- Hudibrastic
Hudibrastic is a type of English verse named for Samuel Butler's "
Hudibras " of1672 . For the poem, Butler invented amock-heroic verse structure. Instead of pentameter, the lines were written in iambictetrameter . The rhyme scheme is the same as inheroic verse (aa, bb, cc, dd, etc.), but Butler usedfeminine rhyme for humor."Baldick, Christopher (1996). " [http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t56.e465 Hudibrastic verse] " in "The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms". Oxford Reference Online (subscription required), Oxford University Press. Retrieved on February 27, 2007.]The first fourteen lines of "Hudibras" illustrate the verse form::When civil dudgeon first grew high,:And men fell out they knew not why?:When hard words, jealousies, and fears,:Set folks together by the ears,:And made them fight, like mad or drunk, :For Dame Religion, as for punk;:Whose honesty they all durst swear for,:Though not a man of them knew wherefore::When Gospel-Trumpeter, surrounded:With long-ear'd rout, to battle sounded, :And pulpit, drum ecclesiastick,:Was beat with fist, instead of a stick;:Then did Sir Knight abandon dwelling,:And out he rode a colonelling.
The rhyme of "swear for" with "wherefore" and "ecclesiastic" with "(in)stead of a stick" are surprising, unnatural, and humorous. Additionally, the rhyme of "-don dwelling" with "a colonelling" is strained to the point of breaking, again for humorous effect. Further, the rhyme scheme in a Hudibrastic will imply inappropriate comparisons. For example, the rhyme of "drunk" and "punk" (meaning "a prostitute") implies that the religious ecstacies of the
Puritan s were the same as that of sexual intercourse and inebriation.The hudibrastic has been traditionally used for
satire .Jonathan Swift , for example, wrote nearly all of his poetry in hudibrastics.Notes
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