A Far Cry from Africa | Style
‘‘A Far Cry from Africa’’ contains four stanzas of mostly iambic tetrameter. Actually, the poem starts off in iambic pentameter, the prevalent form of poetry written in English, but it soon veers off course metrically—a change that reflects the changing scene and perspective in the poem—with lines of varying length and number of stresses. A point of consistency is Walcott's use of masculine endings (lines ending with accented syllables) and masculine rhymes (one syllable rhymes). Rhyme is as irregular as meter. The rhyme scheme of the first stanza might be rendered ababbcdecd...
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- A Far Cry from Africa: Introduction
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- A Far Cry from Africa: Summary
- A Far Cry from Africa: Derek Walcott Biography
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- A Far Cry from Africa: Style
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