caesura, n.1. A pause in a line of verse dictated by sense or natural speech rhythm rather than by metrics.2. The University of Delaware's student literary magazine. Welcome to Caesura, a student ...
There are neat devices employed, like the predominantly masculine caesura in “Finding Josh.” The lines are often broken-up, staccato fragments. They move, sometimes abrupt and sometimes turgid ...
a kind of willed forgetting created a caesura between those events and the everyday life of the present. (This is described in the late Tony Judt’s outstanding book, “Postwar.”) Contrast ...
To top character represents "quiet," the bottom one "solitude." Together the two mean "Tranquility." Source: The author From a psychological point of view, silence is more than the absence of sound.
As the Transcontinental Railroad knit the East Coast to the West Coast, the stories of those who worked on and died for it often went untold. The exhibition "The Other Side of the Tracks" at 516 Arts ...
The struggle, perhaps, is that we try to read the awit—a Tagalog poetic form with four lines per stanza, 12 syllables per line with a caesura, and monorhyme scheme (AAAA)—rather than ...
His manipulation of the sonnet form is skilful, deploying enjambment and mid-line caesura to avoid strings of end-stopped lines that can make some sixteenth-century sonnets clunky, whilst his frequent ...