Coda

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Coda ( Italian "tail") or cauda ( latin and Provence "tail") is in the Verslehre generally to a a verse or a poem final INDIVID or final group of verses.

Specific meanings in Provencal and Italian poetry are:

  • the swan song ( sirma , sirima ) of a tunnel verse at Canso and Kanzone ,
  • the addition at the tail sonnet ( sonetto caudato ), initially only a rhyming with the last line hendecasyllable or Elfsilblerpaar with private Reim was, from the 14th century one or more verses consisting of a Siebensilbler followed by a assonant Elfsilblerpaar, wherein the Siebensilbler takes up the rhyme of the previous stanza,
  • in the old French Sirventes the final short verse of the stanza, which gives the rhyme of the following stanza.

literature

  • Giorgio Bertone: Breve dizionario di metrica italiana. Turin 1999, p. 52 f.
  • Dieter Burdorf, Christoph Fasbender, Burkhard Moennighoff (Hrsg.): Metzler Lexicon literature. Terms and definitions. 3. Edition. Metzler, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-476-01612-6 , p. 126.
  • Wilhelm Theodor Elwert: Italian metric. 2nd Edition. Hueber, Munich 1984, pp. 105, 116, 124.
  • Otto Knörrich: Lexicon of lyrical forms (= Kröner's pocket edition . Volume 479). 2nd, revised edition. Kröner, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-520-47902-8 , p. 33.
  • Gero von Wilpert : Subject dictionary of literature. 8th edition. Kröner, Stuttgart 2013, ISBN 978-3-520-84601-3 , pp. 124, 139.