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Heroic couplet is a poetic form composed of pairs of rhyming lines written in iambic pentameter that is often used in English narrative poems. The rhyme scheme of a heroic couplet is masculine, meaning that only one syllable from each line, usually at the end of the line, rhymes. While the precise origin of this poetic form is not known, it was often used in the 14th century by English poet Geoffrey Chaucer and later in the 17th century by English poets such as Alexander Pope. Some poets writing in heroic couplets strictly adhere to the structure and rhyme scheme while others prefer to occasionally vary the rhyme and rhythm over the course of a poem.

The meter of the heroic couplet is iambic pentameter, a form made up of five iambic feet in each line. An iambic foot is composed of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable. Iambic pentameter is often compared to the sound of a clock ticking or a beating heart. In the heroic couplet, these lines of iambic pentameter are paired by their rhymes and usually by content. One syllable of the first line rhymes with the corresponding syllable in the second line, and one syllable in the third line rhymes with one in the fourth, and so on.

Page last modified on Sunday April 14, 2013 11:51:03 GMT-0000