Difference between revisions of "Dactylic"

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{{cquote|'''Every'''where, '''every'''where, '''Christmas''' to'''night'''. <br> '''Christmas''' in the '''lands''' of the '''fir-tree''' and '''pines.'''}}
 
{{cquote|'''Every'''where, '''every'''where, '''Christmas''' to'''night'''. <br> '''Christmas''' in the '''lands''' of the '''fir-tree''' and '''pines.'''}}
  
It is like the reverse of the anapestic, which is a metrical foot that is two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed.
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It is like the reverse of the anapestic (a metrical foot that is two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed.)
  
 
[[Category:Poetry]]
 
[[Category:Poetry]]

Revision as of 19:50, May 6, 2009

A metrical foot that consists of two stressed syllables followed by an unstressed syllable. An example from Phillip Brooks's poem, "Christmas Everywhere", is a good example:


Everywhere, everywhere, Christmas tonight.
Christmas in the lands of the fir-tree and pines.

It is like the reverse of the anapestic (a metrical foot that is two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed.)