English Verse: Specimens Illustrating Its Principles and HistoryH. Holt, 1903 - 459 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 73
Página 266
... thoughts appear : And every thought did show so lively in mine eyes , That now I sighed , and then I smiled , as cause of thought doth rise . ( EARL OF SURREY : How no Age is Content with his Own Estate , in Tottel's Songs and Sonnets ...
... thoughts appear : And every thought did show so lively in mine eyes , That now I sighed , and then I smiled , as cause of thought doth rise . ( EARL OF SURREY : How no Age is Content with his Own Estate , in Tottel's Songs and Sonnets ...
Página 428
... thought , like clear glass , becomes - even as that becomes — by art's adjustments and the moulding of measured form , a lens , where the thought takes fire as it passes . The poet speaks through a medium which seems to intensify the ...
... thought , like clear glass , becomes - even as that becomes — by art's adjustments and the moulding of measured form , a lens , where the thought takes fire as it passes . The poet speaks through a medium which seems to intensify the ...
Página 433
... thought . Such is the test of genuineness , the underlying principle being that the masterful words of all poetic tongues are for the most part in both their open and consonantal sounds related to their mean- ings , so that with the ...
... thought . Such is the test of genuineness , the underlying principle being that the masterful words of all poetic tongues are for the most part in both their open and consonantal sounds related to their mean- ings , so that with the ...
Contenido
ACCENT AND TIME | 3 |
Irregular intervals | 13 |
THE FOOT AND THE VERSE | 24 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 25 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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