VTP: Lesson - The Scansion of Poetry - Dactylic Hexameter Review
The Scansion of Poetry - Dactylic Hexameter
Over time, in Latin poetry, common patterns emerged, often based on earlier Greek formulae for poetic meters. These patterns became recognizable as belonging to a specific type of poem. For Vergil, we will be dealing with only one meter, which is the meter of epic poetry: dactylic hexameter.
Let's review this important meter.
Dactylic Hexameter
This formula calls for six feet in each line, with each foot concluding by using a dactyl in foot five and a spondee in foot six. The style arose in Greece, and was most famously used in Homer's epic poems: Iliad and Odyssey. Roman poets, wishing to imitate the Greek style, took the use of dactylic hexameter to be the way to formulate epic poems. The most famous Latin example of dactylic hexameter is Vergil's epic poem Aeneid, about a Trojan warrior tasked with founding a new civilization in Italy (in other words, it is Rome's origin story). The poem's famous first seven lines strongly demonstrate the epic meter:
Arma vi | rumque ca | nō, Trō | iae quī | prīmus ab | ōrīs
Ītali | am fā | tō profu | gus Lā | vīniaque | vēnit
lītora, | multum~il | le~et ter | rīs iac | tātus et | altō
vī supe | rum, sae | vae memo | rem Iū | nōnis ob | īram,
multa quo | que~et bel | lō pas | sus, dum | conderet | urbem
īnfer | retque de | ōs Lati | ō; genus | unde La | tīnum
Albā | nīque pat | rēs at | que~altae | moenia | Rōmae.
Notes: Laviniaque = Lavinjaque, so that the ia/ja makes a single sound = ya.
It is harder to find examples in English since we focus less on length and more on accent. This example from the opening line of Evangeline by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow gives you some idea of what dactylic hexameter is like in English:
This is the | forest pri | meval. The | murmuring | pines and the | hemlocks
Video Lesson
Now that we've learned some basics, let's watch a video that goes into more detail about Dactylic Hexameter. Take notes!
Video source: Brian Thomas Reise (YouTube), shared via a CC license.
Practice Activity
Check your ability to scan lines of poetry by completing this review. You'll see each of the lines of poetry twice. The first time, you will be asked to determine the correct scansion using symbols (– and u). The second time, you will be asked to determine the correct names of each foot.
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