Porson's Law: Difference between revisions

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This metrical law (which was later named after its creator)appeared originally in Porson's edition of Hecuba of Euripides. It's original phrasing was :" Nempe hanc regulam plerumque in senariis observabant Tragici, ut, si voce que Creticum pedem efficeret terminaretur versus, eamque vocem hypermonosyllabon praecederet, quintus pes iambus vel tribrachys esse deberet".
This metrical law (which was later named after its creator)appeared originally in Porson's edition of Hecuba of Euripides. It's original phrasing was :" Nempe hanc regulam plerumque in senariis observabant Tragici, ut, si voce que Creticum pedem efficeret terminaretur versus, eamque vocem hypermonosyllabon praecederet, quintus pes iambus vel tribrachys esse deberet".
In translation:" That is to say, the tragic poets followed this law most frequently in verses consisting of six feet (i.e. iambic trimeters). If a verse ends with a cretic metre and this metre is preceded by a word of more than one syllables, then the fifth foot of this verse must consist either an iambic or a tribrachys".
In translation:" That is to say, the tragic poets followed this law most frequently in verses consisting of six feet (i.e. iambic trimeters). If a verse ends with a cretic metre and this metre is preceded by a word of more than one syllables, then the fifth foot of this verse must be either an iambus or a tribrachys".


Regarding [[iambic trimeter]], [[Martin_Litchfield_West|Martin West]] defined Porson's Law as "when the anceps of the third [[metron]] is occupied by a long syllable, this syllable and the one following belong to the same word, unless one of them is a monosyllable." Accordingly, after a short [[anceps]] in the third metron, the beginning of a new word is avoided. Further he observed about the generality of the Law that "there are very few exceptions in tragedy, most of them textually suspect."
Regarding [[iambic trimeter]], [[Martin_Litchfield_West|Martin West]] defined Porson's Law as "when the anceps of the third [[metron]] is occupied by a long syllable, this syllable and the one following belong to the same word, unless one of them is a monosyllable." Accordingly, after a short [[anceps]] in the third metron, the beginning of a new word is avoided. Further he observed about the generality of the Law that "there are very few exceptions in tragedy, most of them textually suspect."

Revision as of 21:26, 23 May 2007

Porson's Law is a metrical law concerning bridge. It states that, in anceps-cretic or cretic-anceps meters, such as the iambic trimeter, no word-break may follow a long anceps, except in the case of a main caesura.

This metrical law (which was later named after its creator)appeared originally in Porson's edition of Hecuba of Euripides. It's original phrasing was :" Nempe hanc regulam plerumque in senariis observabant Tragici, ut, si voce que Creticum pedem efficeret terminaretur versus, eamque vocem hypermonosyllabon praecederet, quintus pes iambus vel tribrachys esse deberet". In translation:" That is to say, the tragic poets followed this law most frequently in verses consisting of six feet (i.e. iambic trimeters). If a verse ends with a cretic metre and this metre is preceded by a word of more than one syllables, then the fifth foot of this verse must be either an iambus or a tribrachys".

Regarding iambic trimeter, Martin West defined Porson's Law as "when the anceps of the third metron is occupied by a long syllable, this syllable and the one following belong to the same word, unless one of them is a monosyllable." Accordingly, after a short anceps in the third metron, the beginning of a new word is avoided. Further he observed about the generality of the Law that "there are very few exceptions in tragedy, most of them textually suspect."

References

  • M. L. West, Introduction to Greek Metre (Oxford 1987) page 25.