
audiobook
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This guide walks readers through the fundamentals of rhetoric as a musical craft, showing how syllables, vowels and consonants combine to create resonant verses. It distinguishes between masculine and feminine diction, explaining why certain endings feel complete while others linger. The author treats each sound as a building block, revealing the logic behind smooth and imperfect lines. With clear definitions and historical references, the work links classical Romance language patterns to modern lyric writing.
The second part offers hands‑on examples of popular metric forms—rigmes, doublettes, seisians, and rondeaux—each illustrated with sample verses and step‑by‑step counts. Readers learn to assemble lines of eight, nine, or six syllables, craft balanced couplets, and experiment with alternating masculine and feminine endings. Practical exercises invite experimentation, turning abstract theory into lively composition. By the end, listeners can apply the principles to their own poems or songs with confidence.
Language
fr
Duration
~37 minutes (36K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laurent Vogel (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica) at http://gallica.bnf.fr)
Release date
2007-03-31
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A shadowy figure in early French literary history, he is chiefly remembered through a late medieval rhetoric manual once printed under his name. Modern catalogues now usually treat that work as misattributed, which makes his legacy especially intriguing.
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