Assumed audience

  • Reading level: comfortable reading poetry; has completed “The Line and the Break.”
  • Background: understands line breaks and enjambment.
  • Goal: hear and understand the sound structures in formal and free verse.

Meter as template

Meter is a recurring pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. It is not the rhythm of a poem — it is the template against which the rhythm plays. When a poet writes in iambic pentameter, the template is five iambs (da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM), but almost no actual line conforms perfectly. The interest is in how the spoken rhythm departs from, returns to, and plays against the metrical template.

The common feet

English-language poetry uses a small set of metrical feet:

FootPatternExample
Iambunstressed–stresseda-BOVE
Trocheestressed–unstressedGAR-den
Anapestunstressed–unstressed–stressedin-ter-VENE
Dactylstressed–unstressed–unstressedMER-ri-ly
Spondeestressed–stressedHEART-BREAK

A line’s meter is named by combining the foot type with the count: iambic pentameter (five iambs), trochaic tetrameter (four trochees), and so on.

Rhythm versus meter

Rhythm is what you hear when a line is spoken aloud. It includes stress, pitch, speed, and pause — everything that gives the line its particular feel. Meter is the underlying pattern that organizes those elements.

The tension between the two is where poetic energy lives. A line that follows its meter exactly can feel mechanical. A line that breaks from its meter can feel urgent, hesitant, or broken — depending on how and where the break occurs. A caesura in the middle of a metrically regular line introduces an unexpected silence; a spondaic substitution (two stressed syllables where the meter expects one stressed and one unstressed) creates weight and emphasis.

Sound beyond meter

Meter is only one dimension of a poem’s sound. Others include:

  • Rhyme: end rhyme, internal rhyme, slant rhyme.
  • Alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sounds.
  • Assonance: repetition of vowel sounds.
  • Consonance: repetition of consonant sounds in any position.

These devices bind words together sonically, creating echoes and connections that may reinforce or complicate the poem’s semantic content.

Guidance

  • Scan poems by marking stressed and unstressed syllables. Look for the metrical pattern, then notice where the actual rhythm departs from it.
  • Read poems aloud — meter is heard, not seen.
  • In free verse, listen for local metrical patterns: a line that falls into iambs amid otherwise irregular verse carries the weight of that inherited form.