A line break is the point at which a line of poetry ends and the next begins. It is the most fundamental tool that distinguishes poetry from prose. Where prose wraps at the margin, poetry breaks by choice — and that choice is meaningful.
A line break can fall at the end of a syntactic unit (an end-stopped line), producing closure and emphasis. Or it can fall in the middle of a phrase or sentence (enjambment), pulling the reader forward across the gap and creating tension between the line as a visual unit and the sentence as a grammatical one.
Lineation — the practice of deciding where to break — is one of the poet’s primary compositional decisions. It governs pace, emphasis, ambiguity, and breath. A well-placed break can make a single word carry the weight of an entire line; a poorly placed one can make the poem feel arbitrary.
Related terms
- enjambment — when a syntactic unit crosses a line break
- caesura — a pause within a line
- stanza — the larger grouping of lines
- meter — the rhythmic structure that line breaks interact with