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XIII.—The Origin of the Rule Forbidding Hiatus in French Verse
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Extract
The rule forbidding hiatus in French verse which has been followed in all literary poetry since Malherbe's day may be thus formulated:—
A word ending in a vowel other than an e muet cannot be followed within the same line by a word beginning with a vowel or h muette.
Where a word ends in an e muet and the following word begins with a vowel or an h muette, the e muet is elided and the hiatus thus avoided.
For the purposes of this rule the t of et is supposed not to exist.
Oui is sometimes treated as though it began with a consonant.
Hiatus is allowed before or after a few interjections; also in certain set expressions such as peu à peu, cà et là, and the like.
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- Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1896