单词 | anapestic |
例句 | Those of you with more to prove will want to drop the words 'anapestic tetrameter' and call it a modern-day Canterbury Tales or even The Wasteland. Summer reads - best book to share: Love, Dishonor, Marry, Die, Cherish, Perish by David Rakoff 2013-07-22T15:04:00Z The majority of Giesel's best-known children's books were written from an educational standpoint, the anapestic tetrameter employed to reinforce learning via phonics, and the limited vocabulary designed to encourage early readers. Why don't Dr Seuss's books make good movies 2012-07-27T11:55:52Z Pertaining to an anapest; consisting of an anapests; as, an anapestic meter, foot, verse. Webster's Unabridged Dictionary 2012-03-24T02:00:23.513Z In noble anapestic lines he pours forth the thought as it comes to him: “‘Behold, I could love if I durst! Browning and the Dramatic Monologue 2011-04-30T02:00:14.330Z These specimens, as is usual in anapestic verse, show considerable freedom in the treatment of the part of the foot containing the light syllables, substituted iambi being very common. English Verse Specimens Illustrating its Principles and History Again we find, especially in dactyllic and anapestic lines, a trochee or spondee thrown in to vary the movement. Rhymes and Meters A Practical Manual for Versifiers In the following nursery rhyme it is clear that the prevailing foot is anapestic, though several feet are iambic, and in the first two lines and the last line a single syllable makes a foot. English: Composition and Literature There is evident a tendency toward the ‘rising verse’ and the anapestic foot. The Translations of Beowulf A Critical Bibliography Technically the poem is anapestic tetrameter much varied by the introduction of iambic feet. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10 The Guide Here we have a hexameter which is neither iambic nor anapestic, but a combination of the two rhythms. English Verse Specimens Illustrating its Principles and History In this anapestic line the meter is varied by a spondee: ⌣ ⌣ — | — — | ⌣ ⌣ — | ⌣ ⌣ — “Not a drum | was heard | not a fun | eral note.” Rhymes and Meters A Practical Manual for Versifiers In like manner we have anapestic lines of all lengths from monometer to hexameter. Elementary Guide to Literary Criticism The meter of this poem, then is anapestic tetrameter, varied by an added syllable in most of the odd-numbered lines and by an iambic foot at the beginning of each line. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 7 Feminine Ending, an extra unstressed syllable at the end of an iambic or anapestic line, 71. The Principles of English Versification The omission of one of the two light syllables from the foot in trisyllabic verse is so common as to make it difficult to find pure anapestic or dactylic verse in English. English Verse Specimens Illustrating its Principles and History His viking code, with its swift anapestic rhythm, has a breezy melody which sings in the ear. Essays on Scandinavian Literature The line, "How she smiled, and I could not but love," contains three anapests, and is therefore anapestic trimeter. Elementary Guide to Literary Criticism A poetic foot of three syllables which bears the accent on the third syllable is called an anapestic foot. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 7 There occur examples of 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-stress iambic, trochaic, anapestic, and dactylic lines, sometimes used continuously and sometimes used in combinations with other lengths. The Principles of English Versification Often it seems to an English reader to have an anapestic effect, and to be best described as anapestic tetrameter. English Verse Specimens Illustrating its Principles and History Next after "The Schoolmistress," the most engaging of Shenstone's poems is his "Pastoral Ballad," written in 1743 in four parts and in a tripping anapestic measure. A History of English Romanticism in the Eighteenth Century When the feet are accented on the last syllable,—that is, when the verse is iambic or anapestic,—an extra syllable may be added at the end of a line. Composition-Rhetoric It is the anapestic, like, as Hannah More remarks, "A cobbler there was, and he lived in a stall!" The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 10, No. 282, November 10, 1827 Furthermore, in a passage like the following, which everyone recognizes as exquisitely musical, it is not obvious whether the rhythm is iambic or anapestic or trochaic. The Principles of English Versification The six-stress anapestic line which Tennyson preferred for his later dramatic monologues like "Rizpah" is really a ballad measure, and is seen as such to its best advantage in "The Revenge." A Study of Poetry The stresses are nearly even throughout; the meter cannot be accurately described as iambic, trochaic, or anapestic; yet there is a rhythm in the approximate temporal equality of the thought-moments. The Principles of Aesthetics The first, from Paradise Lost, II, 604-614, is in blank verse, with five iambic feet to a line; the second, from Shelley's The Cloud, is apparently irregular, but the basis is clearly anapestic. The Principles of English Versification It is iambic, trochaic, anapestic, dactylic, according as the metrical pattern is made up of iambs, trochees, etc. The Principles of English Versification From reading the whole poem we know that the movement is anapestic. The Principles of English Versification The contrast is sharpest in the anapestic and dactylic, less sharp in the trochaic and iambic. The Principles of Aesthetics |
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