Gaudia nostra: a hexameter-ending in elegy

Classical Quarterly 45 (02):500- (1995)
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Abstract

In an earlier article in Classical Quarterly, S. J. Harrison explored the varying frequency of hexameter-endings of the type discordia taetra, where a noun that ends in short a is followed by its epithet with the same termination. It appears from this that while most pre-Augustan poets allow a fairly high frequency of such verse-endings , some Augustan poets and their imitators show a distinct tendency to avoid them , while some almost exclude them altogether . The hexameters of elegiac poetry might be subject to the same restriction; the following are figures for elegy from Catullus to Martial

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Discordia Taetra: The History of a Hexameter-Ending.S. J. Harrison - 1991 - Classical Quarterly 41 (1):138-149.

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