![]() Often it is easy to spot enjambment because of the lack of punctuation marks at the end of a line. At its extreme, individual words can be split over two lines in a technique called broken rhyme. Instead of reading to the end of a line and stopping, the line continues on without any major pause or change of meaning. Enjambment is actually opposite to end-stopping, where a line finishes with a terminal punctuation mark. Instead, treat them both as techniques poets use to change how we read a poem. It’s wrong to think of enjambment as the opposite of caesura. In poetry, it means running two or more lines of a poem together without a terminal punctuation mark.Įnjambment has been used throughout the history of poetry and was particularly favored by English Elizabethan and Romantic poets. The term enjambment (pronounced "en-jam-ment" in American English, and also known as enjambement) is a French word meaning to step over or to put legs across. ![]() Look on my Works, || ye Mighty, || and despair! My name is Ozymandias, || King of Kings || Stand in the desert … || Near them, || on the sand … Who said-"Two vast and trunkless legs of stone I have three daughters || the eldest is elevenĮxample 3: Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley That will be damn’d for’t || would I knew the villain, It is for you we speak, || not for ourselves: Then there’s a pair of us || – don’t tell!Įxample 2: The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare Its use decides whether the effect will be subtle or dramatic for the reader.Įxample 1: I’m Nobody! Who Are You? by Emily Dickinson Create a sense of foreboding at what is to comeĪdditionally, the choice of the poet to use masculine or feminine caesura is a deliberate one.Alternatively, it can make a dramatic pause to add a theatrical feel to a line. It keeps a feeling of natural flow and is soothing to read. With the milk-teeth of babes, || and a smile at the pain? The Effect of CaesuraĬaesura can be used subtly to provide a place to take a breath between phrases. What art is she good at, || but hurting her breast It creates a strong staccato effect, such as in Mother and Poet by Elizabeth Barrett Browning: My country, ’tis of thee || sweet land of liberty ||Ī masculine caesura is used after a stressed or long syllable. There are two instances in this line from My Country, ’Tis of Thee by Samuel Francis Smith: This creates a soft and gentle effect that feels natural. Masculine and Feminine CaesuraĬaesurae are divided into two groups, feminine and masculine.Ī feminine caesura is found after an unstressed short syllable. In the examples below, I have used the marks || so that it is clear where the pause should go. Sometimes you will find caesurae (the plural of caesura) marked with two vertical lines when a poet wants to draw attention to the pause, but generally it is not marked at all. Terminal caesura is a pause at the end of the line. ![]() ![]() The most common type, known as Medial caesura, is found near the middle. If it is near the start, it is called an initial caesura. In modern European verse, it means a pause inside a line of poetry at the end of a natural phrase.Ī caesura can appear in different places within a line. In Greek, Latin, and Anglo-Saxon verse, it refers to a break between words in a metrical foot. It comes from the Latin caes which means to cut. The term caesura (pronounced "seh-zoo-rah" in American English) dates from the mid-16th century.
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