Harman Patil (Editor)

The Ode Less Travelled

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Language
  
English

Publisher
  
Hutchinson

Originally published
  
2005

Genre
  
Non-fiction


Subject
  
Poetry—Authorship

Publication date
  
November 21, 2005 (US)

Author
  
Stephen Fry

OCLC
  
62124135

The Ode Less Travelled t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRgrAq8g2eXAAaNaU

Pages
  
220 pp (hardcover) 357 pp (paperback)

ISBN
  
0-091-79661-X (Hutchinson)

Preceded by
  
Stephen Fry's Incomplete and Utter History of Classical Music

Followed by
  
The Book of General Ignorance

Similar
  
The Liar, Stephen Fry's Incomplet, The Stars' Tennis Balls, Making History, Moab Is My Washpot

The Ode Less Travelled: Unlocking the Poet Within is a book by author, actor, comedian, and director Stephen Fry about writing poetry. Fry covers metre, rhyme, many common and arcane poetic forms, and offers poetry exercises, contrasting modern and classic poets.

Fry's starting point can be summed up by the quotation with which he heads Chapter One: 'Poetry is metrical writing./If it isn't that I don't know what it is.' (J. V. Cunningham.) In a 'rant' near the end of the book he states: "I think that much poetry today suffers from anaemia. There is no iron in its blood, no energy, no drive".

Fry sets out to explain the many tools available to a poet in order to organise writing, noting poetry's essential metrical basis and introducing the many technical terms, with explanations and exercises. The book offers twenty 'Poetry Exercises', with one or two in each chapter.

The first main section, 'Metre', has six chapters, introducing the natural rhythm of spoken English and many forms of metre. In fact, 28 are listed in the 'Table of Metric Feet' which concludes this major section of the book. The next section, 'Rhyme' has three chapters, explaining the 'basic categories', 'rhyming arrangements' and discussing what is good or bad rhyme. Eleven chapters follow on 'Form', starting with a chapter on 'The Stanza. What is Form and Why Bother with It?' Closed and open forms, heroic verse, forms of ode, ballads, comic verse, sonnets, shaped verse; these and several more are explained along with examples. The book's final section is entitled 'Diction and Poetics Today'. There is also a 600 (approx) word 'Incomplete Glossary of Poetic Terms'.

Launch dates

  • UK: 20 October 2005. Hutchinson.
  • USA: 22 November 2005
  • UK: 2007. Arrow Books, London. (Paperback) ISBN 978-0-099-50934-9
  • References

    The Ode Less Travelled Wikipedia