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Monday, November 2, 2015

WEEK 44: LAY DOWN A BEAT...AND THEN BREAK THE RHYTHM

Easy Peasy
by Valerie Ipson



This might be the easiest lesson to blog about. Basically, it reminds us of what we learned about rhythm over the last several lessons (all those interesting Greek words known as schemes)and then says, don't overdo it. Whether you're using epistrophe,anaphora, or anadiplosis a little goes a long way.

Here's an example from the book, actually one taken from another book, Flood: A Romance of Our Time:

"The big sycamore by the creek was gone. The willow tangle was gone. The little enclave of untrodden bluegrass was gone. The clump of dogwood on the little rise across the creek--now that, too, was gone,"1

Here the author, Robert Penn Warren, uses epistrophe (repetition) to create a rhythm and then alters the beat at the end for a pleasing effect.

So, the moral of this blog post is: Establish a rhythm in your writing, then vary it because too much of a good thing is, well, too much.

1 MTC, pg 248

2 comments:

  1. I think it's so much more powerful when used sparingly. Here's an excerpt from The Archer's Hollow: "Chaos. That velvet word. It would descend on them all in a matter of minutes with the most powerful elf leading the way. Savio would argue he was the most powerful but had he killed the mountain witch? No. She had. Would he pull the valley together at the end of the day? No. She would." ch 30

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  2. Nice quote Peggy!
    And Valerie, loved how you ended it with your own perfect break in the rhythm!

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