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The artistic license may also refer to the ability of an artist to apply smaller distortions, such as a poet ignoring some of the minor requirements of grammar for poetic effect.
For example, Mark Antony's " Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears " from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar would technically require the word " and " before " countrymen ", but the conjunction " and " is omitted to preserve the rhythm of iambic pentameter ( the resulting conjunction is called an asyndetic tricolon ).
Conversely, on the next line, the end of " I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him " has an extra syllable because omitting the word " him " would make the sentence unclear, but adding a syllable at the end would not disrupt the meter.
Both of these are examples of artistic license.

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