A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse! William Shakespeare, King Richard III, Act V, scene iv Why is this verse an example of iambic pentameter?
A. It contains five metrical feet, each following a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.
B. The verse forms a pattern of an unstressed syllable immediately followed by a stressed syllable.
C. It is a line from Shakespeare, and his plays contain verse written only in iambic pentameter.
D. The verse is 10 syllables long with an unstressed syllable at the beginning and end.

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D is wrong. The last word is horse and it is stressed. It emphasizes the poetic plea of Richard.



C his plays are not rigidly iambic pentameter. It would sound like a nursery rhyme if that were true.



B is not the answer. What B describes is a Troche foot. This definitely Iambic.

A is the answer. The accents fall on Horse horse king for (to stress for is very unusual. Usually it would be unstressed) horse.

Answer: A

Explanation:

A pex