Latin poetry
A number of meters are used in Classical Latin poetry, almost all inspired by Greek originals; the most common is dactylic hexameter, followed by elegiac couplets and hendecasyllabics.
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2 Examples of different meters 3 Post-classical poetry 4 See also |
Special features of Classical Latin poetry
Heavy and light syllables
Classical Latin poetry differs from English because the Latin language is built more upon vowel length than upon stress. In Latin, syllables are either heavy (long) or light (short). A syllable is heavy if its vowel is long by nature (a long vowel or a diphthong) or if it is long by position (a short vowel followed by multiple consonants or by one of the double consonants, x and z). The consonants in the next word may be used to count toward making a syllable long by position. Some groups of consonats blend and sometimes will not make a syllable long by position. These include bl, br, cl, cr, dr, gl, gr, pl, pr, and tr. These blends will not count as one consonant if they appear in separate words.
Elision
Elision occurs when the following two conditions are satisfied:
- A word ends in a vowel, diphthong, or the letter "m".
- The next word begins with a vowel, diphthong, or the letter "h".
Sometimes a syllable does not elide even if it meets the above condition. The lack of elision is called hiatus. See the examples below.
Caesura
A caesura occurs anytime a word ends in the middle of the foot; however, the caesura is typically metrically significant when it occurs near the middle of the line and correlates with a break of sense in the line, such as a punctuation mark. The caesura divides the line in two and allows the poet to vary the basic metrical pattern he is working with. When a caesura correlates with a sense break, a person speaking the poetry should make a slight pause at the caesura.(info about strong, weak caesuras, etc, to be added)
Examples of different meters
Guide to symbols used
- - indicates a heavy syllable
- u indiacates a light syllable
- ^ indicates a syllable anceps, which may be either heavy or light
- | indicates the end of a foot (when it is directly above a letter, assume that it is before the letter)
- || indicates a caesura
- (parentheses) show that a vowel is dropped due to elision
- _ indicates that an elided syllable is connected to the next syllable
Dactylic hexameter
Dactylic hexameter was used for many of Latin's greatest poems. Influenced by Homer's Greek epics, dactylic hexameter was considered the best meter for weighty and important matters, so it is used in Vergil's Aeneid, Ennius's Annals, and Lucretius's On The Nature of Things. Dactylic hexameter is composed of six feet per line. Each foot is either a dactyl (heavy-light-light) or a spondee (heavy-heavy). The fifth foot is almost always a dactyl. The sixth foot consists of a heavy syllable followed by a syllable anceps; this line ending is perhaps the most notable feature of the meter. Typically the dactylic hexameter's caesura comes in the third or fourth foot. Also, dactylic hexameter often has a bucolic diaresis; a diaresis happens when a word ends at the end of a foot, and a bucolic diaresis is a diaresis between the fourth and fifth feet of a line.
- u u|- u u|-|| -| - -| - u u |- ^ Arma virumque canō, Trōiae quī prīmus ab ōrīs, - u u|- -|- u u|- || -|- u u| - ^ Ītaliam, fātō profugus, Lāvīnaque vēnit, - u u| - -| - ||-| - -| - u u |- ^ lītora, mult(um)_ill(e)_et terrīs iactātus et altō - u u|- -| - u u|- ||-|- u u |- ^ vī superum saevae memorem Iūnōnis ab īram;Note the multiple elisions in line 3. Also note the caesuras throughout and the bucolic diaresis in line 1.
(Vergil's Aeneid, Book I, lines 1-4)
Elegiac couplet
In elegiac couplet, lines are grouped into couplets (pairs of two). The first line of each couplet is standard dactylic hexameter. The second is a modified dactylic pentameter line: two feet + a heavy syllable (a half-foot), then two more feet, then another heavy syllable. Essentially the pentameter line is two and a half feet plus two and a half feet. The division between each half-line in pentameter is usually a caesura.
- - | - - |-||- | - u u | - u u| - ^
Multās per gentēs et multa per aequora vectus
- u u | - u u|- || - u u |- u u|-
adveni(o)_hās miserās, frāter, ad īnferiās
- -| - -|-||-|- - | - u u| - ^
ut tē postrēmō dōnārem mūnere mortis
- -|- u u| -||- u u|- u u|-
et mūtam nequiquam adloquerer cinerem,
Note the elision in line 2 and the hiatus in line 4; also note the caesuras throughout and the bucolic diaresis in line 1.(Catullus 101, lines 1-4)
Examples of other meters to be added.
Post-classical poetry
After the classical period, the pronunciation of Latin changed: in particular the distinction between long and short vowels was lost. Some authors continued writing verse in the classical meters, but this was now something of an academic exercise. Popular poetry, including the bulk of Christian Latin poetry, came to be written in accentual meters (sometimes incorporating rhyme, which was never systematically used in classical verse) and thus came to resemble poetry in modern European languages.