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What Is Metre? The English language, when it is spoken, is a stress-timed
language. It is a mixture of weak and strong vowels, unstressed and stressed
syllables. For example, a cat is a weak vowel and an unstressed
syllable followed by a strong vowel and a stressed syllable. Another
is weak-strong-weak, unstressed-stressed-unstressed. Metre treats the stressed syllables as musical beats and
arranges them in regular rhythmical patterns. For example: A
cat, a cat, another cat, a cat It also intensifies the natural stress patterns of normal
speech. Firstly, by paying attention to secondary stresses. For example, the
word attitude has a primary stress
on the first syllable and a secondary stress on the last syllable, which we
may or may not hear in normal speech. Metre emphasises the secondary stress,
as well as the primary stress, unless the syllable before or after it has a
primary stress: His attitude was bad His
attitude stank Secondly, by paying attention to word stress, rather than
sentence stress. For example, we would say: I went to work today Work
is stressed and the rest of the sentence is reduced to a fast slur. Metre
keeps the word stress: I went
to work today What all this does is, it energises the language, it makes
it exciting. It gives words their full value, it lets them breathe. It makes
a sentence into a musical line, it makes it a song. And it has an effect on
us, physically, emotionally and spiritually. The regular beat of metre matches the natural stresses of
the words. A line of verse, though, is also flexible and supple. This may
mean that a metric beat falls on an unstressed syllable. For example, of in: the winter
of our discontent Or it may mean that we read a line and emphasise a
syllable against the beat. For example, true
in: the marriage
of true minds I will now describe the standard metres in English verse.
The names, from classical Greek poetry, may make them seem abstruse, but the
names aren’t important. The metres themselves are quite simple and it is easy
to get into the swing of reading them. The number of beats in a line defines its length and the
name given to it. So a pentameter, for example, has five beats. Each beat is
part of a metric unit, or foot. A foot contains one stressed syllable and a
number of unstressed syllables. It has a different name depending on the
number of unstressed syllables and their order. The most common is the iamb,
which is unstressed-stressed, as in
this iambic pentameter: If
mus|ic be| the food| of love|, play on Notice that the word music
is stressed-unstressed, but its position in the line fits the iambic pattern. A trochee is stressed-unstressed and is often used
at the start of a line. An amphibrach
is unstressed-stressed-unstressed
and often appears at the end of a line (or before a caesura, a pause, which I will explain below). An example of both
a trochee and an amphibrach is in this line: Whether| tis
nob|ler in| the mind| to suffer An anapest is unstressed-unstressed-stressed: The
A-ssyr|ian
came down| like a wolf| on the fold, These two lines have twelve syllables each, but only four
beats, so they are tetrameters, one beat shorter than a pentameter. Another
example of an anapest is the second foot of the second line here: Now is| the win|ter of| our dis|content A dactyl is
stressed-unstressed-unstressed. There are three here: Ro-me-o,| Ro-me-o,| wherefore| art thou| Ro-me-o Finally, a monometer
is a foot with only one syllable. This is rarely, if ever, used in pentameter
lines, but often starts lines with only three or four beats. For example: Some| are born| to end|less
night, A caesura, which
I mentioned above, is a pause in the middle of a line. It is especially used
in alexandrine lines, which have six beats and divide naturally into three
beats, a pause, three beats. For example: And
sing|ing
still| dost soar,‖ and soar|ing ev|er singest And here is an example of an alexandrine line with an
amphibrach (unstressed-stressed-unstressed) before the caesura: As from|
thy pre|sence
showers‖ a rain| of me|lody The most common line in English poetry is the iambic pentameter.
But when people say that a poem or a play is written in iambic pentameters,
what they mean is that this is the default. The metre is often mixed, as you
can see from the examples above. And in Shakespeare’s plays, for example,
there are often longer or shorter lines as well as the typical pentameters: And,
deep|er than|
did ev|er
plumm|et
sound, Then,
joy|fully, | my no|ble Lord| of Bedford, This notation may make poetry seem mechanical, but it is
no more so than the notation of musical composition. What we hear is music
and poetry. And, as I said above, the metre is supple and flexible, with some
beats emphasised more than others or an emphasis against the beat. For
example, how would you say this line? Shall
I| compare| thee to| a summ|er’s day? The metre of a line is usually clear. But saying it is
still open to interpretation and personal preference. A simple understanding of metre is essential to be able to
read Shakespeare and the great tradition of English poetry. And an ability to
write in metre is a way of keeping that tradition contemporary and alive. Metre is enjoyable. It is a non-intellectual way to
approach the meaning of a poem. The metre of a poem is its pulse, its heartbeat. And, if
we measure the soul between heartbeats, it is a measure of the soul in
language too. |
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