Meter in English: A Critical Engagement

Front Cover
David Baker
University of Arkansas Press, 1996 M01 1 - 368 pages
In 1993, poet, author, and teacher Robert Wallace wrote an essay, "Meter in English," to clarify and simplify methods of studying the line-by-line rhythms and structure of poetry. When David Baker circulated Wallace's essay to other poets and student of prosody, the ten propositions it contained elicited an excited and powerful reaction from each respondent. Some strongly concurred; others expressed rousing disagreement. United States Poet Laureate Robert Haas called the essay "a paradigm shift" in our understanding of English prosody.
David Baker has gathered Wallace's essay, fourteen essay-length responses - from poets as divergent in practice as Timothy Steele and Robert Hass, John Frederick Nims and Eavan Boland - and an extensive afterword by Wallace that brings the argument full circle. With Wallace's ten points as a common benchmark, the respondents have created an unparalleled sampling of thought on the status of meter in poetics today and the rich diversity of opinion on how poems achieve their sound and rhythm. Taken as a whole, the collection becomes a lastingly valuable teaching guide to meter as it's understood by some of its finest scholars and makers.

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Contents

Meter in English
3
A Response
45
A Defense of the NonIambic Meters
59
MeterMaking Arguments
75
A Response to Robert Wallace
97
Some Responses to Robert Wallace
109
A New Footing
125
Metrical Pleasures of Our Time
151
Verse vs ProseProsody vs Meter
249
Metrics and Pedagogical Economy
265
Two Letters
279
A Response to Robert Wallace
283
Completing the Circle
295
Bibliography
351
Contributors
357
Index of Proposal Discussions
361

Strength in Diversity
169
Meter and the Fortunes of the Numerical Imagination
197
Staunch Meter Great Song
221
Index of Authors
363
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About the author (1996)

David Baker is author or editor of fourteen books of poetry and criticism. He holds the Thomas B. Fordham Chair at Denison University, teaches regularly in the Warren Wilson College MFA program, and is the poetry editor of the Kenyon Review.

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