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ALCAICS

Volume 1 · 173 words · 1815 Edition

in Ancient Poetry, a denomination given to several kinds of verse, from Alcaeus, their inventor.

The first kind consists of five feet, viz. a spondee, or iambic; an iambic; a long syllable; a dactyl; another dactyle: such is the following verse of Horace:

Omnes, coelum cognovit, omnium Verfa, tur urpha | ferine | oceae | Sors exitura.

The second kind consists of two dactyls and two trochees: as,

Exilium impetus | tura | cymbae.

Besides these two, which are called dactylic Alcaics, there is another simply styled Alcaic; consisting of an epitrise; a choriambus; another choriambus; and a bacchius: the following is of this species,

Cur timet flavum Tiberim tan gere, cur | olivum?

ALCAIC Ode, a kind of manly ode, composed of several strophes, each consisting of four verses; the two first of which are always alcaics of the first kind; the third verse is a dimeter hypercatalectic, or consisting of four feet and a long syllable; and the fourth verse is an alcaic of the second kind. The following strophe is