- into stanzas, is
called stichic (as
opposed to stanzaic, e.g.). Most
poetry from the Old
English period is
considered stichic. Most
English poetry written...
- non-stanzaically, such as Gr**** epic
poems or
English blank verse, to
which the term
stichic applies. In its
original Gr**** setting, "strophe,
antistrophe and epode...
-
dactylic elements. The
greater part of
Ancient Gr****
poetry is
composed of
stichic (/ˈstɪkɪk/) metres,
which are
those in
which the same verse-pattern is...
-
three lines of a
Sapphic stanza,
though it was also
sometimes used in
stichic verse, for
example by
Seneca and Boethius.
Sappho wrote many of the stanzas...
- bold):
While the
above classical and
Germanic forms would be
considered stichic, Italian,
Spanish and
Portuguese long
poems favored stanzaic forms, usually...
- monostichous, orthostichy, pentastich, polystichia, polystichous, stich,
stichic, stichomancy, stichometry, stichomythia,
telestich stich-
tunic Gr**** στίχη...
- Maecenas. The
metre of the poem, like the
final poem of book 3, is a
stichic version of the Asclepiad,
known as the "1st Asclepiad".
After the first...
-
verse novels composed of sonnets. Long
classical verse narratives were in
stichic forms,
prescribing a
meter but not
specifying any
interlineal relations...
- Oetaeus) and
Boethius used the line in
extended p****ages (thus
resembling the
stichic quality of
blank verse more than a
stanzaic lyric). In one poem (Odes 1...
- is
probably a Gr**** innovation) by a link anceps.
Aeolic poems may be
stichic (with all
lines having the same
metrical form), or
composed in more elaborate...