Spondee
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- For other uses, see Spondee (disambiguation)}}}.
It is impossible to construct a whole, serious poem with spondees. Consequently, spondees mainly occur as variants within, say, an anapaestic structure.
For example (from G. K. Chesterton, Lepanto):
- White founts falling in the courts of the sun
- And the Soldan of Byzantium is smiling as they run;
- The basic template for both lines is anapaestic tetrameter: four feet, each consisting of two short syllables then a long syllable (duh-duh-DAH, duh-duh-DAH, duh-duh-DAH, duh-duh-DAH). It is then heavily modified:
- The second, third and fourth feet in the second line each have three instead of two short syllables (duh-duh-duh-DAH).
- The first anapaest in the first line is replaced with a spondee ("White founts," DAH-DAH)
- The second anapaest in the first line is replaced with a trochee (DAH-duh).
- There are white fountains falling in the courts of the sun .
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