Half rhyme
Half rhyme or slant rhyme, sometimes called near rhyme, or imperfect rhyme, is consonance on the final consonants of the words involved (e.g. ill with shell). Many half/slant rhymes are also eye rhymes.[citation needed]
Half/slant rhyme is widely used in Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and Icelandic verse.[citation needed] Half/slant rhyme has been found in English-language poetry as early as Henry Vaughan,[citation needed] but it was not until the works of W. B. Yeats[citation needed] and Gerard Manley Hopkins[citation needed] that it found wide use among English-language poets.[citation needed] In the 20th century half/slant rhyme has been used widely by English poets.[citation needed] Often, as in most of Yeats' poems, it is mixed with other devices such as regular rhymes, assonance, and para-rhymes.[citation needed] In the following example the 'rhymes' are on/moon and bodies/ladies:
- When have I last looked on
- The round green eyes and the long wavering bodies
- Of the dark leopards of the moon?
- All the wild witches, those most noble ladies,
- (Yeats, "Lines written in Dejection")
Moses ibn Ezra, 12th century Hebrew poet and poetry theoretician, terms the practice of poets to use half-rhyme "donkey-rhyming".[citation needed]
American poet Emily Dickinson also used half/slant rhyme frequently in her works.[1] In her poem "Hope is the thing with feathers" the half/slant rhyme appears in the second and fourth lines. In the following example the 'rhyme' is soul/all.
- Hope is the thing with feathers
- That perches in the soul,
- And sings the tune without the words,
- And never stops at all.
The term 'slant rhyme' has been called into question[by whom?] due to its misleading meaning. A 'slant rhyme' suggests the words rhyme (which they do not) in a slanted fashion as opposed to nearly rhyming or half rhyming.[citation needed]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Lilia Melani (February 24, 2009), Emily Dickinson: An Overview, Department of English, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/english/melani/cs6/dickinson.html, retrieved 2009-06-22