Anacreontic An early example of anaclasis in an
ionic metre is found in the fragments of the poet
Anacreon (late 6th century BC), who would often mix
anacreontic and pure ionic dimeters in the same poem. D. S. Raven quotes this example: : : : : :u u – – | u u – – (pure ionic) :u u – u | – u – – (with anaclasis) :"And there is no longer much time :of sweet life left" The anacreontic continued to be a popular metre into
Byzantine times. In this period, there was a tendency for the word accent to follow the metre. According to
Martin West, in the case of the anacreontic, in Byzantine times the accent tended to fall on the 4th and especially on the 7th position of the line: u u – u′ – u –′ –. This would have given it a strongly syncopated rhythm, different from the alternating rhythm of an iambic line. Not all modern metrical specialists agree that the anacreontic derives from the ionic. According to the metricians Chris Golston and
Tomas Riad, the anacreontic is the more basic rhythm and the ionic is derived from it. Similarly Martin West writes: "We are hampered by not knowing whether u u – u – u – – and u u – – u u – – are of separate origin, and if not, which was primary."
Galliambic The metre most closely associated with the term "anaclasis" is the
galliambic, the music sung by the eunuch devotees of the goddess
Cybele. The best known example is
Catullus's
Attis (poem 63). It consists of two anacreontics, the second one
catalectic and with a
resolution in the last metron: : : u u – u | – u – – || u u – u u u u – : "Attis, after sailing over the high seas in a swift ship..." The first half has anaclasis, but the
resolution in the second half makes it difficult to say if it has anaclasis or not. Apart from two lines quoted by Hephaestion, neither of which seems to have anaclasis, no poems in this metre survive in ancient Greek.
Sotadean A third metre using anaclasis is the
sotadean, named after the 3rd century BC poet
Sotades. It is found in both Greek and Latin. The metre is usually analysed in terms of the (– – uu). : (Petronius) : – – u u | – – u u | – u – u | – – :"Three times I seized the terrible two-edged axe with my hand" Sometimes, in addition to the 3rd metron, the trochaic rhythm is also found in the first or second metron: : (Plautus) : – – u u | – u – u | – u – u | – – :"whatever happens to be pleasing to a man, he thinks it's possible" In another variation, the trochaic or ionic 6-mora metron is replaced by a 7-mora metron such as – u – – or – – – u. As with anacreontic poems, sotadean lines are sometimes mixed in the same poem with lines of pure ionic metre. Since it is not known whether the ionic or the anacreontic was the original metre, it is unclear whether the sotadean should be thought of as being basically ionic with anaclasis in the second half, or basically trochaic with anaclasis in the first half. ==Aeolic metres==