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What Is Poetry Essay Research Paper What (стр. 2 из 2)

consonants: lake, fate, steak, haven

consonance: repetition of ending consonant sounds preceded by differing vowel

sounds (bolt, welt; cake, folk), also called half rhyme or slant rhyme

onomatopoeia: sound that echoes sense or meaning: hiss, whisper, buzz, “The wren

whistles from the garden/And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.”

caesura: a silence rather than a sound but it affects the perception of sound

and rhythm; usually a pause or break in the metrical pattern of a verse, often

signalled by punctuation or syntactical unit such as prepositional phrase,

subject-verb inversion; noted by double diagonal //

end-stopped line: syntactical pause at end of line

enjambment/run-on line: syntactical sense carries over to next line

Diction and syntax affect sound as well as meaning: monosyllabic words have

different sound and rhythm than polysyllabic words even when meter is same.

“wandering” is dactylic and wanders (meandering meanders)

“run for it” is also dactylic but includes pauses that make it a less gentle

and flowing phrase than “wandering”

“Take her up // tenderly” (Thomas Hood) is dactylic dimeter; first dactyl

seems to have a different rhythm from the second because of a combination of

sounds

Stanza Patterns

couplet: two-lines, frequently a rhyming pair

heroic couplet: rhymed iambic pentameter unit of thought, syntactically complete

tercet/triplet: AAA

quatrain: 4 lines

ballad stanza: alternating iambic tetrameter and trimeter ABCB

heroic quatrain: iambic pentameter ABAB

blank verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter (19th century dramatic monologues,

Shakespeare’s plays)

free verse/vers libre: irregular rhythm and rhyme, often unpredictable or absent

patterns, characterized instead by

repetition of sounds, words, phrases, images

parallel grammatical structure

significant line length and arrangement

other sound devices: alliteration, assonance, onomatopoeia, sprung rhythm (see

Gerard Manley Hopkins, “God’s Grandeur”)

nonmetrical cadences

Free Verse (open form): Free verse has predecessors in the nonmetrical rhythms

of Greek poetry, the cadences of the King James Bible Psalms, Milton’s poetry;

however, the true groundbreaker for free verse rhythms was America’s Walt

Whitman in the nineteenth century

Some Familiar Fixed (Closed) forms

Sonnet

Villanelle

“Venus and Adonis” stanza: ABABCC (see Puritan poetry)

Closed couplets

Terza rima: ABA BCB CDC (”Acquainted with the Night”)