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Scansion Scansion

Scansion - PowerPoint Presentation

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Scansion - PPT Presentation

Dactylic Hexameter What makes Latin poetry poetry since it does not rhyme Although classical Latin poetry does not use endrhymes as a rule it is written in a variety of meters or specific patterns of syllables The rhythm of the poem can add meaning fast feet for excitement slow feet fo ID: 543867

elision long short vowel long elision vowel short poetry vowels syllable feet consonant mark syllables consonants line dea continued

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Slide1

Scansion

Dactylic HexameterSlide2

What makes Latin poetry

poetry

since it does not rhyme?Although classical Latin poetry does not use end-rhymes as a rule, it is written in a variety of meters, or specific patterns of syllables. The rhythm of the poem can add meaning (fast feet for excitement, slow feet for majesty or sadness) and euphony (beautiful sound)

Poetry?Slide3

Whereas English poetry is based on stressed and unstressed syllables, Latin poetry is based on short and long vowels.

A short vowel makes a short syllable.

A long vowel makes a long syllable.

Long and Short SyllablesSlide4

1. V

owels that are long by nature

. These are marked with a macron in your text but sadly not on the AP exam. Very common are macrons over ablative and second conjugation verbs.2. Vowels that are long by position.

These are vowels followed by two or more consonants. The consonants may be in the same word or in different words. They may be two of the same consonant.

Three categories of long vowelsSlide5

1. an “x” is considered two consonants, since it has a “k” and an “s” sound.

2. an “h” does not count as a consonant, since it is barely pronounced.

3. A combination of a mute consonant (“b”, “p”, “c”, “g”, “d”, “t”) and a liquid (“l” or “r”) may or may not make the preceding vowel long. To remember the mute consonants, think of the sentence, “Bad Pupils chew Gum During Tests.”

4. An initial “I” is often a consonantal “j” and should not be scanned.

5. The “u” in “QU” is considered part of the consonant “Q” and should not be scanned.

Exceptions to the above rules.Slide6

3. All diphthongs are scanned as one long vowel.

AE, AU,

Eu, Oe

Long Syllables ContinuedSlide7

Elision is a contraction of two words, in which one syllable is either swallowed up or pronounced quickly and passed over.

1. Vowel – Vowel

tecto et becomes tect’et

2. Vowel – H ego

hanc

becomes

eg’hanc

3. –m-Vowel

antrum

immane

becomes

antr’immane

4. –m –H monstrum horrendum becomes Monstr’horrendum

ElisionSlide8

If the elision does not occur where expected (this you can tell from scanning), this is called

HIATUS

. See the following line:Et vera

dea

incessu

patuit

dea

.

Ille

ubi matrem…There is no elision between dea and ille. As this depicts the heretofore disguised Venus walking away from a surprised Aeneas, the hiatus illustrates his gasp of shock.

Elision ContinuedSlide9

When you spot an elision, consider whether the author is showing the close connection of the words elided in some way. In Catullus 3, see the line:

Nec

ses’ a grem’

illius

movebat

.

(Nor did be move himself from her lap)

The elision shows the inseparability of the sparrow from

Lesbia

.

More ElisionSlide10

Epic Meter which consists of six feet of dactyls or spondees.

Dactyl (long, short, short) - u

uSpondee (long, long) - -

The final syllable may be either long or short; such a syllable is known as a

syllaba

anceps

. AP readers want you to mark it as a Long

Dactylic HexameterSlide11

The penultimate (5

th

) foot is almost always a dactyl. If a spondee does occur in the fifth foot, watch for the other horsemen of the apocalypse. Such a line is called a spondaic line. Probably won’t happen.Dactylic Hexameter ContinuedSlide12

1. Check for elision and mark them

2. Mark all longs by position

3. Mark all diphthongs long4. Put shorts over all other vowels5. I

nsert feet lines after a dactyl or a spondee

6. Count feet to make sure you get six

Sometimes it’s helpful to start from the end of the

Procedure when macrons are on text