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A Fourteener, in poetry, is a line consisting of 14 syllables, usually having 7 iambic feet, often used in 16th century English verse. Sometimes it also used to mean a poem of 14 lines, frequently a sonnet. The seventh song of Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella is written in rhyming fourteener couplets:
Sidney's friend, the translator Arthur Golding, was extremely fond of fourteeners:
Poulter's measure is a meter consisting of alternate Alexandrines and Fourteeners, i.e. 12 and 14 syllable lines. It was often used in the Elizabethan era. The term was coined by George Gascoigne, because poulters, or poulterers (sellers of poultry), would sometimes give 12 to the dozen, and other times 14 (see also Baker's dozen). [edit] ExamplesC. S. Lewis, in his English Literature in the Sixteenth Century, castigates the 'lumbering' poulter's measure (p.109). He attributes the introduction of this 'terrible' meter to Thomas Wyatt (p. 224). In a more extended analysis (pp.231–2), he comments:
Lewis's friend J.R.R. Tolkien wrote a poem titled "Galadriel's Song of Eldamar" using only fourteeners. Many of Tolkien's other songs also use heptameter. William Blake used lines of fourteen syllables, for example in The Book of Thel. These lines, however, are not written in iambic heptameter. The iambic heptameter is closely related to the common meter, which breaks the seven-foot line into alternating lines of 4 and 3 feet. [edit] See also |
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