vers libre
/veə'li:br/
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: * Free verse: A form of poetry that does not use consistent meter (regular rhythmic patterns), rhyme schemes, or any other fixed musical pattern. It is characterized by its freedom from traditional constraints, allowing the poet to shape the poem's rhythm and structure based on the natural cadences of speech and the requirements of the content.
Usage and Examples
- Noun:
- The poet abandoned traditional sonnets and began writing in vers libre.
- Modernist writers like T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound were pioneers of vers libre in English.
- The beauty of vers libre lies in its ability to create rhythm through phrasing and repetition rather than a fixed meter.
Advanced Usage
- As a literary movement: The term is historically associated with late 19th and early 20th-century poetic movements, particularly French Symbolism and Anglo-American Modernism, which sought to break from formal traditions.
- The adoption of vers libre was a revolutionary act against the rigid poetic conventions of the Victorian era.
Variants and Related Words
- Free verse: The more common English term for . They are synonyms.
- Prose poetry: A related but distinct form; it uses the dense, figurative language of poetry but is structured in prose paragraphs without line breaks, whereas maintains the lineated form of poetry.
Synonyms
- Free verse
- Unrhymed verse (though this is a broader, more descriptive term)
Antonyms
- Formal verse
- Metrical poetry
- Rhymed verse
Related Concepts and Context
- Blank verse: Unrhymed but written in a consistent metrical pattern, usually iambic pentameter. This distinguishes it from , which has no consistent meter.
- Cadence: The natural rhythmic flow of language, which becomes a primary structural element in in place of formal meter.
- Imagism: An early 20th-century poetic movement that often employed to present clear, precise images.
Noun
- unrhymed verse without a consistent metrical pattern