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 ix
... tension 8. METRICAL RULES AND THE STRUCTURES OF LANGUAGE 8.1 Indefinite stress 8.2 Sense and the stress pattern 8.3 Metrical subordination 8.4 Double offbeats and elision 8.5 Promotion and demotion 8.6 Pairing and syntax 8.7 Pairing and ...
... tension 8. METRICAL RULES AND THE STRUCTURES OF LANGUAGE 8.1 Indefinite stress 8.2 Sense and the stress pattern 8.3 Metrical subordination 8.4 Double offbeats and elision 8.5 Promotion and demotion 8.6 Pairing and syntax 8.7 Pairing and ...
Page xviii
... tension, between a simple metrical pattern and a more varied arrangement of stresses corresponding to the pronunciation of the line in one of the most suggestive features of the classical approach, and one to which we shall return. Let ...
... tension, between a simple metrical pattern and a more varied arrangement of stresses corresponding to the pronunciation of the line in one of the most suggestive features of the classical approach, and one to which we shall return. Let ...
Page xxiii
Derek Attridge. of any notional stress challenging the unstressed ' with ' . The tension is experienced not between two simultaneously perceived levels , but in the linear progression of the line : the stress on ' deaf is immediately ...
Derek Attridge. of any notional stress challenging the unstressed ' with ' . The tension is experienced not between two simultaneously perceived levels , but in the linear progression of the line : the stress on ' deaf is immediately ...
Page xxiv
... tension as we do feel is the result of this hastening or retarding of the fundamental pulse; the poetic effect in these examples is to underline the vigorous confidence of (12) and the ruminative melancholy of (13). The rhythmic quality ...
... tension as we do feel is the result of this hastening or retarding of the fundamental pulse; the poetic effect in these examples is to underline the vigorous confidence of (12) and the ruminative melancholy of (13). The rhythmic quality ...
Page xxvi
... tension' to poetic rhythm, without implying foot-scansion and substitution, or the perception of two discrete patterns at different levels and a relationship between them, and we shall find it an invaluable concept in the chapters that ...
... tension' to poetic rhythm, without implying foot-scansion and substitution, or the perception of two discrete patterns at different levels and a relationship between them, and we shall find it an invaluable concept in the chapters that ...
Contents
THE RHYTHMS OF ENGLISH SPEECH | 8 |
THE FOURBEAT RHYTHM | 25 |
THE FIVEBEAT RHYTHM | |
WHAT IS A METRICAL RULE? | |
THE FUNCTIONS OF POETIC RHYTHM | |
SOME EXAMPLES | |
RULES AND SCANSION | |
Bibliography | |
Sources of examples | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
accentual-syllabic verse alternation anapaestic chapter common metre complex create David Abercrombie demotion deviation dipodic rhythm discussion distinction double offbeat duple metre duple verse duration emphasis English metre English speech English verse example falling rhythm five-beat line five-beat rhythm four-beat line four-beat rhythm four-beat verse function iambic pentameter implied offbeat initial inversion initial offbeat language line-end linguistic metrical form metrical pattern metrical rules metrical set metrical structure metrical style metrical theory movement nonstresses nursery rhymes occur offbeat condition organisation pause perceived perception phonetic phonological phrase poem poetic poetry poets pronunciation prosody reader reading realised rhythmic form rhythmic structure rhythmic unit rising rhythm scansion semantic sense sequence single offbeat sounds speech rhythms stanza stress contour stress pattern stress-final pairing stress-timing stressed and unstressed strong syllable count syntactic break syntax tendency tension triple metre triple rhythm triple verse trochaic trochee underlying rhythm unrealised beat unstressed syllables variation words