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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SAC-SAR |
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SAPPHIC METRE, SAPPHICS , an ancient form of quantitative verse, named after the Aeolian poetess Sappho, who is supposed to have invented it, and who certainly used it with unequalled skill. A sapphic line consists of five equal beats, of which the central one alone is of three syllables, while the others consist of two each. The original
- V V V V 7rOuCt I AOBPov' I bAlwar' I 'Apo 13tra The sapphic strophe consists of three of these lines followed by an adonic, thus:- - V V V V V Horace adopted, and slightly adapted, this form of verse, for some of his most engaging metrical effects. The Greek poets had permitted the caesura to come where it would, but Horace , to give solidity to the form, introduced the practice of usually ending a word on the fifth syllable:jam satis terris nivis atque dirae, the second half of the sapphic leaping off, as it were, with a long syllable which connects it with the first half. This is a typical example of the Latin sapphic strophe :Intelger viltae scelerlisque I purus non el et Maurlis jacullis neique arcu, nec velnenaltis gravilda salg.ttis, Fusee, pharletra. Before the days of Horace, Catullus had used this form in Latin, and afterwards sapphics were introduced by the pseudo- Seneca
Great
Needy knife I grinder! I whither I are you I going? Rough is the I road, your I wheel is I out of I order. But nearer to the effect of the antique verse would be: Needy I grinder! I whither oh! I are you I going? Rough the I road; your I destitute I wheel is I broken, although this certainly does not suit English versification so well. English sapphics were written by the Elizabethan poet, Thomas
original
anonymous
scheme of the Latin in his famous translation
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