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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HEG-HIG |
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HEROIC VERSE , a term exclusively used in English to indicate the rhymed iambic line or HEROIC COUPLET. In ancient literature, the heroic verse, ripwucov ,Arpov, was synonymous with the dactylic hexameter. It was in this measure that those typically heroic poems, cne Iliad and Odyssey and the Aeneid were written. In English, however, it was not enough to designate a single iambic line of five beats as heroic verse, because it was necessary to distinguish blank verse from the distich, which was formed by the heroic couplet. This had escaped the notice of Dryden, when he wrote " The English Verse, which we call
movement
Homer
movement
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" And thus the lone day in fight they spend, Till, at the last, as everything hath end, Anton is shent, and put him to the flight, And all his folk to go, as best go might." This way of writing was misunderstood and neglected by Chaucer's English disciples, but was followed nearly a century later by the Scottish poet, called Blind Harry (c. 1475), whose Wallace holds an important place in the history of versification as having passed on the tradition of the heroic couplet. Another Scottish poet, Gavin Douglas, selected heroic verse for his translation of the Aeneid (1513), and displayed, in such examples as the following, a skill which left little room for improvement at the hands of later poets: " One sang, ` The ship sails over the salt foam, Will bring the merchants and my leman home ' ; Some other sings, ' I will be blithe and light,Mine heart is leant upon so goodly wight.' The verse so successfully mastered was, however, not very generally used for heroic purposes in Tudor literature. The early poets of the revival, and Spenser and Shakespeare after them, greatly preferred stanzaic forms. For dramatic purposes blank verse was almost exclusively used, although the French had adopted the rhymed alexandrine for their plays. In the earlier half of the 17th century, heroic verse was often put to somewhat unheroic purposes, mainly in prologues and epilogues, or other short poems of occasion; but it was nobly redeemed by Marlowe in his Hero and Leander and respectably by Browne in his Britannia's Pastorals. It is to be noted, however, that those Elizabethans who, like Chapman
instrument of Dryden and Pope
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