I Am offering to readers a version of the Attis, which I read at the Leeds meeting of the Classical Association in 1962. It is composed in the same metre as the Latin, according to the rules (and practice) of quantity in English. The metre is galliambic; the line consists of four ionic metra, the last syncopated or catalectic. The ionic metron, as two shorts and two longs, is familiar in Horace's Neobule
miserarum est neque amori dare ludum neque dulci—
but the first and the last syllables of the metron may be either long or short; this admits the anacreontic dimeter, a favourite variant in Greek lyrics—
super alta / uectus Attis …
Catullus' galliambic consists of two such anacreontics—
itaque ut domum Cybelles // tetigeṙe lassulae [pause]. (35.)