Questions tagged [meter]

Questions about determining and representing the meter of a poem, a practice called scansion.

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What is the meter of these lines from 'If' by Rudyard Kipling?

The poem is in iambic pentameter and employs a feminine ending to the odd lines; but there are a few lines whose rhythm confounds me: If you can wait and not be tired by waiting Twisted by knaves to ...
Pearl's user avatar
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is it possible to adapt ancient graeco-roman prosodic styles, forms, principles, modifications into modern verses? [closed]

is it possible to adapt ancient graeco-roman prosodic styles, forms, principles, modifications into modern verses? does anybody know good authors who write in vernacular or modern languages with greek ...
jacklhoward's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
52 views

Prosodic features and rules for Miltonic verses?

Are there any special prosodic features to Milton's blank verse? Is it just unrhyming iambic pentameter, or does it have any restrictions on what the final sound in a line must be like even though ...
jacklhoward's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
48 views

Are there standard guidelines on apostrophising to denote swallowed syllables for scansion?

There are various words in English which can be pronounced in different ways with different numbers of syllables. Poetry often requires them to be read in a particular way for appropriate scansion, ...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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4 votes
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What's the role of "a, a" at the end of every stanza in Jaufré Rudel "No sap chantar qui so non di"?

At page 165 of the book Los trovadores. Historia literaria y textos by Martín de Riquer one finds the text of the cansó No sap chantar qui so non di (262, 3) by the troubadour Jaufré Rudel: No sap ...
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1 vote
0 answers
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What is the metre in the Scotch dialect of Thrawn Janet by Robert Louis Stevenson? [closed]

What is the metre of this specific part of dialect: e.g is it iambic, trochaic, spondaic, anapaestic, dactylic? Fifty years syne, when Mr. Soulis cam’ first to Ba’weary, he was still a young man––a ...
Jasa's user avatar
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6 votes
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"America for Me" - too regular metre?

I'm reading this older book called Poetic Meter and Poetic Form by Paul Fussell. In a chapter called "Metrical Variations", a part of a poem is cited as an example of overly regular metre. ...
user392289's user avatar
4 votes
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How does one count syllables in medieval Galician-Portuguese poetry?

I'm trying to figure out how to count syllables in medieval Galician-Portuguese cantigas. I've tried to find it in the book A poesía lírica galego-portuguesa by Giuseppe Tavani, which I found in my ...
Charo's user avatar
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5 votes
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What is "epic caesura" in French "chansons de geste"?

I'm reading the book La chanson de geste by Jean Rychner. In a certain passage, the expression "epic caesura" ("césure épique" in the French original) appears, which I don't ...
Charo's user avatar
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Scanning Langston Hughes' "The South"

Here's the poem "The South" by Langston Hughes scanned by me (a non-native English speaker): The lazy, laughing South With blood on its mouth. The sunny-faced South, Beast-strong, Idiot-...
user392289's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
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In metrical poetry, what is equal timed?

In metrical poetry, what is equal timed (isochronous)? Is it: the foot, or the ictus, stressed syllable, in a foot, or something else, or nothing in particular?
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Scanning "Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote"

How would you scan the first line of The Canterbury Tales: Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote This blogger says that it's an iambic pentametre line with a headless initial foot and a feminine ...
user392289's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
246 views

How do we divide syllables when scanning a poem?

In this line from Donne's A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, It leans and hearkens after it I would scan it this way: It leans and hear-kens af-ter it However, my dictionary says that hearken is ...
Ahmad Nourallah's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
793 views

How to scan Wyatt's "They flee from me"?

I was told in my class that "They flee from me" is written in iambic pentameter, except for line number 6 in the second stanza in iambic tetrameter. However, some lines in my textbook have ...
Ahmad Nourallah's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
188 views

Iambic pentameter and mono syllables [closed]

I am studying poetry structure and I am focusing on iambic pentameter at the moment. From what I have read, there are 10 syllables per line and 5 stressed and 5 unstressed syllables. It goes ...
user1261710's user avatar
6 votes
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Is there a difference between Russian and English speaking cultures in the sense of rhythm when reciting poetry?

It may a vague question, but I haven't found any data on this myself. I am Russian and I've heard a lot of reading of Russian poetry, since my childhood (poetry reading by heart is a staple assignment ...
DrTyrsa's user avatar
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3 votes
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How do I analyze the stress/unstress in this Stephen King based novel?

Many of the jinni lines follow a stressed/unstressed sound pattern The author talks about this in the ending. What does this mean exactly? Here are some sequential lines from the jinni I would like ...
SwimBikeRun's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
102 views

What's the meter of "Song of Young Girl" by William Lang?

