At the top of my list of favorite children’s books is
“Goodnight
Moon,” with its
soft lines and
easy rhymes (Goodnight
stars/ Goodnight
air/ Goodnight
noises
everywhere).
I never tire of
the story, no
matter how many
children I read
it to. My other
favorite is
“Green Eggs and
Ham,” with its
topsy-turvy
sentences (I
am Sam. Sam I
am.) and
subversive humor
(And I will
eat them in the
rain. And in the
dark. And on a
train.). The playful language found in children’s books comes naturally to us when we are young. We start with “Bye, Bye!” and progress to sing-songy clapping games:
As we mature, our delight in sounds becomes less visceral. We study the couplets of Robert Frost, send the subversive punctuation of E.E. Cummings to paramours and contemplate the “widening gyres” of William Butler Yeats. However, we often lose the child’s love of chaotic vowels and knocking syllables. Even when writing about poetry, we bog down in the language of academia. Our sentences get longer as we pile up clauses and struggle to state a thesis. Then, in our professional lives, we get tangled up in bureaucratese and forget our innate ability to play with sound and sense.
Recovering the
love of language Let’s review some of the devices that allow us to write for the ear. With assonance and consonance we repeat, for effect, either vowel sounds (clean…neat) or consonants (Dr. Seuss’s island of Sala-ma-sond). Alliteration refers to the repetition of the initial sound of words in a phrase or sentence (“Hooray for Diffendoofer Day”). Rhyme, seen in that last title with Hooray and Day, sets up an exact correspondence between the final syllables of words (Dr. Seuss excelled in unexpected rhyme, from “The Cat in the Hat” to “Yertle the Turtle”).
Joe Mortis
With onomatopoeia, we name a thing (or action) by imitating the sounds associated with it. Comic books rely as heavily on onomatopoeia as children’s books, with “words” like zap, zowie, bam, socko, wow, oof, wham, bing and grrr. But sound conveys sense in more serious contexts, too, whether the splash of water, the sniffle of a crybaby or the snicker of a bully. Words can play with gravity (bump, dump and thump) and levity (float and flit). A verb like flutter implies not just action but lightness, speed, motion and emotion. It can also cast a metaphorical net, catching images of things that flutter — butterflies, eyes — as well as related traits like beauty, innocence or delicacy.
Poetry in prose
Woolf uses “monotonous,” “soothing tattoo” and “murmured” when she’s referring to the “kindly meaning” of waves on the beach (and the calming of thoughts) and then “ghostly roll,” “remorselessly beat” and “thundered hollow” when she’s referring to more ominous forces of nature and consciousness. The first set of words murmurs with soft syllables. The second gives us sounds that register like the beats of a tympanum. Such devices don’t have to be literary. We see alliteration, for example, in the titles of best sellers (“Good to Great”) and advertising taglines (“Guinness is good for you”). It can be silly (General Mills’ “I’m cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs”) or serious (William Safire’s “nattering nabobs of negativism”).
Sentence rhythms Sometimes simple repetition is used as a device. It might be single words that are repeated for effect, or rhythms within clauses. And sometimes the repetition is enlivened by a twist, as when Jesse Jackson said, “Both tears and sweat are salty, but they render a different result. Tears will get you sympathy; sweat will get you change.” The power of that phrase comes from the repetition of the words tears and sweat, but also the repetition in his phrases. plain why civil rights could not wait (“Now is the time to make real the promises of democracy”). He reiterated “I have a dream,” elevating his speech to incantation. His wish that his children be judged “not for the color of their skin but for the content of their character” became an iconic example of alliteration. In the often-repeated quote credited to William Butler Yeats, a “poem makes a sound when it is finished like the click of the lid of a perfectly made box.” This click can happen in prose, too, when meaning and music, words and wisdom, combine to establish a writer’s voice. We’ll explore the notion of voice, and how you might play with that, more in my next post. Draft welcomes submissions at draft@nytimes.com.
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