heroic couplet
Noun: A heroic couplet is a specific, formal poetic structure consisting of two successive lines of verse (a couplet) that rhyme. Each line is written in iambic pentameter (a meter with five iambic feet, each foot being an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable: da-DUM). The style is typically elevated, dignified, or grand, suitable for epic, narrative, or satirical subjects.
The heroic couplet is used to create a sense of closure, epigrammatic wit, or rhythmic elegance within a poem. It is a self-contained unit of thought or description. - It is a foundational verse form in English poetry, especially prominent in the Neoclassical period (late 17th and 18th centuries). - Poets use it for its balance, symmetry, and capacity for delivering concise, powerful statements.
- From Alexander Pope's : > "True ease in writing comes from art, not chance, / As those move easiest who have learned to dance."
- From John Dryden's translation of : > "Arms, and the man I sing, who, forced by fate, / And haughty Juno's unrelenting hate..."
- Closed Couplet: A heroic couplet where the two lines form a complete grammatical unit and a full thought, with a distinct pause (often a period or semicolon) at the end of the second line. This was the preferred style of Alexander Pope.
- Open Couplet (or Run-on Couplet): The sense and grammatical structure continue from the second line of one couplet into the first line of the next, creating a more fluid, less epigrammatic effect.
- Couplet (n): A general term for any two successive lines of poetry that rhyme and usually have the same meter.
- Iambic Pentameter (n): The specific metrical pattern of a line containing five iambs, which is the standard meter for the heroic couplet and English sonnets.
- Heroic Verse (n): Poetry written in iambic pentameter, often referring specifically to the heroic couplet or to blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter) used in epic poetry.
- Neoclassical couplet
- Closed couplet (when referring specifically to the self-contained type)
- Distich: Another term for a couplet or a two-line stanza.
- Epigram: A brief, witty, and often satirical statement, which in poetry is frequently delivered in the form of a heroic couplet.
- a couplet consisting of two rhymed lines of iambic pentameter and written in an elevated style