The rhythms of English poetryExamines the way in which poetry in English makes use of rhythm. The author argues that there are three major influences which determine the verse-forms used in any language: the natural rhythm of the spoken language itself; the properties of rhythmic form; and the metrical conventions which have grown up within the literary tradition. He investigates these in order to explain the forms of English verse, and to show how rhythm and metre work as an essential part of the reader's experience of poetry. |
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Page 149
Unfortunately, the sense of conviction that frequently accompanies a metrical
judgement can lead to dogmatic attitudes that paralyse debate, just as it is all too
easy to elevate one's own sense of what is grammatically acceptable into an ...
Unfortunately, the sense of conviction that frequently accompanies a metrical
judgement can lead to dogmatic attitudes that paralyse debate, just as it is all too
easy to elevate one's own sense of what is grammatically acceptable into an ...
Page 229
One conclusion, however, may be drawn from our discussion: it appears that the
weighting of stresses demanded by the sense does not entirely displace the
neutral stress contour produced by phonology and syntax, and that the variable ...
One conclusion, however, may be drawn from our discussion: it appears that the
weighting of stresses demanded by the sense does not entirely displace the
neutral stress contour produced by phonology and syntax, and that the variable ...
Page 308
There is a sense in which a formally organised text does transcend the inevitably
sequential nature of the reader's experience of it, memorably expressed by St
Augustine: 'So it is that a metrical line is beautiful in its own kind although two ...
There is a sense in which a formally organised text does transcend the inevitably
sequential nature of the reader's experience of it, memorably expressed by St
Augustine: 'So it is that a metrical line is beautiful in its own kind although two ...
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Contents
LINGUISTIC APPROACHES | 28 |
THE RHYTHMS OF ENGLISH SPEECH | 59 |
THE FOURBEAT RHYTHM | 76 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
4x4 structure accentual-syllabic verse alternation anapaestic Bo Bo Ceolred classical approach common metre complex create David Abercrombie deviation discussion distinction double offbeat duple metre duple verse emphasis English metre English verse example falling rhythm five-beat line following line four-beat line four-beat rhythm four-beat verse function iambic pentameter implied offbeat initial inversion initial offbeat language linguistic literary metrical form metrical pattern metrical rules metrical set metrical structure metrical style metrical subordination metrical theory metrist movement nonstresses occur offbeat condition optional pause perceived perception phonetic phonological phrase poem poetic poetry poets pronunciation prosody reader reading rhyme rhythmic form rhythmic structure rhythmic unit scansion semantic sense sequence single offbeat speech rhythms stanza stress contour stress pattern stress-final pairing stress-initial pairing stress-timing stressed and unstressed strong syllable count syntactic break syntax tension tradition triple metre triple rhythm triple verse trochaic trochee underlying rhythm unrealised beat unstressed syllables words