BRIDGES' PROSODY OF ACCENTUAL VERSE

In this final section of his book ''Milton's Prosody,'' Robert Bridges describes a prosody of accentual verse.

Contents
Terms and notation
Rules
Stress governs rhythm
True speech-stresses
A stress carries the syllable next to it
Stress is attracted to verbal unity
A stress will not carry a distant heavy syllable
A stress can carry at most one heavy or two light syllables on a given side
List of common stress units

Terms and notation


Bridges classifies the following types of syllable (alternative symbols have been added for browsers that do not display symbols correctly):
Symbol Alternative Syllable Type Description
^ Stressed Syllable carries the stress
- Heavy Is genuinely long, slows down the reading. For example: ''broad'', ''bright'', ''down''.
~ Light All syllables with short vowels, even those that would be long 'by position' in Classical terms. That is, if the consonants around a short vowel do not genuinely retard the syllable then it will be counted 'light'. Light also includes all classically short syllables. For example the second syllables of 'brighter' and 'brightest' are both light, despite the consonants in the latter.

Bridges also has a shorter version of the 'Light' symbol for 'very short' syllables. We can use ⌵ ('.').

Rules


Bridges lists six "rules" for accentual verse. He states (p.89) "These 'laws' are merely the tabulation of what my ear finds in English stressed or accentual verse". The rules are as follows:
# the stress governs the rhythm
# the stresses must all be true speech-stresses
# a stress has more carrying power over the syllable next to it, than it has over a syllable removed from it by an intervening syllable
# stress has a peculiarly strong attraction towards verbal unity and for its own proclitics and enclitics
# a stress will not carry a heavy syllable which is removed from it by another syllable
# a stress will not carry more than one heavy or two light syllables on the same side of it
Stress governs rhythm

True speech-stresses

A stress carries the syllable next to it

Stress is attracted to verbal unity

A stress will not carry a distant heavy syllable

Here Bridges cites several lines from Shelley which violate this rule, such as:
:Each and all like ministering angels were.
A stress can carry at most one heavy or two light syllables on a given side

List of common stress units


Bridges lists the common ''stress units'' or 'feet'':
1st Bare Stress ^
2nd The 2 falling disyllabic feet ⋀– ^-
⋀⌣ ^~
3rd The 2 rising disyllabic feet –⋀ -^
⌣⋀ ~^
4th The britannics or mid-stress trisyllabics ⌣⋀⌣ ~^~
–⋀⌣ -^~
⌣⋀– ~^-
–⋀– -^-
5th The falling and rising trisyllabics ⌣⌣⋀ ~~^
⋀⌣⌣ ^~~
6th The quadrisyllabics ⌣⋀⌣⌣ ~^~~
–⋀⌣⌣ -^~~
⌣⌣⋀⌣ ~~^~
⌣⌣⋀– ~~^-
6th The five syllable foot ⌣⌣⋀⌣⌣ ~~^~~

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