Dictionary Definition
epigram n : a witty saying [syn: quip]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From epigramma < (epigramma) "inscription".Pronunciation
- /ˈɛpɪgɹæm/, /"EpIgr
Extensive Definition
An epigram is a short poem, often with a clever twist at
the end or a concise and witty statement. Derived from the Greek
epi-gramma, or "written upon", the literary device has been
employed for over two millennia.
The Greek tradition of
epigrams began as poems inscribed on votive offerings at
sanctuaries — including statues of athletes — and on funerary
monuments, for example "Go tell it to the Spartans, passer-by…".
These original epigrams did the same job as a short prose text
might have done, but in verse. Epigram became a literary genre in
the Hellenistic
period, probably developing out of scholarly collections of
inscriptional epigrams.
Though modern epigrams are
usually thought of as very short, Greek literary epigram was not
always as short as later examples, and the divide between 'epigram'
and 'elegy' is sometimes
indistinct (they share a characteristic metre, elegiac
couplets); all the same, the origin of the genre in inscription
exerted a residual pressure to keep things concise. Many of the
characteristic types of literary epigram look back to inscriptional
contexts, particularly funerary epigram, which in the Hellenistic
era becomes a literary exercise. Other types look instead to the
new performative context which epigram acquired at this time, even
as it made the move from stone to papyrus: the Greek symposium. Many 'sympotic'
epigrams combine sympotic and funerary elements — they tell their
readers (or listeners) to drink and live for today because life is
short.
We also think of epigram as
having a 'point' — that is, the poem ends in a punchline or
satirical twist. By no means do all Greek epigrams behave this way;
many are simply descriptive. We associate epigram with 'point'
because the European epigram tradition takes the Latin poet
Martial as
its principal model; he copied and adapted Greek models
(particularly the contemporary poets Lucillius and
Nicarchus)
selectively and in the process redefined the genre, aligning it
with the indigenous Roman tradition of 'satura', hexameter satire, as practised by (among
others) his contemporary Juvenal. Greek
epigram was actually much more diverse, as the Milan
Papyrus now indicates.
Our main source for Greek
literary epigram is the Greek
Anthology, a compilation from the 10th century AD based on
older collections. It contains epigrams ranging from the Hellenistic
period through the Imperial period and Late
Antiquity into the compiler's own Byzantine
era - a thousand years of short elegiac texts on every topic under
the sun. The Anthology includes one book of Christian
epigrams.
Ancient Roman
Roman epigrams owe much to
their Greek predecessors and contemporaries. Roman epigrams,
however, were more often satirical than Greek ones, and at times
used obscene language for effect. Latin epigrams could be composed
as inscriptions or graffiti, such as this one from
Pompeii,
which exists in several versions and seems from its inexact meter
to have been composed by a less educated person. Its content, of
course, makes it clear how popular such poems were:
- Admiror, O paries, te non cecidisse
ruinis
- qui tot scriptorum taedia sustineas.
- I'm astonished, wall, that you haven't
collapsed into ruins,
- since you're holding up the weary verse of so many poets.
However, in the literary
world, epigrams were most often gifts to patrons or entertaining
verse to be published, not inscriptions. Many Roman writers seem to
have composed epigrams, including Domitius
Marsus, whose collection 'Cicuta' (now lost) was named after
the poisonous plant Cicuta for its
biting wit, and Lucan, more
famous for his epic Pharsalia.
Authors whose epigrams survive include Catullus, who
wrote both invectives and love epigrams – his poem 85 is
one of the latter.
- Odi et amo. Quare id faciam fortasse
requiris.
- Nescio, sed fieri sentio, et excrucior.
- I hate and I love. Perhaps you're asking why
I do this?
- I don't know, but I feel it happening, and it's torture.
The master of the Latin
epigram, however, is Martial. His
technique relies heavily on the satirical poem with a joke in the
last line, thus drawing him closer to the modern idea of epigram as
a genre. Here he defines his genre against a (probably fictional)
critic (in the latter half of 2.77):
- Disce quod ignoras: Marsi doctique
Pedonis
- saepe duplex unum pagina tractat opus.
- Non sunt longa quibus nihil est quod demere possis,
- sed tu, Cosconi, disticha longa facis.
- saepe duplex unum pagina tractat opus.
- Learn what you don't know: one work of
(Domitius) Marsus or learned Pedo
- often stretches out over a doublesided page.
- A work isn't long if you can't take anything out of it,
- but you, Cosconius, write even a couplet too long.
- often stretches out over a doublesided page.
Poets known for their epigrams
whose work has been lost include Cornificia.
English
In early English literature the short couplet poem was dominated by the poetic epigram and proverb, especially in the translations of the Bible and the Greek and Roman poets. Since 1600, two successive lines of verse that rhyme with each other, known as a couplet featured as a part of the longer sonnet form, most notably in William Shakespeare's sonnets. Sonnet 76 is an excellent example. The two line poetic form as a closed couplet was also used by William Blake in his poem Auguries of Innocence and later by Byron (Don Juan (Byron) XIII); John Gay (Fables); Alexander Pope (An Essay on Man). In Victorian times the epigram couplet was often used by the prolific American poet Emily Dickinson, her poem no. 1534 is a typical example of her eleven poetic epigrams .The novelist George Eliot also included couplets throughout her writings, her best example is shown within her sequenced sonnet poem entitled BROTHER AND SISTER each of the eleven sequenced sonnet ends with a couplet.In her sonnets, the preceding lead-in-line, to the couplet ending of each,could be thought of as a title for the couplet, and as is exampled in Sonnet VIII of the sequence.In the early 20th century the
rhymed epigram Couplet form developed into a fixed verse image
form, with an integral title as the third line, when Adelaide
Crapsey codified the Couplet form into a two line rhymed verse
of ten syllables per line with her
image couplet poem first published, 1915 in Rochester NY by The
Manas Press.
