The Breaking Point: End-stopping and Enjambment by SparrowSong, journal
The Breaking Point: End-stopping and Enjambment
Introduction
The most noticeable difference between poetry and prose is often the use of line breaks in poetry. When the line break comes at the end of a phrase, sentence, or clause, the line is end-stopped. End-stopped lines often end with punctuation like periods/full stops, commas, semi-colons, and colons. When the line break disrupts the phrase, sentence, or clause, the line is enjambed. The French word enjambement, from which 'enjambment' is derived, means 'straddling,' and appropriately, the phrases straddle two or more lines.
End-Stopping
The first four lines of Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18" are an example of end-sto
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