English Verse: Specimens Illustrating Its Principles and HistoryH. Holt, 1903 - 459 páginas |
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Página 137
... sense of the words ; that the most melodious verse cannot be appreciated if in a foreign language , unless read with particular expressiveness ; and that the pleasure derived from what we roughly call melodious or harmonious verses is ...
... sense of the words ; that the most melodious verse cannot be appreciated if in a foreign language , unless read with particular expressiveness ; and that the pleasure derived from what we roughly call melodious or harmonious verses is ...
Página 393
... sense of variation of stress , even when there is no real variation , as in the tick - tack of the clock . He also ... sense of rhythm , see Mr. T. L. Bolton's account of his experiments relating to the subject , given in the Ameri- can ...
... sense of variation of stress , even when there is no real variation , as in the tick - tack of the clock . He also ... sense of rhythm , see Mr. T. L. Bolton's account of his experiments relating to the subject , given in the Ameri- can ...
Página 429
... sense that metrical words live in the memory . This is , of course , a most important fact ; but I am here dealing only with elements of effect that enter into the actual moment of enjoyment . . . . It is a sense of combined parts , and ...
... sense that metrical words live in the memory . This is , of course , a most important fact ; but I am here dealing only with elements of effect that enter into the actual moment of enjoyment . . . . It is a sense of combined parts , and ...
Contenido
ACCENT AND TIME | 3 |
Irregular intervals | 13 |
THE FOOT AND THE VERSE | 24 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 25 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
accent alexandrine alliteration anapestic Anglo-Saxon antistrophe ballade beauty blank verse called century cesura Chapters on English Chaucer classical consonants dactylic death decasyllabic doth Dryden Elizabethan end-stopped English Metre English poetry English verse Essay eyes feet five-stress foot four-stress French Gosse half-line hand harmony hath heart heaven heroic couplet hexameters iambic imitation irregular Italian Keats King language Latin light syllables long line lyrical measure melody metre metrical metrist Middle English Milton modern natural o'er ottava rima pause Pindaric poem poet poetic Pope Primer of English Professor Corson prose quoted reader regular rhyme rhythm rhythmical rime rondeau run-on satires says Schipper seems sense septenary sestet SHAKSPERE sing song sonnet soul sound Spenser spondee stanza stress strophe sweet SWINBURNE syllables TENNYSON thee thing thou thought trochaic trochee unrimed unto versification Villanelle vowel Waller wind words þat