Q&A for How to Scan a Poem

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  • Question
    Which words are required to be stressed and why?
    Community Answer
    Usually words aren't required to be stressed, syllables are. It can depend on the way the poet wants to make the poem flow or on the type of poem or meter used.
  • Question
    How can I know which syllables are stressed? Only by reading out loud?
    Community Answer
    Pretty much. Also, just out of a familiarity with English (and if you don't know how to pronounce a word, you can always look it up). For instance, you know that "poem" is PO-em and not po-EM. Sometimes in older stuff (like Shakespeare) stuff was pronounced a little differently (we pronounce "stressed" like "stress'd," they would've pronounced it like "stress-ed" unless they wrote it with the apostrophe), but generally it's pretty straightforward.
  • Question
    How do I name a poem when it has one line in Iambic Tetrameter, and the next line in Iambic Trimeter, then one in Iambic Tetrameter, and so on?
    Community Answer
    That's called common meter, which is the most, well, common meter for hymns and a lot of American poetry. Sometimes also called ballad meter, although the rhyme schemes for the two vary.
  • Question
    How do I scan a poem online?
    Community Answer
    It's easiest if you copy and paste the poem into Word, or a similar program. Double spacing the poem and adding in the appropriate symbols is really easy to do with a word processing program.
  • Question
    How do I separate "syllable"?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Syl-la-ble.
  • Question
    How can I determine whether the poem is disyllabic or trisyllabic?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    You would have to recite the poem (or hear it recited) in order to detect a repeating pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. Once you recognize the pattern, decide how many syllables are contained within each unit of the repeating pattern.
  • Question
    What if I divide the line into five syllables and there's still one word in the line?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Perhaps you are referring to "iambic pentameter," in which each line consists of five "feet," and each "foot" consists of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable. If you arrive at the fifth stressed syllable and there is still one word left in the line, either the poet miswrote the line, or you miscounted the syllables.
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