In Ancient Greek
elements are quite common in Homer, occurring every four or five verses. An example is line 2 of the ''Iliad'': : : :, – u u , – – , – u u , – – , – u u , – – , :"that baleful (anger), which made many sorrows for the Achaeans" The phenomenon can also occur at the end of iambic lines, for example, the opening of Euripides' play the ''Bacchae'': : : :, – – u – , – – u – , – – u – , :"I, son of Zeus, have come to this land of the Thebans" The ''brevis in longo'' can thus be found both in a weak position, i.e. in a pendant (feminine) ending, and in a strong one, i.e. in a blunt ending. There has been some discussion among scholars over whether these two types should be classified separately. Ancient writers on Latin and Greek metre noted that it was logical for a short syllable at the end of a line to be taken as long, since the pause helped to make up the length. ''Brevis in longo'' therefore only exists when there is a pause. When a line with a rhythm such as , – u u – u u – u u – u u , is part of a continuous song, there is no pause at the end of the line and the final syllable remains short. Another question discussed by scholars is whether a word ending in a short vowel + one consonant, such as () "often", at the end of a line should be considered as ending in a short or long syllable. In the view of Martin West "only a syllable ending in a short open vowel should be counted as short", on the grounds that in some poets the treatment of these is different from that of words ending in a short vowel + one consonant. For example, Pindar has a marked tendency to avoid placing a word ending in a short vowel before a pause, while not so avoiding words ending in a consonant. Another study, by the American scholars Devine and Stephens, similarly shows that a word ending in a short vowel such as () "land" at the end of an iambic trimeter or dactylic pentameter is less common than one ending in a short vowel + consonant, and that the latter in turn is less common than one ending in a long vowel. The Roman poet Ovid also avoided a short vowel at the end of a dactylic pentameter, which suggests that an ending of vowel + consonant was felt to be heavier than short vowel alone. When a metre with a short penultimate element is made catalectic (i.e. abbreviated by one syllable), the short element is affected by the phenomenon, and becomes long. An example in Ancient Greek is the iambic tetrameter, which in normal and catalectic form is as follows: :, x – u – , x – u – , x – u – , x – u – , :, x – u – , x – u – , x – u – , u – – , The deletion of the final element causes the previously short penultimate to become long, and at the same time the ''anceps'' at the beginning of the metron becomes definitely short.In Latin
''Brevis in longo'' is less common in Virgil than in Homer, but is still found: : :, – u u , – u u , – – , – – , – u u , – – , :"the South Wind overwhelmed them, wrapping up both ship and men with water" It can also be found in iambics, as in following lines from Catullus which show a series of short-vowel endings in an iambic setting: : : : : :, u – u – , u – u – , u – u – , :"to you these things were and are very well known, :says the boat; originally, :it says, it was your mountain top on which it stood :and your sea in which it dipped its oars." Catullus, Propertius and Tibullus also occasionally allow a short-vowel ''brevis in longo'' at the end of a pentameter: : :: :, – – , – u u , – u u , – – , – u u , – – , ::, – – , – – , – , , – u u , – u u , – :"My darling, you declare to me that this love between us :will be delightful and everlasting" However, in Ovid, although words like ending with short vowel + consonant are very common at the end of a pentameter, words like which end with a short vowel are extremely rare. ''Brevis in longo'' is also found in the rhythmic sentence-endings favoured by orators known as . In a discussion of these, Cicero says: "It makes no difference whether the final word is a cretic (– u –) or a dactyl (– u u), since even in poetry it doesn't matter whether a final syllable is long or short." However, according to the teacher of rhetoric Quintilian, a spondaic ending such as "to confess" sounded stronger than a trochaic one such as "to fear": "I am well aware that a short syllable can stand for a long one in final position, because some of the silence which follows seems to be added to it; but when I consult my ears it seems to make a big difference whether the last syllable is truly long, or merely a short standing for a long."In Arabic
In classical Arabic, when a verse ends in an open vowel, the vowel is always lengthened in performance. If the vowel is ''-a'', it is always written with ''alif'', like any long ''-a''; if it is ''-i'' or ''-u'' it is usually omitted in writing, but still pronounced long. Thus a normally short vowel can stand in final position in metres such as the '' ṭawīl'', where the repeating pattern of the feet leads one to expect a long syllable at the end: :, u – x , u – x – , u – x , u – u – , Exactly as with Greek, a short penultimate becomes long when a line is made catalectic. Thus the most commonly used Arabic metre, the '' ṭawīl'', has normal and catalectic forms as follows: :, u – x , u – x – , u – x , u – u – , :, u – x , u – x – , u – u , u – – ,In Persian
In classical Persian, just as in Latin and Greek, poetic metres are quantitative, except that in addition to long and short syllables, Persian also has "overlong" syllables which are equivalent in length to long + short. The final syllable of any Persian line or hemistich is considered to be long. In this position, the difference between short, long, and overlong syllables is neutralised, and any of the three may be placed here. It is sometimes said that a final short vowel is lengthened in final position (which is possible), but Thiesen argues that in some cases at least a short vowel is retained, since in Hafez a final ''-e'' is almost never lengthened in normal positions, but is readily used at the end of a verse. The pronunciation of such endings by Persian speakers is also short. The lengthening of a penultimate short syllable when a line is made catalectic is found in Persian too; for example, if a metre in choriambic (– u u –) rhythm is shortened, the resulting ending is a cretic (– u –). The following are two different metres, one a shortened version of the other: :, – u u – , – u u – , – u u – , – u u – , :, – u u – , – u u – , – u – ,In Sanskrit
The final syllable of a line in Sanskrit poetry, in any metre, like those of Latin and Greek, is indifferent in quantity, that is, it may be long or short. Michael HahnSee also
* Prosody (Latin) * Prosody (Greek) * Arabic prosody * Persian metres * Catalectic * AncepsReferences
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