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Choose the poem that uses trochaic meter.Figs (yet growing) candy'd over,By the Sun's attracting Power;Cherries, with the downy Peach,All within my easie Reach.And oh the kindly neighbor-folk that called the young ones in,Down fragrant yellow-tapered paths that thread the prickly whin;The hot, sweet smell of oaten-cake, the kettle purring soft,The dear-remembered Irish speech—they call to me how oft!

Question

Choose the poem that uses trochaic meter.Figs (yet growing) candy'd over,By the Sun's attracting Power;Cherries, with the downy Peach,All within my easie Reach.And oh the kindly neighbor-folk that called the young ones in,Down fragrant yellow-tapered paths that thread the prickly whin;The hot, sweet smell of oaten-cake, the kettle purring soft,The dear-remembered Irish speech—they call to me how oft!

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Solution 1

The poem that uses trochaic meter is "And oh the kindly neighbor-folk that called the young ones in, Down fragrant yellow-tapered paths that thread the prickly whin; The hot, sweet smell of oaten-cake, the kettle purring soft, The dear-remembered Irish speech—they call to me how oft!"

Here's why:

  1. Identify the meter: In poetry, meter is determined by the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. In trochaic meter, the pattern is stressed-unstressed.

  2. Analyze the poems: When you read the poems out loud, you can hear the pattern of stresses.

  3. The first poem, "Figs (yet growing) candy'd over, By the Sun's attracting Power; Cherries, with the downy Peach, All within my easie Reach." has a mix of different metrical feet and doesn't consistently follow the trochaic pattern.

  4. The second poem, "And oh the kindly neighbor-folk that called the young ones in, Down fragrant yellow-tapered paths that thread the prickly whin; The hot, sweet smell of oaten-cake, the kettle purring soft, The dear-remembered Irish speech—they call to me how oft!" has a more consistent pattern of stressed-unstressed syllables, making it trochaic. For example, in the line "And oh the KINDly NEIGHbor-FOLK that CALLED the YOUNG ones IN," "And oh the," "kindly," "neighbor-," "-folk that," "called the," "young ones," and "in" are all trochees (stressed-unstressed).

So, the second poem uses trochaic meter.

This problem has been solved

Solution 2

To determine which poem uses trochaic meter, we need to understand what trochaic meter is. 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.

Now, let's analyze the two poems:

  1. Figs (yet growing) candy'd over, By the Sun's attracting Power; Cherries, with the downy Peach, All within my easie Reach.

  2. And oh the kindly neighbor-folk that called the young ones in, Down fragrant yellow-tapered paths that thread the prickly whin; The hot, sweet smell of oaten-cake, the kettle purring soft, The dear-remembered Irish speech—they call to me how oft!

The first poem seems to follow a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables, which could be indicative of trochaic meter. For example, in the first line, "Figs (yet growing) candy'd over," "Figs" is stressed, "(yet" is unstressed, "grow-" is stressed, "ing)" is unstressed, "can-" is stressed, "dy'd" is unstressed, "o-" is stressed, and "ver" is unstressed. This pattern seems to continue throughout the poem.

The second poem, however, does not seem to follow a consistent pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables, which suggests it does not use trochaic meter.

Therefore, the poem that uses trochaic meter is the first one:

Figs (yet growing) candy'd over, By the Sun's attracting Power; Cherries, with the downy Peach, All within my easie Reach.

This problem has been solved

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