| 1. | The poet uses enjambment and caesura to have the desired structure.
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| 2. | Emily also uses caesura in the first line in stanza four.
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| 3. | There is usually a caesura after the ictus of the third foot.
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| 4. | His verses are mostly octosyllables with, generally, a median caesura.
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| 5. | A fermata may be placed over a caesura to indicate a longer pause.
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| 6. | This caesura is not guaranteed teleportation but has a low chance of succeeding.
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| 7. | The caesura formula is a good base for enjambment.
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| 8. | It was metrically stricter, allowing no epic caesura:
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| 9. | This line uses caesura in the medial position.
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| 10. | The pentameter often displayed a clearer caesura, as in this example from Propertius:
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