Heptametr


Heptammeter (seven-legged) - the meter, which is divided into seven feet. In Polish literature, there are heptameters that are trochethic (fourteen-syllable) SsSsSsSs // SsSsSs and iambic (fifteen-syllabic) sSsSsSsS // sSsSsSs. Heptametrem iamb Stanisław Ciesielczuk wrote a poem Letter z tomiku Pies kosmos: Here, in the evening, I am more beautiful than the poetic sheet, And at night I often tremble when I delight in the sky. And I listen to the peeps of white stars from nests under the blue roof And I am raising the golden walls of huts, new huts under the moon.

The jambic parameter (fourteener) is very popular in English literature. As I in hoary winter’s night stood shivering in the snow, Surpris’d I was with sudden heat which made my heart to glow; And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near, A pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air appear; (Robert Southwell, The Burning Babe)

The iambic parametermeter was used in England by, among others, Robert Browning (The pope and the net) and Gilbert Keith Chesterton (The rolling English road). The fifteen-sided jambic heptameter, known as the political poem in Byzantine times, replaced the ancient hexameter in ancient Greek literature. The form of the fifteen-syllable Greek poem was kept in his translations by Janusz Strasburger.

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