Transcript Slide 1

In English poetry, metre is governed by where the stress falls, but Latin metre is based
on patterns of heavy and light syllables i.e. containing long or short vowels.
The ictus falls on the first syllable of a group.
In spoken Latin the penultimate syllable of a word is usually stressed but sometimes it
is the one before.
It is not very clear how these two ways of reading Latin verse complemented or competed with each other!
Metre is not something you really need to worry about
(you can achieve top marks in public exams without mentioning it!) but
it can be useful to understand and be able to use
technical terms like:
‘the dactylic metre’
‘the spondaic feel of this line’
‘the coincidence of ictus and accent’
‘early caesura and other pauses’
‘the two elisions increase the speed’
The metre will influence the basic ‘feel’ of a poem and
will give you some indication of what its subject-matter
is likely to be.
Most of the examples in this presentation are taken from the OCR 2010 GCSE
Legacy specification for 2010 with the A2 Catullus selection interspersed.
Other examples will be added from time to time so check for updates.
Updates can be found here http://www.pyrrha.me.uk/jmeetpyr.html
If this is your first experience of the scansion of poetic metre
do not try to remember everything at once -
just relax and try to enjoy it!
N.B. There are Appendices at the end to help with the process of scansion.
You can email me for help using the Links/contact page of the Pyrrha website.
SCANSION of poetry
- this means analysing the metre
• Hendecasyllables
• Hexameters
• Elegiac Couplets
(Hexameter plus Pentameter)
• Asclepiads
• Sapphics, Alcaics...
• Limping Iambics, Galliambics
• Dimeters, Trimeters and Tetrameters
Latin poetry does not rhyme!
Instead, it uses patterns of heavy and light syllables.
Heavy syllables contain a ‘long’ vowel and light ones contain a ‘short’ vowel.
When you see – marked over a vowel it means it is LONG
eg the ablative singular of 1st Declension nouns
_
a
The symbol for a SHORT vowel is
u
a
x denotes a syllable which can be either heavy or light.
If a word ends with a vowel (or -m) and the next word starts with
a vowel (or h-), the two sounds are ELIDED - slurred together.
Hendecasyllables have eleven syllables in each line
(in Greek ‘hen’ = 1, ‘deca’ = 10) and they follow this pattern :
xx -uu- u-u-x
(the first two can be any combination except u
u)
- - - uu - u-u-quaeris, quot mihi basiationes
u- - uu - u - u - u
tuae, Lesbia, sint satis superque.
Catullus Poem 7
When you read Catullus’ personal poetry you do not realise at first that he is
choosing his words carefully to fit this metrical pattern!
The poems are not written in such a casual style as you might imagine.
Asclepiads are said to be named after the Greek poet
Asclepius (but nothing is known about him!)
and they follow this pattern :
---uu-|-uu-ux
---uu----uu-ux
-
twice
- - u u-|- uu - u -
quis multa gracilis te puer in rosa
- - - uu -| - u u -u -
perfusus liquidis urget odoribus
-- - u u
--
grato, Pyrrha, sub antro?
- - - uu - u -
cui flavam religas comam,
Horace Odes I: 5
Horace enjoyed adapting Greek metres to the requirements of Latin poetry.
Sapphics are named after the Greek poetess Sappho who
lived on the island of Lesbos
(Catullus named his girlfriend ‘Lesbia’ after her)
and they follow this pattern :
-u---uu-u--uu-x
three times
- u - -- u u - u - Furi et Aureli, comites Catulli,
- u - - - u u -u - sive in extremos penetrabit Indos,
-u - - - u u - u -litus ut longe resonante Eoa
- uu - tunditur unda.
Catullus 11
The short last line of each stanza forms a distinctive finale.
Iambic Trimeter
Iambics are used extensively in Greek Tragedy - fairly quick-moving
pairs of syllables with a light one followed by a heavy in each pair.
u Catullus 4 uses two sets of three iambs, possibly to represent the speed of
the now-retired boat which is the subject of the poem.
u - |u -|u
- | u - |u - | u - |
phaselus ille quem videtis hospites
The final syllable of each line does not have to be heavy.
