extra long syllable. The former half consists of two metres, dactyls or spondees; the latter half must be two dactyls. The following is a rhyming specimen in English:
   Would you be happy an hour, dine well; for a day, tend a wedding;
   If for a week, buy a house; if for a month, wed a spouse;
   Would you be happy six months, buy a horse; if for twelve, start a carriage;
   Happiness long as you live, only contentment can give.
   E. C. B.
   This metre might be introduced, and would suit epigrams and short poems.

Hexameter Verse A line of poetry consisting of six measures, the fifth being a dactyl and the sixth either a spondee or a trochee. The other four may be either dactyls or spondees. Homer's two epic poems and Virgil's Æneid are written in hexameters. The latter begins thus:
   Arms and the | man I | sing, who | driven from | Troy by ill-| fortune
   First into | Italy | came, as | far as the | shores of La-| vina.
   Much was he harassed by land, much tossed on the pitiless ocean,
   All by the force of the gods, and relentless anger of Juno.
   E. C. B.
   Or rhyming with the Latin,

"Arma virumque cano Trojæ qui primus ab oris."
Arms and the man I sing who first from the Phrygian shore is.

"Italiam Fato profugus, Lavinaque venit ..."
Tossed to the land of Lavina, although Jove's queen didn't mean it. E. C. B.
   Longfellow's Evangeline is in English hexameters.

  By PanEris using Melati.

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