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Decasyllabic   Listen
Decasyllabic

adjective
1.
Having or characterized by or consisting of ten syllables.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Decasyllabic" Quotes from Famous Books



... Romantic Drama was an extraneous product in English literature. Even the magnificent medium in which it is composed, the decasyllabic blank verse which the genius of Marlowe adapted to the needs of the drama, is ultimately due to the Italian Trissino, and has never kept a firm hold on English poetry. Thus both the formal elements of the Drama, plot and verse, were importations from Italy. But style and characterisation ...
— The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1 • William Painter

... a less original and happy command of the rhymed decasyllabic couplet, which he sometimes handles after a fashion which makes one almost think of Dryden, and sometimes after a fashion (as in the lovely description of Alresford Pool at the opening of Philarete) ...
— A History of English Literature - Elizabethan Literature • George Saintsbury

... induction of examples, has naturally gained a good deal of credit. I cannot, however, by any means concur in the extension given to it. Pages may be read in Chaucer, and still more in Dunbar, where every line is regularly and harmoniously decasyllabic; and though the caesura may perhaps fall rather more uniformly than it does in modern verse, it would be very easy to find exceptions, which could not acquire a rhythmical cadence by any artifice of the reader. The deviations from the normal type, or decasyllable ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 57, No. 356, June, 1845 • Various

... Terminal Essay singles out the original as one of the finest pieces of devotional verse in the Nights; and worthy of Vaughan or Christina Rossetti. The gigantic nature of Payne's achievement will be realised when we mention that The Arabian Nights contains the equivalent of some twenty thousand decasyllabic lines of poetry, that is to say more than there are in Milton's Paradise Lost, and that he has rendered faithfully the whole of this enormous mass in accordance with the intricate metrical scheme of the original, and in felicitous ...
— The Life of Sir Richard Burton • Thomas Wright

... This poem is composed of decasyllabic and of pentasyllable verses. The last two verses of the lst and 3d stanzas and the last verse of the 2d and 4th stanzas are agudos, the other verses being llanos. The rhyme scheme is a, a, b, b, c, c, d, d, e, e, c for each half of the poem. Notice the hiatus ...
— Legends, Tales and Poems • Gustavo Adolfo Becquer

... line.' Rhymeless it is not, for shore, its rhyme-termination, answers to bower and power, the halfway rhymes of lines 118 and 121 respectively. Why Mr. Locock should call line 12 an 'unmetrical line,' I cannot see. It is a decasyllabic line, with a trochee substituted for an iambus in the third foot—Around : me gleamed : many a : bright ...
— The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume I • Percy Bysshe Shelley



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