Octosyllable
The eight syllable (l) er is a meter or verse with eight syllables in the verse theory with the syllable counting verse principle . In addition to decosyllables and verse commun , it plays an important role in medieval French literature . Occasionally, especially in the context of ancient poetry, the term octosyllabus is also used.
literature
- Terry VF Brogan, Clive Scott: Octosyllable. In: Roland Greene, Stephen Cushman et al. (Ed.): The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics. 4th edition. Princeton University Press, Princeton 2012, ISBN 978-0-691-13334-8 , p. 970 f ( limited preview in Google book search).
- W. Theodor Elwert : French metric. 4th edition. Hueber, Munich 1978, ISBN 3-19-003021-9 , p. 125 f.
- Walther Suchier : French verse theory on a historical basis (= collection of short textbooks on Romance languages and literatures. Vol. 14, ZDB -ID 517267-6 ). Niemayer, Tübingen 1952, pp. 55-58.