![]() ![]() Later epic poets, such as Apollonius in Greek and Virgil in Latin, seldom repeat phrases and almost never repeat lines, for they could write and rewrite their poems at leisure and then read them aloud or recite them from memory to an audience. E Scansion of hendecasyllables The hendecasyllabic line is an arrangement of eleven syllables within five feet. Homer and his predecessors, it seems, did not so much memorize their long poems as reconstruct them each time they performed them, rather as a jazz musician may improvise a good deal of his or her piece while preserving its tune and following the main lines of its theme-and-variation structure and many individual “riffs.” The main evidence for the oral origin of the epics lies in the “formulas” that pervade both of them: the epithets such as “swift-footed” (Achilles) and “shepherd of the people” (Agamemnon), whole lines such as the one about “rose-fingered Dawn” (twenty times verbatim in the Odyssey), and stock descriptions such as arming for battle or serving and eating food. HENDECASYLLABIC SCANSION LATIN SERIESThanks to the work of Milman Parry (1902–35), we are now almost certain that the Iliad and the Odyssey, for example, were largely composed orally by an illiterate bard, or more likely by a long series of illiterate bards who recomposed and elaborated the stories they inherited. When poets learned to write, poetry changed. Strictly speaking this is the Phalaecian hendecasyllable, named after the Greek. Only as a second alternative does Bede present the true scansion of the. Before writing systems were invented, starting around 5,000 years ago, all poetry was oral, and some poetry today, even in societies with universal literacy, is still composed and performed without the aid of writing. I devised these mnemonics for my teaching of Greek metre and its Latin. Seppo Heikkinen The Christianisation of Latin Metre A Study of Bedes De arte. ![]()
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