‘Limping Iambics’
The correct name for this metre is either Choliambics or Scazons.
Imagine a line of 5 iambs,
u-|u-|u-|u-|u-|
and then at the end instead of the iamb you are expecting there is
either
|--|
- a spondee
or
|-u|
- a trochee
You can see why they are called limping iambics! Very effective if the
poet wants to emphasise something at the end of each line, and
when the line is also end-stopped there is even more emphasis.
Catullus 8
u - | u - |u - | u - | u - | - x
miser Catulle, desinas ineptire,
et quod vides perisse perditum ducas.
fulsere quondam candidi tibi soles,
cum ventitabas quo puella ducebat,
In this poem Catullus is urging himself to stop being silly and to realise that
his girlfriend does not really love him.
The ‘limping’ stress at the end of each line is extremely effective and could
be interpreted as emphasising his determination /desperation.
To gain an insight into the effects created by this metre
we should look at which poems Catullus uses it for …
• 8 showing his own folly
• 22 and 44, complaining about the bad
poetry of Suffenus and Sestius
• 39, 59 and 60, invective against people he
does not like
So perhaps it is not the most overtly ‘poetic’ of all metres!
Hexameter (in Greek ‘hex’ = 6) This is the metre used for epic
poetry - very heroic and noble and it has a lot of flexibility!
It uses particular patterns of heavy and light syllables within
each line
You might like to think of the heavy syllables as crotchets
in music and the light ones as quavers.
A crotchet is twice as long as a quaver.
_
=
u
u
A sequence of two heavy syllables is a SPONDEE
_
_
One heavy syllable followed by two lights is a DACTYL
-
u
u
In music you might have a tune which has 6 bars in 2/4
time.
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
In music you might have a tune which has 6 bars in 2/4
time.
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
In poetry, the equivalent of this line is called a Hexameter
(Hex is Greek for 6)
Each division is called a FOOT; not a bar.
l - - |- uu|- - |- - |-uu |- x |
•The 5th foot in a Hexameter is always a DACTYL
-uu
•The 6th foot in a Hexameter is always
-X
•The first 4 feet can be either
- - or - u u
•There is a natural break called a CAESURA in the middle of the 3rd or 4th foot.
Ovid Amores III 2: 1 - 14
Ovid picks a Favourite at the Races
Hexameter line of Elegiac couplet
Look at how the dactylic metre adds to the speed of this line:
11
u u|- u u |-
u
u | - u u|-
u u |- -
et modo lora dabo, modo verbere terga notabo
Ovid Metamorphoses XI: 415 - 43 Alcyone and Ceyx
Hexameter
Remember that Alcyone is weeping as she speaks: look at how the spondees and
the double consonants slow the line down.
The stress of the words does not always coincide with the metrical ictus.
Notice how this adds to the jerkiness of the first part of the line.
- - | - u u|- - | - - | - u
<
6
<
<
u |- <
singultuque pias interrumpente querellas
Elegiac couplets are made up of alternate Hexameters and
Pentameters (in Greek ‘pent’ = 5)
This is the metre used for love poetry and light themes, and the sense is
usually contained within the two line unit.
The first poem in Ovid’s Amores explains that he was trying to write an
important and serious epic poem, but the god Cupid sneaked up and stole
the last foot from the second line, making it into a Pentameter! When Ovid
complained, calling him a ‘savage boy’, Cupid retaliated by making him fall
desperately in love so that he would write love poetry!
arma gravi numero violentaque bella parabam
edere, materia conveniente modis.
par erat inferior versus: risisse Cupido
dicitur atque unum surripuisse pedem.
Hexameter
Pentameter
Hexameter
Pentameter
“quis tibi, saeve puer, dedit hoc in carmina iuris? Hexameter
A Pentameter has 5 feet (so it is shorter than a Hexameter.)
