A caesura is a pause that usually occurs in the middle, or towards the end, of a poetic line. There are two types of caesura: masculine, which is a harder pause and usually occurs after a long or accented syllable in the line, and feminine, which is a softer pause and usually occurs after a non-stressed and short syllable.
There are several examples of caesurae in "The Wanderer." This poem's first caesura occurs in the first few lines: "No man, to whom / I'd clearly speak..." The caesura, a masculine caesura, occurs after the comma before "to whom" and creates a kind of rhythm.
Another example of a caesura in this poem occurs a few lines later: "So I, wandering..." The caesura, masculine again, occurs after the comma. A caesura often is used to create breath and call the reader's attention to some information in the line, and, in this case, the caesura emphasizes the "I," and the fact that this speaker is wandering.
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