Meter (poetry)
In
literature,
meter
is a term used in the scansion of
poetry,
usually indicated by the kind of feet and the number of them. For instance, "
iambic
pentameter", "dactylic tetrameter", etc.
Greek and Latin Poetry
The
metrical
"feet" in the classical languages were based on the length of time taken
to pronounce each syllable, which were categorized as either "long" syllables
or "short" syllables. The foot is often compared to a musical measure and the
long and short syllables to whole notes and half notes. In English poetry, feet
are determined by emphasis rather than length, with stressed and unstressed syllables
serving the same function as long and short syllables in classical meter.
The
basic unit in Greek and Latin prosody is a mora,
which is defined as a single short syllable. A long syllable is equivalent to
two moras. A long syllable contains either a long vowel, a diphthong,
or a short vowel followed by two or more consonants. Various rules of elision
sometimes prevent a grammatical syllable from making a full syllable.
Technical
terms in poetic meter
- caesura:
A caesura (literally, a cut or cutting) refers to a particular
kind of break within a poetic line. In Latin and Greek meter, caesura refers to
a break within a foot caused by the end of a word. In English poetry, a caesura
refers to a sense of a break within a line, sometimes indicated by extra whitespace
between words. Caesuras play a particularly important role in Old
English poetry.
- Inversion: When a foot of poetry is reversed with
respect to the general meter of a poem, it is referred to as an inversion. This
term is usually only used for the first foot in a line.
- Headless: A
headless meter is one where the first foot is missing its first syllable.
Disyllables
- pyrrhus or dibrach:
two short syllables
- iamb:
Consisting of a short syllable followed by a long one, or of an unaccented syllable
followed by an accented; as, an iambic foot.
- trochee
or choree: A metrical foot of two syllables, the first long and the second short,
as in the Latin word ante, or the first accented and the second unaccented, as
in the English word motion; a choreus.
- spondee:
A poetic foot of two long syllables
Trisyllables
-
tribrach: three short syllables
- anapest:
A poetic foot of two short syllables followed by a long one.
- amphibrach:
short-long-short
- bacchius: short-long-long
- dactyl:
A poetical foot of three syllables, one long followed by two short, or one accented
followed by two unaccented
- amphimacer or cretic: long-short-long
-
antibacchius: long-long-short
- molossus: long-long-long
Tetrasyllables
-
tetrabrach or proceleusmatic: short-short-short-short
- quartus paeon:
short-short-short-long
- tertius paeon: short-short-long-short
-
minor ionic, or double iamb: short-short-long-long
- secundus paeon: short-long-short-short
- diamb: short-long-short-long
- antispast: short-long-long-short
- first epitrite: short-long-long-long
- primus paeon: long-short-short-short
- choriamb: long-short-short-long
- ditrochee: long-short-long-short
- second epitrite: long-short-long-long
- major ionic: long-long-short-short
- third epitrite: long-long-short-long
- fourth epitrite: long-long-long-short
- dispondee: long-long-long-long
The most important Classical
metre is the
dactylic
hexameter, the metre of Homer and Vergil. This form uses verses of six feet.
The first four syllables are dactyls, but can be spondees. The fifth syllable
is always a dactyl. The sixth is either a spondee or a trochee. The initial syllable
of either foot is called the
ictus, the basic "beat" of the verse. There
is usually a caesura after the ictus of the third foot. The opening line of the
Æneid is a typical
line of dactylic hexameter:
- ("I sing of arms
and the man, who first from the shores of Troy. . . ")
The first
and second feet are dactyls; their vowels are grammatically short, but long in
poetry because both are followed by two consonants. The third and fourth feet
are spondees, with two long vowels, one on either side of the caesura. The fifth
foot is a dactyl, as it must be, with the ictus this time falling on a grammatically
long vowel. The final foot is a spondee with two grammatically long vowels.
The dactylic hexameter was imitated in English by Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow in his poem Evangeline:
This is the
forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks, Bearded with moss, and
in garments green, indistinct in the twilight, Stand like Druids of old, with
voices sad and prophetic, Stand like harpers hoar, with beards that rest on their
bosoms.
Also important in Greek and Latin poetry is the dactylic pentameter.
This was a line of verse, made up of two equal parts, each of which contains two
dactyls followed by a long syllable. Spondees can take the place of the dactyls
in the first half, but never in the second. The long syllable at the close of
the first half of the verse always ends a word, giving rise to a caesura.
