Greek lyric is the body of lyric poetry written in dialects of Ancient Greek. Lyric poetry is, in short, poetry to be sung accompanied by music, traditionally a lyre. It is primarily associated with the early 7th to the early 5th centuries BC, sometimes called the " Lyric Age of Greece",Andrew W. Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology in Translation (Hackett, 1996), p. xi. but continued to be written into the Hellenistic and Roman Greece.
Much of Greek lyric is occasional poetry, composed for public or private performance by a soloist or chorus to mark particular occasions. The symposium ('drinking party') was one setting in which Lyric poetry were performed.Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology, p. xii. 'Lyric' was sometimes sung to the accompaniment of either a string instrument (particularly the lyre or kithara) or a wind instrument (most often the reed pipe called aulos). Whether the accompaniment was a string or wind instrument, the term for such accompanied lyric was melic poetry (from the Greek word for 'song' melos). Lyric could also be sung without any instrumental accompaniment. This latter form is called meter and it is recited rather than sung, strictly speaking.
Modern surveys of "Greek lyric" often include relatively short poems composed for similar purposes or circumstances that were not strictly "song lyrics" in the modern sense, such as elegiac couplet and iambics.Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology, pp. xii–xiii. The Greeks themselves did not include elegies nor iambus within melic poetry, since they had different metres and different musical instruments.Ragusa, Para Conhecer a "Lírica" Grega Arcaica
Greek lyric poems celebrate athletic victories (victory ode), commemorate the dead, exhort soldiers to valor, and offer religious devotion in the forms of , , and . Partheneia, "maiden-songs," were sung by choruses of maidens at festivals.Douglas E. Gerber, A Companion to the Greek Lyric Poets (Brill, 1997), pp. 161, 201, 217, 224, 230. Love poems praise the beloved, express unfulfilled desire, proffer seductions, or blame the former lover for a breakup. In this last mood, love poetry might blur into invective, a poetic attack aimed at insulting or shaming a personal enemy, an art at which Archilochus, the earliest known Greek lyric poet, excelled. The themes of Greek lyric include "politics, war, sports, drinking, money, youth, old age, death, the heroic past, the gods," and hetero- and homosexual love.
In the 3rd century BC, the encyclopedic movement at Alexandria produced a literary canon of the nine melic poets: Alcaeus, Alcman, Anacreon, Bacchylides, Ibycus, Pindar, Sappho, Simonides, and Stesichorus.Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology, p. xiii. Only a small sampling of lyric poetry from Archaic Greece, the period when it first flourished, survives. For example, the poems of Sappho are said to have filled nine papyrus rolls in the Library of Alexandria, with the first book alone containing more than 1,300 lines of verse. In modern times, only one of Sappho's poems exists intact, with fragments from other sources that would scarcely fill a chapbook.Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology, p. xv.
There are two main divisions within the meters of ancient Greek poetry: lyric and non-lyric meters. "Lyric meters (literally, meters sung to a lyre) are usually less regular than non-lyric meters. The lines are made up of feet of different kinds, and can be of varying lengths. Some lyric meters were used for monody (solo songs), such as some of the poems of Sappho and Alcaeus; others were used for choral dances, such as the choruses of tragedies and the victory odes of Pindar."
The lyric meters' families are the Ionic meter, the Aeolic verse (based on the choriamb, which can generate varied kinds of verse, such as the glyconian or the Sapphic stanza), and the Dactylo-epitrite. The Doric Greek were composed in complex triadic forms of strophe, antistrophe, and epode, with the first two parts of the triad having the same metrical pattern, and the epode a different form.Miller, Greek Lyric: An Anthology, pp. xiii–xiv.
/ref> The Edinburgh Companion to Ancient Greece and Rome offers the following clarification: "'melic' is a musical definition, 'elegy' is a metrical definition, whereas 'iambus' refers to a genre and its characteristics subject matter. (...) The fact that these categories are artificial and potentially misleading should prompt us to approach Greek lyric poetry with an open mind, without preconceptions about what 'type' of poetry we are reading."
Meters
Bibliography
Translations
Anthologies
Loeb Classical Library
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Lyric
Elegy and Iambus
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