The Alcaic stanza is a Greek literature Lyric poetry meter, an Aeolic verse form traditionally believed to have been invented by Alcaeus, a lyric poet from Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, about 600 BC. The Alcaic stanza and the Sapphic stanza named for Alcaeus' contemporary, Sappho, are two important forms of Classical poetry. The Alcaic stanza consists of two Alcaic , followed by an Alcaic enneasyllable and an Alcaic decasyllable.
× – u – × – u u – u – || (alc11) × – u – × – u u – u – || (alc11) × – u – × – u – – || (alc9 ) – u u – u u – u – – ||| (alc10)
An example, quoted by Athenaeus, is:
In Horace the Alcaic stanza takes this form:
x – u – – : – u u – u – x – u – – : – u u – u – x – u – – – u – – – u u – u u – u – –
(An "–" denotes a long syllable, "u" a short one, x is anceps (long or short), and ":" is the caesura.) The first syllable in lines 1 to 3 is sometimes short (13 times in book 1), but usually long. The 5th syllable, unlike in Greek, is always long. There is almost always a word-break after the 5th syllable.Nisbet & Hubbard (1970). A Commentary on Horace Odes Book 1, pp. xl–xli.
– – u – : – – u u – u – Antehāc nefās dēprōmere Caecubum – – u – – : – u u – u– cellīs avītīs, dum Capitōliō – – u – – – u– – Rēgīna dēmentīs ruīnās – u u – u u– u – – fūnus et Imperiō parābat. (''Odes'' 1.37, lines 5-8)
Certain developments can be observed in the Alcaic stanza over the course of the four books of Horace's Odes. For example, the short syllable at the beginning of the first three lines becomes less frequent in the course of books 1 to 3 and is not found at all in Book 4.Nisbet & Hubbard (1970). A Commentary on Horace Odes Book 1, pp. xxviii, xliv.
A notable feature of Horace's Alcaics is the heavy word which usually fills the centre of the 3rd line.Raven, D. S. (1965), Latin Metre, p. 146. The most common pattern is for the line to end with a polysyllable + trisyllable (e.g. Augustus adiectīs Britannīs). This puts a word accent on the 5th syllable of the line, which occurs in 67% of the lines.Becker, A. S. (2012). "Rhythm in a Sinuous Stanza: The Anatomy and Acoustic Contour of the Latin Alcaic". The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 133, No. 1, pp. 117–152; p. 128. Another form of the line is to end in a polysyllable + disyllable (e.g. Tītānas immānemque turbam). This puts an accent on the 6th syllable of the line. It is uncommon at first (only 5% in book 1 and 6% in book 2) but becomes more common in the later books (25% in book 3 and 30% in book 4).Nisbet & Hubbard (1970). A Commentary on Horace Odes Book 1, pp. xlii.
A tetrasyllable ending in the 3rd line (e.g. nōdō coercēs vīperīnō) or double disyllable ending (e.g. prōnōs relābī posse rīvōs), on the other hand, putting an accent on the 4th syllable of the line, is not common: only 7% in book 1, 8% in book 2; and not found at all in books 3 and 4. But 3rd lines ending with a monosyllable + trisyllable (e.g. stetēre causae cūr perīrent) seem more acceptable, and form 20% of lines in book 1, 15% in book 2, 7% in book 3, and 11% in book 4.
God-gifted organ-voice of England,
[[Milton|John Milton]], a name to resound for ages!
The Alcaic stanza was adapted to use in English and French during the Renaissance. It was very frequently used in Italian poetry of the 19th century, especially by Giosuè Carducci. As in English, the meter is accentual rather than quantitative.
o Ebe con passo di dea
trasvolata sorridendo via;
In Polish poetry (in contrast to the Sapphic stanza which was extremely popular since the 16th century) Alcaics were used very rarely. Even in translation Horace's Alcaic stanzas were usually turned into different forms. An example (perhaps the only) of an Alcaic stanza in Polish original literature is Stanisław Trembecki's Ode to Adam Naruszewicz:Adam Ważyk, Mickiewicz i wersyfikacja narodowa, Warszawa 1951 (in Polish).
Wieńcz twe skronie, wieszczą bierz laskę,
Śnieżny ubiór i złotą przepaskę.
Trembecki's verse is syllabic (11/11/9/10). There is no accentual metrical pattern.
German has also used alcaics with some success. They were introduced by Klopstock, and used by Hölderlin, by Johann Heinrich Voss in his translations of Horace, by August Kopisch and other 19th century German poets.
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