Question
The Knight by Rainer Maria Rilke
In which line does the poet use a caesura?
a. "The Knight rides forth in a coat of mail"
b. "And here is Life: the vines in the vale"
c. "In a thousand streets unfurled."
d. "Into the roar of the world."
In which line does the poet use a caesura?
a. "The Knight rides forth in a coat of mail"
b. "And here is Life: the vines in the vale"
c. "In a thousand streets unfurled."
d. "Into the roar of the world."
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
A caesura is a pause or break in a line of poetry, typically occurring in the middle of a line. In the lines you've provided, the one that contains a caesura is:
b. "And here is Life: the vines in the vale"
The colon after "Life" creates a pause, marking a caesura in the line.
b. "And here is Life: the vines in the vale"
The colon after "Life" creates a pause, marking a caesura in the line.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.