Dactylic pentameter is never used in isolation. Rather, a line of dactylic pentameter
follows a line of dactylic hexameter in the elegiac
distich or elegiac
couplet, a form of verse that was used for the composition of elegies and
other tragic and solemn
verse in the Greek and Latin world. An example from Ovid's
Tristia:
/ x x / x / x / x / x x / x Vergilium vîdî
tantum, nec amâra Tibullô / x x / x x/ | / x x / x x / Tempus amîcitiae
fâta dedêre meae.
- ("I only saw Vergil, greedy
Fate gave Tibullus no time for me.")
The Greeks and Romans also
used a number of
lyric meters,
which were typically used for shorter poems than elegiacs or hexameter. One important
line was called the
hendecasyllabic,
a line of eleven syllables. This meter was used most often in the
Sapphic
stanza, named after the Greek poet
Sappho,
who wrote many of her poems in the form. A hendecasyllabic is a line with a never-varying
structure: two trochees, followed by a dactyl, then two more trochees. In the
Sapphic
stanza, three hendecasyllabics
are followed by an "Adonic" line, made up of a dactyl and a trochee. This is the
form of
Catullus 51:
/ x / x / x x/ x / x Ille mi par esse deo videtur; / x / x / x x / x / x ille,
si fas est, superare divos, / x / x / x x / x / x qui sedens adversus identidem
te / x x / x spectat et audit. . .
- ("He seems to me
to be like a god; if it is permitted, he seems above the gods, he who sitting
across from you gazes at you and listens to you.")
The Sapphic
stanza was imitated in
English
by
Swinburne
in a poem he simply called
Sapphics:
Saw the white implacable
Aphrodite, Saw the hair unbound and the feet unsandalled Shine as fire of sunset
on western waters; Saw the reluctant. . .
English
Poetry
Most English meter is classified according to the same system as Classical
meter with an important difference: stressed and unstressed syllables take the
place of long and short syllables. The most frequently encountered line of English
verse is the
iambic
pentameter, five iambic feet per line. The verse portions of Shakespeare's
plays,
John Milton's
Paradise Lost,
most sonnets, and much else besides in English are written in iambic pentameter.
A rhymed pair of lines of iambic pentameter make a
heroic
couplet, a verse form which was used so often in the
eighteenth
century that it is now used mostly for humorous effect.
Another important
meter in English is the ballad
meter, also called the "common meter", which is a four line stanza, with two lines
of iambic tetrameter
followed by two lines of iambic trimeter;
the rhymes usually fall on the lines of trimeter, although in many instances the
tetrameter also rhymes. This is the meter of most of the Border and Scots or English
ballads, and a great many hymns,
such as Amazing
Grace:
Amazing Grace! how sweet the sound That saved a wretch
like me; I once was lost, but now am found; Was blind, but now I see.
but
perhaps the poet who put this form to best use was
Emily
Dickinson:
Great streets of silence led away To neighborhoods of pause;
Here was no notice — no dissent — No universe — no laws.
Old
English poetry has a different metrical system. In Old English poetry, each
line must contain four fully stressed syllables, which often alliterate. The unstressed
syllables are less important. Old English poetry is an example of the
alliterative
verse found in most of the older
Germanic
languages.
French Poetry
In
French
poetry, meter is determined solely by the number of syllables in a line. A silent
'e' counts as a syllable, except at the end of a line. The most frequently encountered
meter in French is a line of six feet called the
alexandrine.
Spanish Poetry
In Spanish poetry, meter is
determined solely by the number of syllables in a line. Syllables in Spanish metrics
are determined by consonant breaks, not word boundaries, so a single syllable
may include multiple words. For example, the line
De armas y hombres canto
consists of 6 syllables: "De ar" "mas" "y hom" "bres" "can" "to."
Some common
meters in Spanish verse are:
- Heptasyllable: A line consisting of seven
syllables.
- Octosyllable: A line consisting of eight syllables. This
meter is commonly used in romances, narrative poems similar to English
ballads.
- Hendecasyllable:
A line consisting of eleven syllables. This meter plays a similar role to pentameter
in English verse. It is commonly used in sonnets, among other things.
-
Alexandrines: A line consisting of twelve syllables. This is frequently used in
epic poetry.
See also:
Alexandrine,
Dactylic
hexameter,
Elegiac
couplet,
Hendecasyllable,
Heroic couplet,
Iambic
pentameter