1st Edition

Key to Latin Hexameter Verse An Aid to Composition

By S. E. Winbolt Copyright 1903
    76 Pages
    by Routledge

    76 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1903. Samuel Edward Winbolt (1868-1944) spent his entire working life from 1892 to 1926 teaching classics at his old school, Christ's Hospital. In his later years, he was best known for his work on Romano-British history and archaeology; but Latin Hexameter Verse, published in 1903, is the book by which he deserves to be remembered and which has earned him his place in the history of classical scholarship. Its subtitle and its stated aim of offering 'help to fifth and sixth forms, and undergraduates at universities' belie its true and continuing importance. Winbolt's detailed, sensitive and copiously illustrated analysis of the technique of Latin verse-writing still provides the most accessible and illuminating guide to a just appreciation of the craftsmanship which went to the formation of the Latin hexameter, ' the stateliest measure ever moulded by the lips of man'.

    Preface; 1. Pauses; 2. Caesuras; 3. The beginning of the verse; 4. The end of the verse; 5. The meeting of vowels, consonants, and composite sounds; 6. Metrical conveniences; 7. Rhythmical structures; 8. Descriptive verse, etc.; Exercises; Appendix; Key to exercises in Latin Hexameter Verse.

    Biography

    S.E.Winbolt