the feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage
used by Gerard Manley Hopkins to describe the idiosyncratic meters of his poems
poetry not written in a regular, thythmical pattern, or meter
3 True/False Question
voice → the voice of a poet is his or her "sound" on the page
speaker → the imaginary voice assumed by the writer of a poem; the character who "says" the poem
counterpoint rhythm → two opposing rhythms appear together, for example, 2 trochaic feet in an iambic line. "The world is charged with the grandeur of God."