After the Caesura it is always
- uu|-uu |-|
If you add this up you will see it makes 21/2 feet,
(dah-diddy
dah-diddy dah!)
so you can put the extra half-foot just before the Caesura : total - 3 feet.
|- - uu|-uu |-|
Then the first two feet are either spondees or dactyls.
|- uu|-uu|- - uu|-uu |-|
|- - |- - |
Catullus Poem 85
Conflicting Emotions
Elegiac Couplet
Look at how the elisions add to the speed and colloquialism of this epigram
- u u|- - |-
u u|- -| - u u|- -
odi et amo. quare id faciam, fortasse requiris.
- uu| - uu|-| - u u| - u u|nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
The metrical ‘ictus’ is on the first syllable of each foot,
but in spoken Latin the stress is on the penultimate syllable (or the one before if
the penultimate is short).
- u u|<
<
- |<
u u| <
-| - u u | - <
<
odi et amo. quare id faciam, fortasse requiris.
-< uu| - uu|-|
-< u u | - u< u|<
nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
This creates an interesting tension between the metrical ictus
and the spoken stress accent.
Petronius fragment: Love will not let the poet sleep
Elegiac couplets - both examples are Pentameters.
Look at the breaks and the caesura in line 6 and the effect of the stress accent. The
breaks in the first half of the line follow the spoken stress accent but ictus and accent
coincide in the second half.
(NB The ‘i’ of ‘iacere’ is consonontal: ie equivalent to ‘j’ rather than ‘i’)
- u u|- -| - | - u u| - u u| <
6
<
<
<
<
<
solus, io, solus, dure, iacere potes?”
Look at the similarities between the two halves of line 8,
and the speed created by dactyls & elisions
-
uu|-
uu|-| -
u u | - u u|-
8 omne iter impedio, nullum iter expedio
Virgil Aeneid Book XI: 176 - 502 Nisus and Euryalus
Hexameters
These examples show how the use of spondaic or dactylic rhythms can enhance the
effect of what the poet is trying to convey.
- u u |- u u|- u u|4
- | - u u|- -
his amor unus erat pariterque in bella ruebant
They are enthusiastic about their feelings for each other and they rush into battle together.
- - |7
- |- - | -
- | -u u| - -
laxabant curas et corda oblita laborum
Night is described as relaxing everyone’s worries.
-
- | - - |- - |- - | -u u | - -
11stant longis adnixi hastis et scuta tenentes
Although they are eager to rush off they have to wait patiently for permission to go.
Virgil Aeneid Book XI Nisus and Euryalus
Hexameters
How does this line emphasise the drama of the betraying flash from the helmet?
- u u| - u u |54
uu|-
- | - u u|- -
prodidit immemorem radiisque adversa refulsit
Here Virgil emphasises that he is trapped in a circle of the enemy.
- -|
60
-
- |-
u u| - - |- u u| - -
hinc atque hinc, omnemque abitum custode coronant
Notice how the caesura is ‘blocked’ - mirroring the sense of the line as he is
surrounded with no way out!
This line has its caesura in the middle of the second foot instead of the third.
How do these four lines emphasise the threat posed by Volcens?
61
saevit atrox Volcens nec teli conspicit usquam
62
auctorem nec quo se ardens immittere possit.
63 “tu
64
tamen interea calido mihi sanguine poenas
persolves amborum” inquit; simul ense recluso
Lots of long, threatening, scary spondees in the first two lines and then speed
created by the dactyls in the second two lines as he utters his threats.
How does this line emphasise the desperation of Nisus?
68
“me, me, adsum qui feci, in me convertite ferrum,
Long despairing spondees with the only speed in the dactylic 5th foot: what he is
begging them to do.
Virgil Aeneid Book XI Nisus and Euryalus
Hexameters
This line tells of the death of Euryalus.
Commentators point out the ‘coincidence of ictus and accent’ in the second half of the
line, emphasising the finality of death.
- -|-
u u|- u u| <
86
- | - u u|- <
<
confossus, placidaque ibi demum morte quievit.
So those people who think that Latin poetry should be read solely according to the
ictus of the metre would lose the drama of this emphasis!
Can we find connections between Latin poetry and Spanish flamenco?
On listening to some flamenco music I was struck by the way in which there is more
than one rhythm going on at the same time and I would like to thank Jenny
Nicholson who has arranged, performed and recorded this Sevillana for us.
