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Solving the puzzle of Shakespeare’s language
Or… just how in the world did he write a play in lines that sound like poetry?
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How he wrote his plays Shakespeare wrote many of his plays using poetic-like lines. That means his lines have rhythm. Rhythm the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line.
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Syllables Syllables can be accented or unaccented. (stressed or unstressed) A poetic foot is a unit of accented and unaccented syllables that is repeated or used in sequence with others to form the meter.
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Meter Meter – the number of ‘feet’ in a line of poetry or in this case, in a line from a Shakespeare play monometer one foot dimeter two feet trimeter three feet tetrameter four feet pentameter five feet hexameter six feet heptameter seven feet octameter eight feet
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More about Feet/foot Foot- A metrical unit composed of stressed and unstressed syllables. For example, an iamb or iambic foot is represented by ˘', that is, an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one. Frost's line "Whose woods/ these are/ I think/ I know" contains four iambs, and is thus an iambic foot.
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Scansion Scansion – Describing and labeling the rhythms of poetry by dividing the lines into feet, marking the locations of stressed and unstressed syllables, and counting the syllables.
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Types of ‘feet’ - Iambic
^ / ^ / ^ / ^ / The falling out of faithful friends, ^ / ^ / ^ / renewing is of love
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Trochee Trochee (/^) / ^ / ^ / ^ / ^ Double , double toil and trouble
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Anapest Anapest (^^/) ^ ^ / ^ ^ / ^ ^ / I am monarch of all I survey
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Dactyl Dactyl (/^^) / ^ ^ / ^ ^ Take her up tenderly
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Shakespeare wrote in iamb’s
An iamb is a metrical unit made up of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable. An example of an iamb would be good BYE. A line of iambic pentameter flows like this: baBOOM / baBOOM / baBOOM / baBOOM / baBOOM.
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Try it! Can you scan this poem excerpt? The morns are meeker than they were, The nuts are getting brown; The berry’s cheek is plumper, The rose is out of town. --Emily Dickinson
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Answers The Emily Dickenson poem is iambic.
The meter in line one is tetrameter. Line two is trimeter. Line three has seven syllables. Line four is trimeter.
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Try another! Bats have webby wings that fold up; Bats from ceilings hang down rolled up; Bats when flying undismayed are; Bats are careful; bats use radar; --Frank Jacobs, “The Bat”
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The answers "The Bat" is trochaic tetrameter.
That means each line has three feet. Each foot is written in trochee. This is one stressed syllable followed by one unstressed syllable. ( / ^ )
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Sources Holman, C. Hugh and William Harmon. A Handbook to Literature. Macmillan Publishing Company, Kennedy, X.J. Literature. Scott, Foresman, and Company, 1987.
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