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2. Internal Expansion
we see the preservation of a clear metrical delineation between opening and closing, with an unfixed rhythm in the former and a fixed rhythm in the latter. The similarity here with the 4 + 4 delineation of opening + closing in the Indic octosyllable [1] is indeed striking. Furthermore, the opening + closing delineation of the choriambic dimeter is reinforced by an important constraint, which becomes apparent when we examine all the possible permutations in the opening:
(Triple and quadruple shorts are not likely to have been inherited by Greek [2] and thus have not been listed.) The only rhythmical pattern excluded from the opening is – ⏑ ⏑ –, that is, the choriamb of the closing. [3] It appears that the constraint here is freedom: the opening of the choriambic dimeter must be free, and therefore {37|38} it is not allowed to be a choriamb itself.
Watkins has surveyed this type and designated it as the ‘irregular Glyconic’. [4] If syllable 4 had been generalized as short and consequently syllable 3 had been generalized as long (to avoid a triple short), the result would be the Glyconic
so that the designation ‘irregular Glyconic’ is well founded. Watkins must have chosen this term instead of ‘iambic dimeter’ because the latter is traditionally applied to the regularized unit
where the opening pattern mirrors the closing pattern. Note, however, that this type of octosyllable preserves an archaism lost even by the primitive residual ‘irregular Glyconic’: in syllable 5 (and consequently in syllable 1), there has been no obligatory generalization of short as against long.
opening + closing + closing
In the case of iambic trimeter, where opening equals closing formally, this complex structure is collapsed into a simplex structure:
The middle component is overtly neither an opening nor a closing: it is simply an iamb, which may be perceived simply as an insertion between two other iambs. Here we see the start of internal expansion.
Within the framework of such a structure, however, {39|40} we find that the iamb (ia) is interchangeable with the choriamb (ch). Consider the four surviving stanzas of Anakreon 388P, where each stanza consists of two tetrameters followed by a dimeter: [6]
ch ch ia ia
ia ia
ch ch ch ia
ch ch ch ia
ia ia
ch ch ch ia
ch ch ch ia
ia ia
ch ch ia ia
ia ch ch ia
ia ia
The same sort of iambic/choriambic interchangeability, which was actually noticed by the metrician Hephaistion, [7] is sporadically attested even in the iambic trimeter. For example, consider the verse-initial formula εἶεν ἀκούω (– ⏑ ⏑ – – …), as used by Aischylos (Libation Bearers 657) and Aristophanes (Peace 663). In the textual tradition of the Iambographoi, we find sporadic instances of – ⏑ ⏑ – even at syllables 5 6 7 8:
For example, consider line 4 of Semonides 1D:
⏑ – ⏑ – – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓
(For attempts at emendation, see 1.4W and the apparatus.)
παρθενία, παρθενία, ποῖ με λίποιc’ ἀποίχῃ (Sappho 114LP)
A choriambic series or a single choriambic opening may have a choriambic closing only if the latter is catalectic, as in the following:
οὐδὲ λεόντων cθένοc οὐδὲ τροφ (Adespota 975bP)
αἲ Κυθερήαc ἐπιπνεῖτ’ ὄργια λευκωλένου (Adespota 975cP)
In such patterns, the inherent asymmetry of choriambic verse has been preserved by way of catalexis. The intact choriambs (– ⏑ ⏑ –) of these verses are not mirrored by the truncated choriamb (ch^ = – ⏑ ⏓) in the closing. [10]
⏓ ⏓ – ⏑ ⏑ – – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓ = Asclepiad (glc = Glyconic with choriambic expansion)
⏓ ⏓ – ⏑ ⏑ – – ⏑ ⏑ – – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓ = Greater Asclepiad (gl2c = Glyconic with double choriambic expansion)
The well-known Asclepiad is a dodecasyllabic trimeter that was generated from an octosyllabic dimeter simply by the insertion of a choriamb (– ⏑ ⏑ –) between the rhythmically free (⏓ ⏓) and fixed (– ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓) segments of the Glyconic. In size, the Asclepiad corresponds to the iambic trimeter just as the Greater Asclepiad corresponds to the iambic tetrameter.
– – – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓
ῥηγνὺc ἁρμονίαν χορδοτόνου λύραc
– – – ⏑ ⏑ – – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏓
Besides their being morphologically parallel, χρυcόδετον and χορδοτόνου share (1) the same number of syllables, (2) juxtaposition with a following disyllabic word, (3) the consonants χ ρ δ τ. Another sign of poetic artifice seems to be the twice-over occupation of the rhythm-breaking Aeolic base ⏓ ⏓ by a word which actually means ‘break’, ῥηγνύc. I propose that there is at least one other attested instance where a word for ‘break’ seems to have reinforced its own meaning via its position. In verse 9 of the famous Sapphic poem (31LP) that begins φαίνεταί μοι κῆνοc, the expression γλῶccα ἔαγε displays a hiatus otherwise intolerable in this Lesbian genre. The ἔαγε should not be deemed corrupt on that account. [15] Rather, hiatus is the very factor that creates the special effect, namely, that the form is arranged in such a way that it symbolizes what it means. [16]
We have just derived the sequences labeled by bracket A from the closing of a choriambic dimeter. Notice, however, that the same rhythmical sequence is already present in the Glyconic, as labeled by bracket A’. From a diachronic point of view, we may say that A is a real choriamb, but not A’. From a synchronic point of view, however, A’ = A. In this connection, the following three lyric fragments are crucial:
τὰ δὲ cάμβαλα πεμπεβόηα
πίccυγγοι δὲ δέκ’ ἐξεπόναιcαν
ὄρπακι βραδίνῳ δε μάλιcτ’ ἐϊκάcδω
αἰ χρῆ cυμποcίαc ἐπόναcιν ἔμοιγε γένεcθαι
2. ⏓ ⏓ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏓
3. ⏓ ⏓ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏑ ⏑ – ⏓
These types 1/2/3 are simply Pherecratics with the {46|47} insertion of one/two/three rounds of – ⏑ ⏑ respectively between the Aeolic base (⏓ ⏓) and the fixed segment (– ⏑ ⏑ – ⏓). In line with Snell’s convention, [17] I call these verses pherd/pher2d/pher3d respectively:
Just as the Pherecratic equals the Glyconic minus the last syllable, so also the segment – ⏑ ⏑ equals – ⏑ ⏑ – minus the last syllable. The metrical segmentation B’ in Pherecratics is a formal analogue to the symmetrical effect achieved by the metrical segmentation A’ in Glyconics: 2 + 4 + 2 and 2 + 3 + 2, where 4 = A’ and 3 = B’. The A’ has the acoustic shape of a choriamb (– ⏑ ⏑ –), while B’ is what we call a dactyl (– ⏑ ⏑ = d). To sum up: on the model of the internal choriambic expansions of the Glyconic, the Pherecratic could have generated internal dactylic expansions.
(Footnote [18] refers to the second line; footnote [19] to the third.)
Footnotes