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Published byHoward Barrett Modified over 9 years ago
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Prosidy Vanessa Clayberg and Arati Sharma
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Meter Reoccurring patterns of sounds that give poems, written in verse, their distinctive rhythms.
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Quantitative Meter The relative length of the utterance of syllables (long and short) that constitute a poetic line. This type of meter was used predominately in Latin and Greek poetry.
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Syllabic Meter Syllabic meter depends on the number of syllables in a line, without regard to their strees. This type of meter is used mainly in French, Spanish, and Japanese poetry.
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Stress The special emphasis given in pronouncing some syllables.
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Accentual Meter The number of stressed syllables in each line, without regard to unstressed syllables. This meter is often featured in Germanic poetry.
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Accentual-Syllabic Meter Accentual-Syllabic Meter is based on both the number of syllables in a line and on the pattern of stresses in each metrical unit, or foot.
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Metrical Feet
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Foot The 'Foot' in Literary Terms refers to two or more syllables that together make up the smallest unit of rhythm in a poem. It is composed of stressed and unstressed syllables.
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Iamb A metrical foot consisting of an unaccented syllable and an accented or stressed one. For example: unaccented syllable (noted by "x") and an accented (noted by "/") x / a wall Iambic is the most common metrical measure in English verse. A line from Christopher Marlow: x / x / x / x / Come live | with me | and be | my love.
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Anapest An anapest (or anapaest) comprises two unstressed syllables and one stressed one: for example, "unabridged," "intercede," "on the loose." And And the sound of a voice that is still
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Trochee A trochee is a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one: For example: Tell me not in mournful numbers
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Dactyl A dactyl is a stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables. For example: This is the forest primeval, the murmuring pines and the hemlock. (The final dactyl is replaced by a Trochee
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Number of Feet in a Line
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Monometer A rare form of verse in which each line consists of a single metrical unit (foot). Example: Desmond Skirrow’s “Ode on a Grecian Urn Summarized”: Gods chase Round vase. What say? What play? Don’t know Nice, though
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Dimeter A line of verse composed of two feet. For example: “Some go local / Some go express Some can’t wait / To answer Yes,” by Muriel Rukeyser in her poem “Yes,”
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Trimeter A line of verse that consists of three feet. For example: Fresh green /upon /the tree. When here /the spring / we see,
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Tetrameter A line of verse that contains four feet. For example : Though she/ were true/ when you/ met her And last/ till you/ write your/ letter
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Pentameter A line of verse that contains five feet. For example : To be | or not | to be, | that is | the question
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Hexameter A line of verse that contains six feet. For example : Down in a | deep dark | hole sat an | old pig | munching a | bean stalk. (All of it is supposed to be in one line)
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Heptameter A line of verse that contains seven feet. This kind of verse is very rare in poems, because of it's complexity.
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Naming the Meter
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Iambic Pentameter A line comprised of five iambs. This meter is closest to English speech. Example: "When you / are old / and grey / and full / of sleep, And nod / ding by the fire, / take down/ this book." -William Butler Yeats, "When you are old
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Trochaic Trimeter A line made up of three feet of trochees. Example: "Higher / still and / higher From the/ earth thou / springest Like a / cloud of / fire The deep / blue thou / wingest" -Percy Bysshe Shelley, "To a skylark"
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Dactylic Tetrameter A line made up of four dactyls. Example: "Woman much / missed, how you / call to me, / call to me" -Thomas Hardy, "The Voice"
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Common Substitutions
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Substitution Any variant foot within a line that consists predominately if another metrical patten.
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Spondee (Spondaic Foot) Two stressed syllables in a row. Example: "Rough winds / do shake / the dar / ling buds / of May, And sum / mer's lease / hath all / too short / a date." -William Shakespeare, "Sonnet 18"
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Catalexis A missing unstressed syllable at the end of a Trochaic or Dactylic line. Example: "Go and / catch a / falling / star, Get with / child a / mandrake / root" -John Donne, "Song"
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Masculine Endings Lines that end with a strong stress. Example: "I wake / to sleep / and take / my wak / ing slow." -Theodore Roethke, "The Waking"
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Feminine Endings Lines that end in an unstressed syllable. Example: "To be / or not / to be, / that is / the ques / tion." -William Shakespeare, Hamlet
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Pauses Within and Between Lines of Verse
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End-stopped Lines These lines contain a complete sentence of an independent clause. So they have a distinct pause at the end. For example: The Burning Babe by Robert Southwell. As I in hoary winter's night stood shivering in the snow, Surprised I was with sudden heat, which made my heart to glow; And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near, A pretty babe all burning bright did in the air appear.
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Enjambed Lines A line which does not end with a grammatical break, that is, where the line cannot stand alone, cannot make sense without the following line. For example: A thing of beauty is a joy forever: Its loveliness increases; it will never Pass into nothingness but still will keep A bower quiet for us, and asleep Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing The first and last lines are end-stopped. Lines 2,3,4 are enjambed.
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Caesura Caesura is a pause somewhere in the middle of a verse. Some lines have strong (easily recognizable) caesurae, which usually coincide with punctuation in the line, while others have weak ones. For example: A poem by Alexander Pope Alas how changed! || What sudden horrors rise! A naked lover || bound and bleeding lies! Where, where was Eloise? || her voice, her hand, Her poniard, || had opposed the dire command.
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Scansion The process of analyzing and marking the type and number of feet in each line of verse.
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