+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter...

Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter...

Date post: 12-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: claire-johnston
View: 235 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
12
Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme
Transcript
Page 1: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme

Page 2: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Meter

• Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables• The basic unit of meter is a foot.• Most common feet in English poetry:

Iamb / Trochee / Anapest / Dactyl / Spondee / /

Page 3: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Shakespeare’s SONNET 138 (IAMBIC)

U / U / U / U / U /When my love swears that she is made of truth

I do believe her though I know she lies,

That she might think me some untutor’d youth

Page 4: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Trochaic /

/ / / / / / Pe·ter Pi·per picked a peck of pick·led pep·pers

Page 5: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Anapestic /

/ / /

There was an old man in a tree / / /

Who was hor·rib·ly bored by a bee / /

When they said, "Does it buzz?“ / /

He re·plied, "Yes, it does! / / /

It's a reg·u·lar brute of a bee!"

Edward Lear

Page 6: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

/ Dactylic (po·e·try)

/ / / /

Picture your self in a boat on a river with / / / /

tangerine tree-ees and marmalade skii-ii-es.

Dactylic tetrameter ¾ time: The Beatles, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds “

Page 7: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Spondaic / /Rarely an entire line of poetry

/ / / /See Saw, Margery Daw

/ / / / I scream. You scream./ / / We all scream for ice cream

Page 8: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Metrical Lines

• One foot monometer• Two feet dimeter• Three feet trimeter• Four feet tetrameter• Five feet pentameter (iambic pentameter)• Six feet hexameter (dactylic hexameter)• Seven feet heptameter• Eight feet octameter

Page 9: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Stanzas

• 2 line stanzas: couplets

• 3 line stanzas: tercets triplets: aaa bbb ccc

ddd terza rima: aba bcb

cdc ded

• 4 line stanzas: quatrains

• 5 line stanzas: quintets

• 6 line stanzas: sestets

• 7 line stanzas: septets

• 8 line stanzas: octaves

Page 10: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Rhyme Scheme

The ends of lines repeat the same sounds.

Mary had a little jam,she spread it on a waffle.And if she hadn't eaten tenshe wouldn't feel so _____.

ABCB

The snow came downAnd covered the townThe snow came down last nightThe snow came downAnd covered the townAnd left it snowy _____.

AABAAB

Page 11: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Kinds of Rhyme

• Exact: eye/sky/pie; sing/ding/ring• Near or Half: sing/dung/rang• Eye: tough/through/dough• Internal:

"Ah, distinctly I remember, it was in the bleak December"

/ /

• Masculine: rang/sang / /

• Feminine: ringing/singing

Page 12: Poetic Rhythm and Rhyme. Meter Patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables The basic unit of meter is a foot. Most common feet in English poetry:

Practice

• Let’s complete some scansion practice!


Recommended