Caesura is a pause somewhere in the middle of a verse. It is usually used for rhetorical effect. Like alliteration, there are multiple examples of caesura in the text. An example includes line 1134 that reads “The lord of that land was by no means last” followed by like 1135 that reads “to be rigger out for riding with the rest of his men”, which coincides with the punctuation of the lines (751). Not all examples of caesura coincide with the punctuation, and in many examples of literature it is denoted by a
Caesura is a pause somewhere in the middle of a verse. It is usually used for rhetorical effect. Like alliteration, there are multiple examples of caesura in the text. An example includes line 1134 that reads “The lord of that land was by no means last” followed by like 1135 that reads “to be rigger out for riding with the rest of his men”, which coincides with the punctuation of the lines (751). Not all examples of caesura coincide with the punctuation, and in many examples of literature it is denoted by a