OTP: Lesson - The Scansion of Poetry - Example One

The Scansion of Poetry - Let's Scan!

We've been working with a line from Vergil's Aeneid to demonstrate syllables and length. Let's now attempt to scan the line we've been working with. The Aeneid was written in dactylic hexameter, so we can expect six feet, with the final two feet being a dactyl (long, short, short) followed by a spondee (long, long).

Arma virumque canō, Trōiae quī prīmus ab ōrīs

  • First, let's check for elision: there are no examples of elision in this line.
  • Now, let's perform the syllabification for this line:
    • ar/ma/vi/rum/que/ca/nō/Trō/iae/quī/prī/mus/ab/ōr/īs
  • For each syllable, we now need to assign a quantity: long or short
    • ar = long (a followed by two consonants: r + m)
    • ma = short
    • vi = short
    • rum = long (u followed by two consonants: m + qu)
    • que = short
    • ca = short
    • nō = long (by nature)
    • Trō = long (by nature)
    • iae = long (ae = diphthong)
    • quī = long (by nature)
    • prī = long (by nature)
    • mus = short
    • ab = short
    • ōr = long (by nature)
    • īs = long (by nature)
  • Let's lay out the full line with space to mark each syllable as long or short. This should make it easier to see the feet for the final analysis:
Syllable Length, Line 1
ar ma vi rum que ca

Trō iae quī prī mus ab

ōr

īs

u u u u u u
  • Now we can search for feet: long, short, short = dactyl; long, long = spondee. These are the only two types of feet used in dactylic hexameter and we know that the line ends with a dactyl, spondee for feet five and six. Remember, feet are divided with a straight line: |
    • −   u  u  |   −      u   u |   −   −  |   −     − |    −   u   u  |  − − | 
    • arma vi | rumque ca | nō Trō | iae quī | prīmus ab | ōrīs |
    • dactyl | dactyl | spondee | spondee | dactyl | spondee