an irregular system of prosody developed by the 19th-century English poet Gerard Manley Hopkins. It is based on the number of stressed syllables in a line and permits an indeterminate number of unstressed syllables. In sprung rhythm, a foot may be composed of from one to four syllables. (In regular English metres, a foot consists of two or three syllables.) Because stressed syllables often occur sequentially in this patterning rather than in alternation with unstressed syllables, the rhythm is said to be sprung. Hopkins claimed to be only the theoretician, not the inventor, of sprung rhythm. He saw it as the rhythm of common English speech and the basis of such early English poems as Langland's Piers Plowman and nursery rhymes such as Sprung rhythm is a bridge between regular metre and free verse. An example of Hopkins' use of it is: Spring and fall to a Young Child
SPRUNG RHYTHM
Meaning of SPRUNG RHYTHM in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012