You will need to download this separately from www.pyrrha.me.uk (on the ‘meet Pyrrha’ page)
and then put it into a folder with the powerpoint so that it will play when you click the icon.
It uses a 12-beat compas which has its accents thus: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
This tune starts on the 4th beat (some start on the 8th or 12th)
Catullus Poem 63 Attis - hymn to Cybele
GALLIAMBICS
A very complicated metre: you can look on the internet to see how scholars disagree
with each other about how it is organised!
This is the only Latin poem written in this metre, which was used for hymns to the
Mother Goddess Cybele sung by her eunuch priests the Galli as they rushed around
“citatis … tripudiis” (line 26) “with fast ritual 3-beat dances”
The flamenco on the previous slide is played to a 12-beat compas :
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
The tune starts on the 4th beat (some start on the 8th or 12th)
but the dancers have a 3-beat dance and there is a lot of ‘2 against 3’ rhythm going on.
Perhaps this is a useful comparison to bear in mind when trying to work out the
rhythmic pattern of poem 63 … ?
Catullus Poem 63 Attis - hymn to Cybele
GALLIAMBICS
Each line can be analysed as being composed of two anacreontics (named after the
Greek poet Anacreon)
u u - u| - u - -
Some heavy syllables can be ‘resolved’ into two lights, some lights can be merged into one heavy, the
final syllable of the line is lost (called catalexis) and the last one can be either heavy or light.
The dance was accompanied by frenzied drumming and cymbal clashes
di-di-dum di-dum di-dum - dum, di-di-dum -di-di-di-di-di !
as well as the music of a low-sounding Phrygian pipe which Professor Wiseman
thinks might have sounded like a baritone sax.
73
- u u - - - u - uu
iam iam dolet quod egi iam iamque paenitet
This is the shortest line, where Attis regrets what he has done.
63
u u uuu u u u - u u - u u u uu
ego mulier, ego adulescens, ego ephebus, ego puer
This is the longest line, where Attis is remembering all the different identities (s)he has had.
An exploration of some of Ovid Metamorphoses Book VIII (OCR AS)
and
Aeneid II (OCR GCSE)
Ovid Metamorphoses VIII lines 81 –
Notice the patterns of slow and quick action here: contrasting between the peaceful
night and Scylla’s quick movements.
talia dicenti curarum maxima nutrix
nox intervenit tenebrisque audacia crevit.
prima quies aderat, qua curis fessa diurnis
pectora somnus habet; thalamos taciturna paternos
intrat et (heu facinus!) fatali nata parentem
Line 85 -
intrat et (heu facinus!) fatali nata parentem
crine suum spoliat praedaque potita nefanda
[fert secum spolium sceleris progressaque porta]
per medios hostes (meriti fiducia tanta est)
pervenit ad regem, quem sic adfata paventem est:
Line 90 –
Does the metre enhance the effect here? What sort of person does Scylla present
herself as? How does Ovid show her ruthlessness and Minos’s reaction?
'suasit amor facinus; proles ego regia Nisi
Scylla tibi trado patriaeque meosque Penates.
praemia nulla peto nisi te; cape pignus amoris
purpureum crinem nec me nunc tradere crinem,
sed patrium tibi crede caput' scelerataque dextra
munera porrexit. Minos porrecta refugit
turbatusque novi respondit imagine facti:
Line 97 - How does Ovid emphasise Minos’s reaction?
'di te submoveant, o nostri infamia saecli,
orbe suo, tellusque tibi pontusque negetur.
certe ego non patiar Iovis incunabula, Creten,
qui meus est orbis, tantum contingere monstrum.’
dixit, et ut leges captis iustissimus auctor
hostibus imposuit, classis retinacula solvi
iussit et aeratas impelli remige puppes.
