Tanakh religious poetry, love poetry. and rap.
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