Assonance

Assonance is a resemblance in the sounds of words or syllables either between their vowels (e.g., meat, bean) or between their consonants (e.g., keep, cape).[1] However, assonance between consonants is generally called consonance in American usage.[2] The two types are often combined, as between the words six and switch, in which the vowels are identical, and the consonants are similar but not completely identical. If there is repetition of the same vowel or some similar vowels in literary work, especially in stressed syllables, this may be termed vowel harmony.[3]

A special case of assonance is rhyme, in which the endings of words (generally beginning with the vowel sound of the last stressed syllable) differ in their initial consonant, while the rest of the word is identical—as in six and mix or history and mystery. Vocalic assonance is an important element in verse.[4] Assonance occurs more often in verse than in prose; it is used in English-language poetry and is particularly important in Old French, Spanish, and the Celtic languages.

Examples

English poetry is rich with examples of assonance:

That solitude which suits abstruser musings

on a proud round cloud in white high night

E. E. Cummings, if a cheerfulest Elephantangelchild should sit

It also occurs in prose:

Soft language issued from their spitless lips as they swished in low circles round and round the field, winding hither and thither through the weeds.

Hip hop relies on assonance:

Some vodka that'll jumpstart my heart quicker than a shock when I get shocked at the hospital by the doctor when I'm not cooperating when I'm rocking the table when he's operating...

Dead in the middle of little Italy little did we know that we riddled some middleman who didn't do diddly.

Big Pun, Twinz

Can't tell me shit about the tricks of this trade

Switchblade, with a little switch to switch blades

And switch from a six to a sixteen-inch blade

Eminem, "Rap Game"

It is also heard in other forms of popular music:

I must confess that in my quest I felt depressed and restless

Thin Lizzy, "With Love"

Dot my I's with eyebrow pencils, close my eyelids, hide my eyes. I'll be idle in my ideals. Think of nothing else but I

Keaton Henson, "Small Hands"

Assonance is common in proverbs:

The squeaky wheel gets the grease.

The early bird catches the worm.

This poetic device can be found in the first line of Homer's Iliad: Menin aeide thea Peleiadeo Achilleos. Another example is Dies irae (probably by Thomas of Celano):

Dies iræ, dies illa
Solvet sæclum in favilla,
Teste David cum Sibylla.

In Dante's Divine Comedy there are some stanzas with such repetition.

così l’animo mio, ch’ancor fuggiva,
si volse a retro a rimirar lo passo
che non lasciò già mai persona viva.

In the following strophe from Hart Crane's To Brooklyn Bridge there is the vowel [i] in many stressed syllables.

How many dawns, chill from his rippling rest
The seagull’s wings shall dip and pivot him,
Shedding white rings of tumult, building high
Over the chained bay waters Liberty—[5]

All rhymes in a strophe can be linked by vowel harmony into one assonance. Such stanzas can be found in Italian or Portuguese poetry, in works by Giambattista Marino and Luís Vaz de Camões:

Giunto a quel passo il giovinetto Alcide,
che fa capo al camin di nostra vita,
trovò dubbio e sospeso infra due guide
una via, che’ due strade era partita.
Facile e piana la sinistra ei vide,
di delizie e piacer tutta fiorita;
l’altra vestìa l’ispide balze alpine
di duri sassi e di pungenti spine.[6]

This is ottava rima[7] (abababcc),[8] a very popular form in Renaissance, used in the first place in long epic poems.

As armas e os barões assinalados,
Que da ocidental praia Lusitana,
Por mares nunca de antes navegados,
Passaram ainda além da Taprobana,
Em perigos e guerras esforçados,
Mais do que prometia a força humana,
E entre gente remota edificaram
Novo Reino, que tanto sublimaram;[9]

There are many examples of vowel harmony in French poetry.[10] Vowel harmony is found in Czech[11] and Polish[12] poetry.

References

  1. Chambers 21st Century Dictionary (1996).
  2. Merriam-Webster consonance.
  3. Assonance at Enciclopaedia Britannica
  4. Khurana, Ajeet "Assonance and Consonance" Outstanding Writing
  5. Hart Crane, from The Bridge: To Brooklyn Bridge at Poetry Foundation.
  6. Giambattista Marino, Adone, Canto II, stanza 1 (in Italian).
  7. Ottava rima at Encyclopædia Britannica.
  8. Ottava rima at Poetry Foundation.
  9. Luís Vaz de Camões, Os Lusíadas, Canto Primeiro, stanza 1 (in Portuguese).
  10. Roy Lewis, On Reading French Verse. A Study of Poetic Form, Oxford 1982, p. 70-99, 149-190.
  11. Wiktor J. Darasz, Harmonia wokaliczna w poezji Vladimíra Holana, Almanach Czeski, 2006 (in Polish).
  12. Wiktor Jarosław Darasz, Mały przewodnik po wierszu polskim, Kraków 2003, p. 179-185 (in Polish).

See also

Commentators

Sources

Further reading

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