Choose the poem that uses trochaic meter.On the rim of a skyscraper's foreheadI looked down and saw: hats: fifty thousand hats:Swarming with a noise of bees and sheep, cattle and waterfalls,Stopping with a silence of sea grass, a silence of prairie corn.Bounding billow, cease thy motion,Bear me not so swiftly over!Cease thy roaring, foamy ocean!I will tempt thy rage no more.
Question
Choose the poem that uses trochaic meter.On the rim of a skyscraper's foreheadI looked down and saw: hats: fifty thousand hats:Swarming with a noise of bees and sheep, cattle and waterfalls,Stopping with a silence of sea grass, a silence of prairie corn.Bounding billow, cease thy motion,Bear me not so swiftly over!Cease thy roaring, foamy ocean!I will tempt thy rage no more.
Solution
The poem that uses trochaic meter is "Bounding billow, cease thy motion, Bear me not so swiftly over! Cease thy roaring, foamy ocean! I will tempt thy rage no more."
Here's why:
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Trochaic meter is a rhythmic pattern in poetry where a stressed syllable is followed by an unstressed syllable. This pattern is repeated throughout the poem.
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If we break down the first line of the second poem "Bounding billow, cease thy motion," we can see this pattern:
- 'Bound-ing' (stressed, unstressed)
- 'bill-ow,' (stressed, unstressed)
- 'cease' (stressed)
- 'thy' (unstressed)
- 'mo-tion' (stressed, unstressed)
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The same pattern can be seen in the rest of the poem, confirming that it is written in trochaic meter.
The first poem does not follow this pattern and therefore is not written in trochaic meter.
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