Prosody is the study and practice of the sound patterns in verse: meter, rhythm, rhyme, stress, intonation, and the way these interact with meaning. It is the technical discipline of understanding how a poem sounds and why it sounds that way.
Prosody asks questions like: why does this line feel heavy? Why does that stanza feel rushed? What changes when the meter breaks at this particular word? It provides the vocabulary — iamb, trochee, caesura, enjambment — for answering those questions precisely.
Prosodic analysis is not mechanical scansion for its own sake. It matters because sound is meaning in poetry. A shift from regular to irregular meter can signal emotional turbulence; a dense cluster of stressed syllables can make a line feel like an obstacle; a run of light unstressed syllables can feel like release. Understanding prosody means hearing these effects and understanding how they work.
Related terms
- meter — the structured pattern of stress that prosody analyzes
- rhyme — sound repetition at line endings or within lines
- caesura — a pause within the line
- line break — where the line ends, shaping the poem’s rhythm