Alcaic verse
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - A specific form of classical poetic verse, consisting of strophes (stanzas) of four lines each, written in a particular meter. This meter is characterized by its use of tetrametric lines (lines with four metrical feet). The form is named for and reputedly invented by the ancient Greek lyric poet Alcaeus.
Usage
- As a literary/poetic term: Used to describe or analyze the structure of certain ancient Greek and Latin poems, and later imitations.
- The scholar dedicated her thesis to the analysis of Alcaic verse in Horace's Odes.
- Few modern poets attempt to compose in Alcaic verse due to its complex metrical rules.
Advanced Usage
- Technical Analysis: In detailed prosodic analysis, the term specifies the exact metrical pattern (a combination of dactylic and trochaic feet) that defines the Alcaic stanza.
- The transition from the first two lines to the last two in an Alcaic verse stanza creates a distinct rhythmic shift.
Variants and Related Words
- Alcaic (adjective): Pertaining to Alcaeus or the verse form he invented.
- The poet employed an Alcaic stanza in his homage to Horace.
- Alcaics (noun, plural): Another term for Alcaic verse or stanzas.
- The translation attempted to preserve the rhythm of the original Alcaics.
Synonyms
- Alcaic stanza: A direct synonym emphasizing the stanzaic structure.
- Alcaic meter: A synonym focusing on the metrical pattern rather than the complete verse form.
Related Concepts (Not Phrasal Verbs or Idioms)
- Sapphic verse: Another classical verse form, often discussed alongside Alcaic verse, invented by Alcaeus's contemporary, Sappho.
- Ode: A type of lyrical poem; many of Horace's odes, which popularized Alcaic verse in Latin, belong to this genre.
- Lyric poetry: The broader category of personal, often emotional poetry to which Alcaic verse belongs.
Noun
- verse in the meter used in Greek and Latin poetry consisting of strophes of 4 tetrametric lines; reputedly invented by Alcaeus