What's the meter of the poem "Song of Young Girl" by William Lang? The first three stanzas are: Softly I walk through the forest The owl sleeps in the thicket I hear the voice of the lake ...
ChocolateChapta's user avatar
15 votes
1 answer
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What meter are "I lik the bred" poems in?

I'm trying to determine the meter of "i lik the bred" poems: "i lik the bred" is a series of short poems about a domesticated cow written by British author Sam Garland, better ...
AncientSwordRage's user avatar
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0 answers
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How blank verse is “closest to the natural rhythms of English speech”? [duplicate]

I was reading a book and in that it was written Shakespeare has used this poetic form (the blank verse) skillfully in his dramas because it is closest to the natural rhythms of English speech, and ...
Knight wants Loong back's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
213 views

Etymology of "iamb", as a genre and a type of metre

An excellent verbose answer says that: Etymologically, the word iambos is related to the Greek word for cripple, with the short syllable representing the lame leg and the long the strong one. ...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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21 votes
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Were English poets of the sixteenth century aware of the Great Vowel Shift?

The Great Vowel Shift was a series of changes in the pronunciation of English vowel sounds, marking the dividing line between Middle English and Modern English. A wholesale shift of sounds took place ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
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1 answer
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How to figure out if something is iambic pentameter?

I have an assignment where I have to write a Shakespearean sonnet for my professor (who is very strict about the formatting of the assignment). Are there any ways/tricks in which I can figure out if ...
Joe Kerr's user avatar
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Resources for determining the meter of a line in Shakespeare

Most of Shakespeare's plays are written in iambic pentameter,‎ which is part of what makes the verse so powerful.‎ However,‎ due to differences between different manuscripts of the text, and words ...
ak0000's user avatar
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6 votes
1 answer
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How to scan the "Clark" poem from "One Fish, Two Fish"?

One of my favorite things about Dr. Seuss's One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish is the combination of rhyme and rhythm or meter in its poems. I think I've found satisfying rhythms for reading all ...
Dan Getz's user avatar
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6 votes
1 answer
288 views

How does this song lyric "Simple and Clean" scan?

From the English version of "Simple and Clean" by Utada Hikaru: When you walk away You don't hear me say Please, O baby, don't go Simple and clean is the way that you're making me feel ...
Fomalhaut's user avatar
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12 votes
1 answer
368 views

What evidence is there for the "recession of accent" theory?

In the late 19th and early 20th century, there was a theory that certain oddities in the rhythms of Shakespeare and other early modern English poets could best be explained by recession of accent. ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
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909 views

What is the rhythm of the line 'I want a hero, an uncommon want'?

What is the rhythm of the following line from the start of Byron's Don Juan? I want a hero: an uncommon want, Is it iambic or trochaic? It's a tetrameter and not a pentameter that I am aware of. ...
Sanjana's user avatar
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How can enjambment be used to enhance rhythm in a poem?

I was wondering how enjambment can be used to improve the rhythm in poetry. I have seen some innovative uses of it by e.e. cummings, such as by breaking a word and writing the ending on the next line....
Mallam Awal's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
342 views

What is the meter of the poem "Snow" by Louis MacNeice?

I'm struggling to find the meter in which the poem "Snow" is written. I know that Shakespeare's poetry was written in iambic pentameter. So far, I've read that the poem "Snow" has a rough meter, and ...
Bobby's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
403 views

What is the metre of "High Waving Heather" by Emily Bronte?

I really like "High Waving Heather" by E. Bronte: High waving heather 'neath stormy blasts bending, Midnight and moonlight and bright shining stars, Darkness and glory rejoicingly blending, ...
xyz's user avatar
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9 votes
1 answer
704 views

Can three unstressed syllables constitute a substitute foot in Shakespeare?

While trying to ascertain the accentuation of certain names in Shakespeare, by analyzing lines of verse where they occur, I encountered a couple of lines that I was tempted to scan with a substitute ...
Brian Donovan's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
2k views

Confused about the meter and rhythm of Ulysses by Tennyson

Ulysses is written in iambic pentameter. There are a few spondees and trochees thrown in for good measure, but I'm confused in some places, like here: I cannot rest from travel: I will drink Life ...
Yeats's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
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How can prose be musical?

Prof. Brooks Landon, U. Iowa, Ph.D. U. Texas at Austin. Building Great Sentences: How to Write the Kinds of Sentences You Love to Read (Great Courses) (2013). p. 142         ...
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6 votes
1 answer
437 views

What is the metrical style of Hungarian poetry?

