The Rhythms of English Poetry |
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Page 118
... create in verse a dipodic alternation that begins with the secondary beat ; this is achieved by starting the line with two relatively weak syllables , which are interpreted , once the general rhythmic scheme has been established , as a ...
... create in verse a dipodic alternation that begins with the secondary beat ; this is achieved by starting the line with two relatively weak syllables , which are interpreted , once the general rhythmic scheme has been established , as a ...
Page 208
... create tension of a kind in a poem by Milton through their unwonted regularity . A complex metrical style has a relatively high level of general tension , but increases of tension in individual lines will be difficult to achieve : the ...
... create tension of a kind in a poem by Milton through their unwonted regularity . A complex metrical style has a relatively high level of general tension , but increases of tension in individual lines will be difficult to achieve : the ...
Page 209
... created by run - ons in four - beat verse is , as we have noted , greater than that in five - beat verse , because ... create a line with a clear rhythmic balance , which we can indicate as 2 : 3 ; a pause after the third beat , 3 : 2 ...
... created by run - ons in four - beat verse is , as we have noted , greater than that in five - beat verse , because ... create a line with a clear rhythmic balance , which we can indicate as 2 : 3 ; a pause after the third beat , 3 : 2 ...
Contents
TRADITIONAL APPROACHES | 3 |
LINGUISTIC APPROACHES | 44 |
34 | 50 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
acceptable alliteration allow already alternation approach beat beginning chapter classical common complex conventions course create demands demotion deviation discussion distinction double offbeat duple effect emphasis English example expectations experience expressive fact falling final five-beat four-beat function further give given hand iambic implied offbeat important indicate initial instance inversion kind language less linguistic means metre metrical pattern metrical set movement natural nonstresses normal noted observed occur opening optional pairing particular pause pentameter perceived perhaps phrase poem poetry poets position possible preference principle produces promotion pronunciation provides reader reading realisation reflect regular result rhyme rhythm rhythmic rules scansion semantic sense sequence simple single sounds speech stanza stress strong structure style subordination suggest syntactic tension theory third tradition triple trochaic underlying units unstressed syllables usually variation verse