Meters
Much lyric poetry depends on regular
meter based either on number of syllables or on stress. The most common meters are as follows:
- Iambic - two syllables, with the short or unstressed syllable followed by the long or stressed syllable.
- Trochaic - two syllables, with the long or stressed syllable followed by the short or unstressed syllable. In English, this metre is found almost entirely in lyric poetry.
- Pyrrhic - Two unstressed syllables
- Anapestic - three syllables, with the first two short or unstressed and the last long or stressed.
- Dactylic - three syllables, with the first one long or stressed and the other two short or unstressed.
- Spondaic - two syllables, with two successive long or stressed syllables.
Some forms have a combination of meters, often using a different meter for the refrain. ...
History of lyric poetry
The Classical period
Greece
For the ancient Greeks, lyric poetry had a precise technical meaning: verse that was accompanied by a
lyre or other stringed instrument (e.g. the
barbitos). The lyric poet was distinguished from the writer of plays (although Athenian drama included choral odes, in lyric form), the writer of
trochaic and
iambic verses (which were recited), the writer of
elegies(accompanied by the flute, rather than the lyre) and the writer of epic. The scholars of
Hellenistic Alexandria created a canon of
nine lyric poets deemed especially worthy of critical study. These
archaic and classical musician-poets included
Sappho,
Alcaeus,
Anacreon and
Pindar. Archaic lyric was characterized by strophic composition and live musical performance. Some poets, like
Pindar extended the metrical forms to a triad, including
strophe,
antistrophe (metrically identical to the strophe) and
epode (whose form does
not match that of the strophe).
Rome
Among the major extant
Roman poets of the classical period, only
Catullus (nos. 11, 17, 30, 34, 51, 61) and
Horace (four books of
Odes) wrote lyric poetry, which however was no longer meant to be sung, but read or recited. What remained were the forms, the lyric meters of the Greeks adapted to Latin. Catullus was influenced by both archaic and
Hellenistic Greek verse and belonged to a group of Roman poets called the
Neoteroi ("newer poets"), who spurned
epic poetry, following the lead of
Callimachus, and instead composed brief highly polished poems in various thematic and metrical genres. The Roman love elegy of
Tibullus,
Propertius and
Ovid (
Amores,
Heroides), with its focus on the poetic "I" and the expression of personal feeling, may be the thematic ancestor of much medieval, renaissance, Romantic and modern lyric poetry, but these works were composed in
elegiac couplets, and so were not lyric poetry in the ancient sense.
China
In China, an anthology of poems by
Qu Yuan and
Song Yu,
Songs of Chu, defined a new form of poetry that came from the area of
Chu during the
Warring States period. As a new literary style,
chu ci abandoned the classic four-character verses used in poems of
Shi Jingand adopted verses with varying lengths. This gave it more rhythm and latitude in expression.
Originating in 10th century
Persian, a
ghazal is a
poetic form consisting of
couplets that share a
rhyme and a
refrain. Formally it consists of a short lyric composed in a single metre with a single rhyme throughout. The central subject is love. Notable exponents include:
Hafiz,
Amir Khusro,
Auhadi of Maragheh,
Alisher Navoi,
Obeid e zakani,
Khaqani Shirvani,
Anvari,
Farid al-Din Attar,
Omar Khayyam, and
Rudaki. The ghazal was introduced to European poetry in the early 19th century by the German writers
Friedrich Schlegel,
Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall and
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who called Hafiz his "twin".
Lyric in European literature of the medieval or Renaissance period means a poem written so that it could be set to music—whether or not it is. A poem's particular structure, function or theme is not specified by the term. The lyric poetry of Europe in this period was created largely without reference to the classical past, by the pioneers of courtly poetry and
courtly love. The
troubadors, travelling composers and performers of songs, began to flourish towards the end of the 11th century and were often imitated in successive centuries.
Trouvères were poet-composers who were roughly contemporary with and influenced by the troubadours but who composed their works in the northern
dialects of France. The first known
trouvère was
Chrétien de Troyes (
fl. 1160s-80s). The dominant form of German lyric poetry in the period was the
Minnesang, "a love lyric based essentially on a fictitious relationship between a knight and his high-born lady". Initially imitating the lyrics of the French troubadours and trouvères, Minnesang soon established a distinctive tradition. There is also a large body of medieval
Galician-Portuguese lyric.
In Italy,
Petrarch developed the sonnet form pioneered by
Giacomo da Lentini, which Dante used in his
Vita Nuova. In 1327, according to the poet, the sight of a woman called Laura in the church of Sainte-Claire d'Avignon awoke in him a lasting passion, celebrated in the
Rime sparse ("Scattered rhymes"). Later, Renaissance poets who copied Petrarch's style named this collection of 366 poems
Il Canzoniere ("Song Book"). Laura is in many ways both the culmination of medieval
courtly love poetry and the beginning of Renaissance love lyric.
16th Century
In France,
La Pléiade aimed to break with earlier traditions of French poetry (especially
Marot and the
grands rhétoriqueurs), and, maintaining that French was a worthy language for literary expression, to attempt to ennoble the French language by imitating the Ancients. Among the models favoured by the Pléiade were
Pindar,
Anacreon,
Alcaeus,
Horace and
Ovid. The forms that dominate the poetic production of these poets are the
Petrarchan sonnet cycle and the
Horatian/
Anacreontic ode. The group included:
Pierre de Ronsard,
Joachim du Bellay and
Jean-Antoine de Baïf. Spanish devotional poetry adapts the lyric for religious purposes. Notable poets include:
Teresa of Avila,
Saint John of the Cross,
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz,
Garcilaso de la Vega,
Lope de Vega. Although better known for his epic
Lusiadas, Luís de
Camões is also considered the greatest Portuguese lyric poet of the period.
17th Century
Lyric is the dominant poetic idiom in 17th-century English poetry from
John Donne to
Andrew Marvell.
[13] The poems of this period are short, rarely tell a story and are intense in expression.
[13] Other notable poets of the era include
Ben Jonson,
Robert Herrick,
George Herbert,
Aphra Behn,
Thomas Carew,
John Suckling,
Richard Lovelace,
John Milton,
Richard Crashaw, and
Henry Vaughan. A German lyric poet of the period is
Martin Opitz.
Matsuo Bashō is a Japanese lyric poet.
18th Century
19th Century
In Europe the lyric emerges as the principal poetic form of the 19th century, and comes to be seen as synonymous with poetry.
Romantic lyric poetry consists of first-person accounts of the thoughts and feelings of a specific moment; feelings are extreme, but personal.
The 19th century in France sees a confident recovery of the lyric voice after its relative demise in the 18th century. The lyric becomes the dominant mode in French poetry of this period.
Charles Baudelaire is, for
Walter Benjamin, the last European example of lyric poetry "successful on a mass scale."
20th Century
The relevance and acceptability of the lyric in the modern age was, though, called into question by
modernist poets such as
Ezra Pound,
T. S. Eliot,
H.D. and
William Carlos Williams, who rejected the English lyric form of the 19th century, feeling that it relied too heavily on melodious language, rather than complexity of thought. After World War II, the American
New Criticism returned to the lyric, advocating a poetry that made conventional use of rhyme, meter and stanzas, and was modestly personal in the lyric tradition. Lyric poetry dealing with relationships, sex and domestic life constituted the new mainstream of American poetry in the late 20th century, influenced by the
confessional poets of the 1950s and 60s, such as
Sylvia Plath and
Anne Sexton.
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