Aeneid II: Lines 268-280; 298-317; 624-654; 671-716, 768-795
Notice the difference between the peaceful night, the excitement of what Hector has
done and the solemn sadness: Spondaic or Dactylic lines.
incipit et dono divum gratissima serpit. 269
in somnis, ecce, ante oculos maestissimus Hector 270
visus adesse mihi largosque effundere fletus
raptatus bigis ut quondam, aterque cruento
pulvere perque pedes traiectus lora tumentes
Aeneid II: Lines 268-280; 298-317; 624-654; 671-716, 768-795
Notice the difference between the excitement of what Hector has done and sadness.
ei mihi, qualis erat, quantum mutatus ab illo
Hectore qui redit exuvias indutus Achilli
vel Danaum Phrygios iaculatus puppibus ignes!
squalentem barbam et concretos sanguine crines
vulneraque illa gerens, quae circum plurima muros
accepit patrios. ultro flens ipse videbar
compellare virum et maestas expromere voces: 280
Aeneid II: Lines 298- Notice the effect of dactyls on the speed, and also elisions.
diverso interea miscentur moenia luctu
298
excutior somno et summi fastigia tecti
302
ascensu supero atque arrectis auribus asto 303
in segetem veluti cum flamma furentibus Austris 304
Ucalegon; Sigea igni freta lata relucent
312
Aeneid II: Lines 298- Notice the effect of dactyls on the speed, and also elisions.
arma armens capio; nec sat rationis in armis, 314
sed glomerare manum bello et concurrere in arcem 315
Aeneid II: Lines 624 – 654 - Look at the long, sad syllables and elisions as Aeneas is
emphasising the sadness of the fall of Troy, and the contrast with the quick successive
(dactylic) axe-blows in 627
tum vero omne mihi visum considere in ignes 624
Ilium et ex imo verti Neptunia Troia:
ac veluti summis antiquam in montibus ornum
cum ferro accisam crebrisqued bipennibus instant
eruere agricolae certatim, illa usque minatur
et tremefacta comam concusso vertice nutat, 629
Aeneid II: Lines 630 - 1 The tree eventually gives way.
vulneribus donec paulatim evicta supremum
congemuit traxitque iugis avulsa ruinam.
630
Aeneid II: Lines 639 – 40 See Anchises’ emotion in the broken syntax, alliteration,
dactylic rhythm (apart from the contrast with ‘suo stant’ – and then the totally broken
line 640. Does this stress Anchises’ emotion or is it a line which Virgil was intending to
revise and finish? Either way, it shows its importance, since it should not be like this!
sanguis,’ ait, ‘solidaeque suo stant robore vires,
vos agitate fugam.
640
Notice the long syllables which emphasise Anchises’ reluctance in 650
talia perstabat memorans fixusque manebat.
Aeneid II: Lines 671 - Look at the long, sad syllables, enjambements and elisions as
Aeneas is reluctantly going to war (especially 672) and Creusa is desperately trying to
stop him.
hinc ferro accingor rursus clipeoque sinistram 671
insertabam aptans meque extra tecta ferebam,
ecce autem complexa pedes in limine coniunx
haerebat, parvumque patri tendebat Iulum: 674
Aeneid II: Line 675 - How does the metre emphasise Creusa’s anger that Aeneas
intends to go out to his death, but also wants him to take her and their son with him?
si periturus abis, et nos rape in omnia tecum
675
Aeneid II: Line 675 - How does the metre emphasise Creusa’s anger that Aeneas
intends to go out to his death, but also wants him to take her and their son with him?
si periturus abis, et nos rape in omnia tecum
675
Lines 685 - 6 How does the metre contrast their panic with the true sacred and solemn
nature of the omen?
nos pavidi trepidare metu crinemque flagrantem
excutere et sanctos restinguere fontibus ignes.
