Isosyllabics is the regulation of verse lines by the number of syllables. Because English verse, unlike that in some other languages – French, Italian and Japanese for example – is timed by beats rather than syllables (see prosody), this produces only notional metre, undetectable to the ear. Isosyllabic verse begins to be prominent in English shortly after 1900 with the Modernists’ abandoning of metrical form and imitation of such verse forms as the Japanese
haikuwhich traditionally comprises no more than ten words and seventeen syllables divided into lines or groups of five, seven, and five. Isosyllabics have often met with indifference from English readers, who will probably not even notice the metre because it is decipherable only by one who is not experiencing the poem but…
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Citation: Groves, Peter Lewis. "Isosyllabics". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 23 June 2004 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1435, accessed 24 November 2024.]