Meter (a Tempo, a Piacere)

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Spenser Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1086/717194
Lucía Martínez Valdivia
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

he more time I’ve spent with the keyword I chose to think about earlymodern lyric, themore difficulty it has givenme. This is in part, I think, because “meter” is something that can often come across as profoundly unlyrical. By this I don’t mean that we don’t account for meter when we approach the analysis of a lyric poem: that is fundamental to poetic and prosodic interpretation. What I have in mind is, rather, the critical tendency—or the readerly tendency—to designate rhythmically regular or emphatic or predictable verse in a category apart from the “lyrical,” as the “metrical.” And so, to resist that tendency to see what insights may result, my idea is a simple one: that meter, being closely tied to, and indeed emerging from, the concepts of sound and rhythm, can serve as a key to understanding the category of lyric in early modern England and to the experience of reading it. I do not propose (here) to align myself with any of the several camps that have formed in lyric studies. “Lyric”will serve simply as my term of approach, one that foregrounds the connection between poetry andmusic, a thread also picked up in the essays by Wendy Beth Hyman (“Patterns, the Shakespearean Sonnet, and Epistemologies of Scale”) and Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld (“Do You Hear What I Hear?”). In the sixteenth century, the earliest sustained theorization of English meter appears in George Gascoigne’s 1575 Certayne Notes of Instruction Concerning the Making of Verse or Ryme in English. One of the first notes discusses “measure,” a cognate for “meter,” and is devoted to the question of holding “the iust measure wherwith you begin your verse.” This is decided by the number of syllables in a line (“whether it be in a verse of sixe syllables, eight, ten, twelue, etc.”) rather than the number of rhythmic feet;
拍子(一个节拍,一个节拍)
我花越多的时间在我选择思考早期现代歌词的关键词上,它给我的困难就越大。我认为,这在一定程度上是因为“韵律”通常会被认为是非常不抒情的东西。我并不是说,当我们分析一首抒情诗的时候,不需要考虑格律,那是诗歌和韵律解释的基础。我想到的是,更确切地说,批评倾向——或者读者倾向——把有节奏的、强调的或可预测的诗划入“抒情”之外的一个类别,称为“格律”。因此,为了抵制这种想要了解结果的倾向,我的想法很简单:韵律,与声音和节奏的概念紧密相连,并且确实是从声音和节奏的概念中产生的,可以作为理解早期现代英国抒情类型的关键以及阅读它的体验。我不打算(在这里)把自己与抒情研究中形成的几个阵营中的任何一个站在一起。“抒情诗”将简单地作为我的方法术语,它突出了诗歌和音乐之间的联系,这条线索也出现在温迪·贝丝·海曼(《模式、莎士比亚十四行诗和音阶认识论》)和科琳·露丝·罗森菲尔德(《你听到我听到的了吗?》)的文章中。在16世纪,最早持续的英语格律理论出现在乔治·加思因1575年的《关于制作英语韵文或押韵的教学笔记》中。第一个音符中有一个讨论了“measure”,它是“meter”的同源词,并致力于保持“你开始你的诗的正确的小节”的问题。这是由一行的音节数决定的(“它是在六个音节、八个音节、十个音节、十二个音节的诗中,等等”),而不是节奏步的数量;
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Spenser Studies
Spenser Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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