685
Aeneid II: Lines 769 - Notice how Aeneas’ desperation and panic at losing Creusa is
emphasised by dactyls and elisions, and his sadness by spondees (maestus,
nequiquam).
implevi clamore vias, maestusque Creusam
769
nequiquam ingeminans iterumque iterumque vocavi
Aeneid II: Lines 769 - Notice how Aeneas’ desperation and panic at losing Creusa is
emphasised by dactyls and elisions, and his sadness by spondees (maestus,
nequiquam).
implevi clamore vias, maestusque Creusam
769
nequiquam ingeminans iterumque iterumque vocavi 770
Line 774 - Aeneas is in total shock to see Creusa as a larger-than-life sized apparition:
you can see his panic in the dactyls and elision.
obstipui, steteruntque comae et vox faucibus haesit 774
Aeneid II: Lines 780 A dactylic rhythm is used first to emphasise all the hard work
and travelling still in store for Aeneas as he searches for his destined new country, but
in the second line it represents the gentle waves of the river Tiber through the beautiful
countryside.
longa tibi exsilia et vastum maris aequor arandum 780
et terram Hesperiam venies, ubi Lydius arva
inter opima virum leni fluit agmine Thybris.
Aeneid II: Line 787 – another incomplete line! This time it emphasises Creusa’s
status as a Trojan lady and the daughter-in-law of the goddess Venus.
Dardanis et divae Veneris nurus;
Aeneid II: Line 787 – another incomplete line! This time it emphasises Creusa’s
status as a Trojan lady and the daughter-in-law of the goddess Venus.
Dardanis et divae Veneris nurus;
Line 789 – You can easily work out what Creusa’s most important message to Aeneas
is about by looking for the long, heavy syllables (spondaic rhythm) among the dactyls.
iamque vale et nati serva communis amorem.’
Aeneid II: Lines 790 – 791 Very dactylic lines: the only spondee has an elision in it to
add to the speed, really emphasising Aeneas’ desperation and panic as the ghost of
Creusa disappears into the breezes while he is trying to embrace her.
haec ubi dicta dedit, lacrimantem et multa volentem
dicere deseruit, tenuesque recessit in auras.
Aeneid II: Aeneas’ resignation can be seen in the heavy syllables at the beginning of
792 & 793: he tries but it is in vain. The ghost disappears and the rhythm becomes
light like the fleeting winds or like a dream.
ter conatus ibi collo dare bracchia circum;
792
ter frustra comprensa manus effugit imago,
par levibus ventis volucrique simillima somno.
Aeneid II: Aeneas’ resignation can be seen in the heavy syllables at the beginning of
792 & 793: he tries but it is in vain. The ghost disappears and the rhythm becomes
light like the fleeting winds or like a dream.
ter conatus ibi collo dare bracchia circum;
792
ter frustra comprensa manus effugit imago,
par levibus ventis volucrique simillima somno.
The heavy spondees in the final line of our selection seems to emphasise Aeneas
dragging his feet and spending the whole night looking for Creusa before going back to
his companions.
sic demum socios consumpta nocte reviso.
795
APPENDIX
How do I know which vowels are long and which are short?
LONG
ablative singular of 1st declension nouns: a
diphthongs eg: ae, au, oe
any vowel when it is followed by 2 consonants even if in the next word
exceptions: pl, br, cr, tr
final i, o, u; es, os, as - (usually) of nouns
NB x = double consonant
qu = consonant
h doesn’t count at all
i sometimes = consonant (eg the first one in Iulius and iam)
SHORT
When there are 2 vowels with separate sounds, the first one is short.
eg: the ‘u’ in puella, the ‘i’ in resonantia
How do I scan a Hexameter line? (6 feet: either Spondee - - or Dactyl - u u)
A word ending in a vowel or ‘-m’ loses its final
syllable if the next word begins with a vowel - the two sounds are slurred together.
1. Look for Elisions and mark them.
2. The 6th foot is either
- -
3. The 5th foot is always
- uu
or
- u so mark it - x
4. The first part of the line must now be divided into 4 feet.
Count the syllables (8 - 12) and work backwards, identifying known long and short
vowels (Appendix 1) and then fill in the gaps (much easier to do backwards!)
5. Mark the Caesura in the middle of the 3rd or 4th foot.
e.g.
|- - |- uu|- - |- - |-uu |- x|
(5 feet: either - - or - u u)
-
and a Pentameter?
-
remember that the second half of the line is always
- uu|-uu|-
mark a single heavy syllable just before the caesura.
-
then there are two feet to work out in the first half of the line.
e.g.
|- - |- uu| - | - uu |-uu |-