ON SEEING WEATHER-BEATEN TREES. By the 1930s this five line
cinquain verse form
became widely known in the poetry of the Scottish poet William
Soutar. Originally labelled epigrams but later identified as
image cinquains in the style of Adelaide
Crapsey. In the last decade of the 20th century the American
poet Denis Garrison developed a two line 17 syllable variation of
the image couplet with his http://ichthys-couplets.blogspot.com/crystalline,
where euphony is the key component and a title thereto
optional.
Poetic epigrams
- What is an Epigram? A dwarfish whole;
- Its body brevity, and wit its soul.
- — Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Its body brevity, and wit its soul.
- Little strokes
- Fell great oaks.
- — Benjamin Franklin
- Fell great oaks.
- Here lies my wife: here let her lie!
- Now she's at rest — and so am I.
- — John Dryden
- Now she's at rest — and so am I.
- I am His Highness' dog at Kew;
- Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?
- — Alexander Pope
- Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?
- I'm tired of Love: I'm still more tired of
Rhyme.
- But Money gives me pleasure all the time.
- — Hilaire Belloc
- But Money gives me pleasure all the time.
- I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am
free.
- — Nikos Kazantzakis
In the early part of the 20th
century a short image form of the Poetic epigrams was created by
Adelaide
Crapsey whereby she codified this Couplet form into a
two line rhymed verse of ten syllables per line with an integral
title as exampled by her image poem published in 1915 ..'ON SEEING
WEATHER-BEATEN TREES'.In more recent times the American poet Denis
Garrison developed a two line 17 syllable variation of the couplet
which he labelled the crystalline. The key
component of the latter is euphony.
Non-poetic epigrams
Occasionally, simple and witty statements, though not poetical per se, may also be considered epigrams, such as one attributed to Oscar Wilde: "I can resist everything except temptation." This shows the epigram's tendency towards paradox. Dorothy Parker's witty one-liners can be considered epigrams. Also, Macdonald Carey's legendary line "Like sands through the hourglass, so are the days of our lives" can be considered an epigram, as the meaning of life is concisely explained in a simile.The term is sometimes used for
particularly pointed or much-quoted quotations taken from longer
works.
epigram in Catalan:
Epigrama
epigram in Czech:
Epigram
epigram in German:
Epigramm
epigram in Spanish:
Epigrama
epigram in Esperanto:
Epigramo
epigram in French:
Épigramme
epigram in Galician:
Epigrama
epigram in Croatian:
Epigram
epigram in Interlingua
(International Auxiliary Language Association):
Epigramma
epigram in Italian:
Epigramma
epigram in Hungarian:
Epigramma
epigram in Japanese:
エピグラム
epigram in Dutch:
Epigram
epigram in Norwegian:
Epigram
epigram in Polish:
Epigramat
epigram in Romanian:
Epigramă
epigram in Russian:
Эпиграмма
epigram in Slovak:
Epigram
epigram in Slovenian:
Epigram
epigram in Finnish:
Epigrammi
epigram in Swedish:
Epigram
epigram in Ukrainian:
Епіграма
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Atticism, English sonnet,
Horatian ode, Italian sonnet, Petrarchan sonnet, Pindaric ode,
Sapphic ode, Shakespearean sonnet, abridgment, adage, alba, ana, anacreontic, analects, aphorism, apophthegm, apothegm, axiom, balada, ballad, ballade, bon mot, boutade, bright idea, bright
thought, brilliant idea, bucolic, byword, canso, catchword, chanson, clerihew, collected sayings,
conceit, crack, current saying, dictate, dictum, dirge, distich, dithyramb, double entendre,
eclogue, elegy, epic, epithalamium, epode, epopee, epopoeia, epos, equivoque, expression, facetiae, flash of wit, flight
of wit, georgic,
ghazel, gibe, gnome, golden saying, haiku, happy thought, idyll, jeu de mots, jingle, limerick, lyric, madrigal, maxim, monody, moral, mot, motto, narrative poem, nasty
crack, nursery rhyme, ode,
oracle, palinode, paronomasia, pastoral, pastoral elegy,
pastorela, pastourelle, persiflage, phrase, pithy saying, play of
wit, play on words, pleasantry, poem, precept, prescript, prothalamium, proverb, proverbial saying,
proverbs, pun, quip, quips and cranks, repartee, retort, rhyme, riposte, rondeau, rondel, roundel, roundelay, sally, satire, saw, saying, scintillation, sentence, sententious
expression, sestina,
sloka, smart crack, smart
saying, snappy comeback, song, sonnet, sonnet sequence, stock
saying, stroke of wit, sutra, tanka, teaching, tenso, tenzone, text, threnody, triolet, troubadour poem, turn
of phrase, turn of thought, verse, verselet, versicle, villanelle, virelay, wisdom, wisdom literature, wise
saying, wisecrack,
witticism, word, words of
wisdom