While reading about Hungarian poetry, I came across the claim that: pure syllabic/quantitative metre is very rare = Hungarian, Greco-Roman ‘időmértékes’ metre I don't know what "pure syllabic/...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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15 votes
1 answer
2k views

Why did iambic pentameter become so 'standard' in classical English poetry?

Iambic pentameter is probably the most prevailing and widely used meter in classical English poetry, and it's the 'standard' form of verse in many forms of poetry such as sonnets. From Wikipedia (...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
548 views

Significance of rising/falling meter

If I am analyzing a poem and I realize that it has rising meter, what does that say about the poem. Like do happy tone poems have rising meters whereas sad poems have falling meter?
tim's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
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Analysis of a self-written stanza in terms of meter?

A long time ago I used to write poetry, and there was one particular stanza that has always stuck with me and seemed inherently rhythmic, but I’m not familiar with the relevant terminology and so I’m ...
TheIronKnuckle's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
98 views

'meter' vs. 'rhythm': How do their meanings in poetry differ from those in music?

'meter' and 'rhythm' are termed in poetry and music. So what are their parallels? Their differences? Source: Listening to Music (2013 7 ed, but ∃ 8 ed) by Yale Prof. Craig Wright: [p. 463] meter: ...
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4 votes
2 answers
224 views

How does anacrusis simulate a ship's pushing back from dock?

[ Source : ] Interestingly, anakrouein or anacrusis is also found in Greek poetry, where the first syllable is not accented. Being the sea-faring people as they were, starting a poem with anacrusis ...
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3 votes
1 answer
6k views

Meter and number of syllables per line in "The Raven"

After reading some analysis of "The Raven", I've become confused about how syllables are counted. For example, in the second line: Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore A few ...
Daniel's user avatar
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5 votes
0 answers
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A break in the 5-7-5-7-7 meter?

So I was reading about Waka poetry and then about the tanka meter, when I came across several poems by Ono no Komachi and Narihira. The ついにゆく poem from Narihira has 8 syllables rather than 7 in the ...
Horus's user avatar
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7 votes
2 answers
691 views

Scanning the line "And every spirit upon earth" in Thomas Hardy's "The Darkling Thrush"

In the Thomas Hardy poem "The Darkling Thrush", one line seems to scan quite jarringly compared to the even iambic meter of the others: The land's sharp features seemed to me The Century's corpse ...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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18 votes
4 answers
4k views

Why did the alexandrine become the "natural" metre for French verse drama, whereas English renaissance drama adopted the iambic pentameter?

We previously had a question asking Were all of Shakespeare's plays fully in iambic pentameter?, but of course, it wasn't just Shakespeare who used iambic pentameter; it became the prevalent metre in ...
Tsundoku's user avatar
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8 votes
2 answers
953 views

Why isn't Coleridge's line about trochees missing an unstressed syllable?

Samuel Coleridge wrote this really fun poem, Metrical Feet: Lesson for a Boy, that names and gives examples of the various types of metric feet. I've included a copy and scanned the poem to make the ...
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5 votes
1 answer
285 views

What form of poem is "A Child of Mine" by Edgar Guest?

What form of poem (ie. sonnet, limerick, haiku, etc.) is Edgar Guest's "A Child of Mine?" I would be looking for the scansion and rhyming pattern if there is one. Any relevant information in ...
Dr Gore's user avatar
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13 votes
2 answers
12k views

Why do the witches in Macbeth rarely speak in iambic pentameter?

Shakespeare is pretty well known for writing in iambic pentameter. One important exception to this are the witches in Macbeth, who speak in everything from trochaic meter: Double, double toil and ...
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5 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is there a name for a version of trochaic tetrameter with lines of 8|7|8|7 syllables?

Is there a name for the meter used in Clementine: Drove she ducklings to the water Every morning just at nine Struck her foot against a splinter Fell into the foaming brine Or in Schiller's Ode to ...
Michael Kay's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
827 views

How does scansion work in Arabic poetry?

I was reading about Arabic poetry on Wikipedia, and specifically the description of scansion: The rhymed poetry falls within fifteen different meters collected and explained by al-Farahidi in The ...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
807 views

Do rap lyrics require metrical feet in English with long and short syllables?

I finally got a round to checking out Straight Outta Compton and it got me thinking seriously about metric feet in English poetry, and English poetry in general. It's long been my suspicion that one ...
DukeZhou's user avatar
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