Catullus Catullus 61 is a wedding song consisting of 47 stanzas (with some lines missing) each with four glyconics followed by a pherecratean. It begins with an address to
Hymen, god of wedding ceremonies: : : : : : : – u – u u – u – (4x) : – u – u u – – :"Cultivator of
Mount Helicon, :son of
Urania, :you who seize a tender virgin for a husband, :o Hymenaeus Hymen, :o Hymen Hymenaeus." Catullus 34 is written in a similar metre, but with stanzas consisting of three glyconics + a pherecratean. The combination of a single glyconic and pherecratean is sometimes given the name
priapean (Latin: ). It is used in the
Appendix Vergiliana (Priapea 3), and in Catullus 17. Catullus 17, addressed to a certain village which held a festival on a dangerously shaky bridge across a marsh, begins as follows: : : – u – u u – u – | – u – u u – – :"O Colonia, who desire to hold a festival on a long bridge"
Horace The poet
Horace does not use glyconics on their own, but in combination with
asclepiad lines (a kind of expanded glyconic) and sometimes also with
pherecratean lines. An example is the following, which alternates glyconics with the lesser asclepiad: : : : : : – – – u u – u – (glyconic) : – – – u u – – u u – u – (lesser asclepiad) : – – – u u – u – : – – – u u – – u u – u – : "As long as I was pleasing to you, :and no better young man used to put : his arms round your white neck, :I flourished more happy than the king of the Persians." The various different combinations are referred to by modern scholars as "1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th asclepiad". However, different authors disagree as to which combination has which number.
Seneca The first two syllables of the line (known as an "aeolic base") are often a trochee (– u) in Catullus, but are usually standardised to a spondee (– –) in
Horace's version of the metre. Seneca in his tragedies has two different styles. In
Hercules Furens 875–94 he writes a chorus of glyconics with every line beginning with a spondee (– –), but in
Oedipus 882–914 every line begins with a trochee (– u). In one line in the latter play he contracts the two short syllables into a long one: : : : – u – u u – u – : – u – – – u – :"May a safe life convey me as it runs along by a middle way." ==Further reading==