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APPENDIX B

Basic Guide to
Latin Meter and Scansion

Latin poetry follows a strict rhythm based on the quantity of the vowel in
each syllable. Each line of poetry divides into a number of feet (analogous to the
measures in music). The syllables in each foot scan as long or short according
to the parameters of the meter that the poet employs.

A vowel scans as long if

(1) it is long by nature (e.g., the ablative singular ending in the first declen-
sion: puell);
(2) it is a diphthong: ae (saepe), au (laudat), ei (deinde), eu (neuter), oe
(poena), ui (cui);
(3) it is long by positionthese vowels are followed by double consonants
(canttae) or a consonantal i (Tria), x (flexibus), or z.

All other vowels scan as short.


A few other matters often confuse beginners:

(1) qu and gu count as single consonants (sc aquilam; lingu);


(2) h does NOT affect the quantity of a vowel (Bellus hom: Martial 1.9.1, the
-us in bellus scans as short);
(3) if a mute consonant (b, c, d, g, k, q, p, t) is followed by l or r, the preced-
ing vowel scans according to the demands of the meter, either long
(omnium patrnus: Catullus 49.7, the -a in patrnus scans as long to
accommodate the hendecasyllabic meter) OR short (pr patri: Horace,
Carmina 3.2.13, the first -a in patri scans as short to accommodate the
Alcaic strophe).

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584 appendix b

When two vowels elide, the first vowel drops out and does not affect the quantity
of the elided syllable. Elision in Latin occurs if

(1) one word ends in a vowel or diphthong and the next one begins in a
vowel (Lesbia, atque ammus: Catullus 5.1);
(2) one word ends in a vowel or diphthong and the next one begins with h
(atque hc: Vergil, Aeneid 8.655); or
(3) one word ends in um, am, or em and the next word begins in a vowel
(quantum est: Catullus 3.2).

An elided syllable scans a ccording to the quantity of the second vowel. A hiatus
(or very abrupt break in the scansion of a line) results from a failure to elide.

Most Latin meters utilize five different types of measures (the macron indicates a
long vowel, the micron a short vowel):

dactyl: < < (example: Lesbia)


spondee: (example: qur)
iamb: < (example: reg)
trochee: < (example: praeda)
choriamb: < < (example: dliciae)

Note the following conventions:

| marks the division between feet in dactylic lines


|| marks the pause (hiatus) within a line
x marks a syllable that can scan either long or short

There are thirteen meters represented in NLP:

Dactylic hexameter: six feet of dactyls. The first four feet can be either dactyls or
spondees; the fifth foot is usually a dactyl; and the last foot scans as a spondee
whether the last syllable is short or long.


<<| <<| <<| <<| <<| x

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basic guide to latin meter and scansion 585

Elegiac couplets: alternating lines of dactylic hexameter and dactylic pentameter.


In the pentameter line, the first two feet may be dactyls or spondees, but the rest
of the line follows a set pattern.


<<| <<| <<| <<| <<| x

<<| <<| || <<| <<|x

Hendecasyllabics: lines of eleven syllables in five feet. The first foot may be a
spondee, iamb, or trochee, followed by a dactyl, two trochees, and finally a spon-
dee or trochee.


<<<<<<x

Limping iambics (known also as choliambics or scazons): five iambs capped off
with a trochee or spondee. A spondee may be substituted in the first and third foot.


<<<<< x

Iambic Trimeter: three pairs of iambs with flexibility to substitute spondees in


the first, third, and fifth foot.


<<< || <<< x

Iambic strophe: alternating lines of iambic trimeter (three pairs of iambs) and iambic
dimeter (two pairs of iambs) with flexibility to substitute spondees in the first, third,
and fifth foot of the trimeter line, and in the first and third foot of the dimeter line.


<< <|| <<<x

<<<<x

Galliambics: meter used in Catullus 63 (NLP 36.15) to celebrate the goddess Cybele.
The name refers to the Galli, a retinue of castrated priests devoted to her worship.

<<<< || <<<<<<x

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586 appendix b

Sapphic strophe (in honor of Sappho of Lesbos, fl. seventhsixth century bce):
afour-verse stanza, with the same metrical pattern in the first three lines.

< || <<<x
< || <<<x
< || <<<x
<<x

Alcaic strophe (in honor of the Greek poet Alcaeus of Lesbos, born c. 630 bce):
afour-verse stanza, with the same metrical pattern in the first two lines.

x< || <<<x
x < || << <x
x< <x
<<<<<x

First Asclepiadean (in honor of the Greek poet Asclepiades of Samos, fl. 290 bce):
a spondee followed by two choriambs, capped off with an iamb.

<< || <<<x

Second Asclepiadean (likewise inspired by the Greek poet Asclepiades):


aGlyconic line (see this example) followed by a line of First Asclepiadean.

<<<x
<< || <<<x

Fourth Asclepiadean (likewise inspired by the Greek poet Asclepiades): two lines
of First Asclepiadean, followed by one Pherecratean line and one Glyconic line.

<< || <<<x
<< || <<<x
<<x
<<<x

Alcmanic Strophe (in honor of the Greek poet Alcman of Sparta, fl. 7th century
bce): one line of dactylic hexameter followed by one line of dactylic tetrameter.

<<| <<| <<| <<| << |x

<<| <<| <<|x

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