Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Third Series
Fragment ID: 21027
Lines from “Ilion”, an unfinished poem in English hexameter (quantitative):
|||||||||||||||||||||
Triumph and agony changing hands in a desperate
measure
Paced and turned, as a man and a maiden
trampling the grasses
Face and turn and they laugh for their joy in the
dance and each other.
These were gods and they trampled lives. But
though Time is immortal,
Mortal his works are and ways and the anguish
ends like the rapture.
Artisans satisfied now with their works in the
plan of the transience,
Beautiful, wordless, august, the Olympians turned
from the carnage.
Vast and unmoved they rose up mighty as eagles
ascending,
Fanning the world with their wings. In the bliss
of a sorrowless ether
Calm they reposed from their deeds and their
hearts were inclined to the Stillness.
Less now the burden laid on our race by their
star-white presence,
There was a respite from height; the winds
breathed freer, delivered.
But their immortal content from the struggle
titanic departed.
Vacant the noise of the battle roared like a sea
on the shingles;
Wearily hunted the spears their quarry, strength
was disheartened;
Silence increased with the march of the months
on the tents of the leaguer.
The principle is a line of six feet, preponderantly dactylic, but anywhere the dactyl can be replaced by a spondee; but in English hexameter a trochee can be substituted, as the spondee comes in rarely in English rhythm. The line is divided by a caesura, and the variations of the caesura are essential to the harmony of the verse.
An example of Alcaics from the “Jivanmukta” (Alcaics is a Greek, metre invented by the poet Alcaeus):
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|||||||||||||||||||||||
But in English, variations (modulations) are allowed, only one has to keep to the general plan.
Swinburne’s Sapphics are to be scanned thus:
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Two trochees at the beginning, two trochees at the end, a dactyl separating the two trochaic parts of the line – that is the Sapphics in its first three lines, then a fourth line composed of a dactyl and a trochaic.