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Name Period Poetic Meter and

Meter: The typical rhythmic pattern of a poem.

Foot: The unit of in a of .

Scansion: The division of into feet to determine the meter of a poem.

Feet Types

˘ ΄ (the most common in English verse) ˘ ˘ ΄ anapest

΄ ˘ ΄ ˘ ˘

΄ ΄ ˘ ΄ ˘

˘ ˘

Lengths of Poetic Lines

: one foot : five feet : two feet : six feet : three feet heptameter: seven feet : four feet : eight feet

Thus, by scanning the lines of a poem, one arrives at its meter. The meter of a poem whose dominant foot is the iamb, and whose lines commonly have five feet, is . A line of two would be trochaic dimeter, six dactyls, ; and so on.

Substitution: Using a foot which is different from the one typically used in a certain line or . A trochee, for example, used in an iambic pentameter line, would be a .

Free verse: Poetry written without any tight metrical structure. has, instead of meter, a looser kind of rhythm which produces its feeling of flow and unity.

Blank verse: Unrhymed iambic pentameter. Shakespeare uses very often in his plays.

Rhyme scheme: The pattern of end- in a poem or stanza.

Half-, slant-rhyme, or off-rhyme: A rhyme that is close, but not perfect.

Quatrain: A group of four lines, linked by their end-rhymes, subject matter, or both.

Sestet: A group of six lines, as above.

Octave: A group of eight lines, as above.

Couplet: A pair of lines, in succession, that rhyme.

Harris, English IV Name Period

Stanza: A group of lines set off by themselves in a poem. Properly speaking, all in a poem have the same number of lines; if they don’t, they should be called irregular stanzas, sections, or even verse paragraphs.

Sonnet: A fourteen-line, lyric poem with a single theme written in iambic pentameter. The was invented by Italian poet Francesco . follow definite forms. The form is determined by the type of sonnet.

The Italian or consists of an followed by a . The octave is almost always rhymed abbaabba; the sestet’s is either cdecde, cdccdc, or cdedce. Often the octave states a problem, and the sestet resolves it.

The Spenserian sonnet was invented by English poet . It consists of three followed by a rhyming . The rhyme scheme is abab/bcbc/cdcd/ee.

The English or Shakespearean sonnet has three quatrains followed by a rhyming couplet. The typical rhyme scheme is abab/cdcd/efef/gg. Usually the couplet comments epigrammatically on the problem/situation presented in the three quatrains.

In a sonnet sequence, sonnets are linked by theme or person addressed.

Adapted from: C. Hugh Holman, A Handbook to , Lynn Altenbernd and Leslie L. Lewis, A Handbook for the Study of Poetry. Source: http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/sonnet.html Source: Prentice Hall Literature: The British Tradition – unit 2

Harris, English IV