The Foreign Sources of Modern English Versification: With Especial Reference to the So-called Iambic Lines of 8 and 10 Syllables |
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Page 2
... respect to the various refinements to which this principle has been subjected , but it appears in them all only as a theoretical base . § 2. Syllabic verse . Probably the first important ad- vance from this crude stage of art is to be ...
... respect to the various refinements to which this principle has been subjected , but it appears in them all only as a theoretical base . § 2. Syllabic verse . Probably the first important ad- vance from this crude stage of art is to be ...
Page 14
... respects ( as will be pointed out hereafter ) he observes those laws with care : he was , moreover , a man of wide reading , and it is not easy to see how such a man could scan his lines in the excruciating manner indicated above . The ...
... respects ( as will be pointed out hereafter ) he observes those laws with care : he was , moreover , a man of wide reading , and it is not easy to see how such a man could scan his lines in the excruciating manner indicated above . The ...
Page 16
... respects Commodian is strictly attentive to quantity , and it seems almost perverse to accept any theory which reduces this la- borious strictness to " todter Zierrat " . Meyer himself points out ( p . 291 ) that of the 490 verses of ...
... respects Commodian is strictly attentive to quantity , and it seems almost perverse to accept any theory which reduces this la- borious strictness to " todter Zierrat " . Meyer himself points out ( p . 291 ) that of the 490 verses of ...
Page 29
... respect the conventions of prosody they also were especially anxious not to thrust then into the foreground . Further but perhaps more dubious evidence of the intention of these poets is found in the endings of their lines . In the hymn ...
... respect the conventions of prosody they also were especially anxious not to thrust then into the foreground . Further but perhaps more dubious evidence of the intention of these poets is found in the endings of their lines . In the hymn ...
Page 63
... respects different : but their verse - forms in general have been controlled by the same essential principles . Now Latin rhythmical hymns have been familiar to English poets of every generation since the time of Bede , and it seems not ...
... respects different : but their verse - forms in general have been controlled by the same essential principles . Now Latin rhythmical hymns have been familiar to English poets of every generation since the time of Bede , and it seems not ...
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Common terms and phrases
10th century 4th syllable accentual principle accentual rhythm accentual verse Adam of St Alexandrine Ambrosian hymns anapæstic arsis arsis and thesis Augustine Augustine's psalm Aurora lucis rutilat cæsura century Chaucer's church Commodian course dactyls dissyllables early example exhibit explanation fact familiar feet fixed cæsura foot form of verse Fortunatus French decasyllabic French octosyllabics French poet French verse Greek hemistich hexameters ictus imitation influence initial inversions Kawczynski King Horn language late Latin Latin hymns Latin rhythms Latin verse latter lines long syllables metre metrical Meyer modern English modern French number of accents number of syllables octosyllabics passage penults perhaps poem poetry polysyllables probably prose accent prosody purely syllabic quantitative verse quantity quoted read accentually regarded regular rhythmical rime Roman Schipper seems short syllables specimens spondee Stengel stress strictly style syllabic principle syllabic verse theory thesis tonic syllable trochaic trochees verse-end verse-forms versification words wrenched accent
Popular passages
Page 103 - O'ER the glad waters of the dark blue sea, Our thoughts as boundless, and our souls as free, Far as the breeze can bear, the billows foam, Survey our empire, and behold our home!
Page 49 - Ideo autem non aliquo carminis genere id fieri volui, ne me necessitas metrica ad aliqua verba quae vulgo minus sunt usitata compelleret.
Page 80 - More miserable. Both have sinn'd ; but thou Against God only, I against God and thee ; And to the place of judgment will return, There with my cries importune Heaven, that all The sentence, from thy head removed, may light On me, sole cause to thee of all this woe ; Me — me only, just object of his ire...
Page 11 - Bel auret corps, bellezour anima. Voldrent la veintre li Deo inimi, Voldrent la faire diaule servir.
Page 59 - Quo modo et ad instar iambici metri pulcherrime factus est hymnus ille praeclarus : rex aeterne domine, rerum creator omnium, qui eras ante saecula semper cum pâtre filius, et alii Ambrosiani non pauci. Item ad formam metri trochaici canunt hymnum de die iudicii per alphabetum : apparebit repentina dies magna domini, fur obscura velut nocte improvisos occupans.
Page 1 - And Lamech said unto his wives: " Adah and Zillah, hear my voice; Ye wives of Lamech, hearken unto my speech: For I have slain a man for wounding me, And a young man for bruising me: If Cain shall be avenged sevenfold, Truly Lamech seventy and sevenfold.
Page 9 - Ad perennis vitae fontem mens sitivit arida ; Claustra carnis praesto frangi clausa quaerit anima : Gliscit, ambit, eluctatur exul frui patria.
Page 104 - The Life of St. Cecilia, from MS. Ashmole 43 and MS. Cotton Tiberius E. VII, with Introduction, Variants, and Glossary. Bertha Ellen Lovewell, Ph.D.
Page 4 - THE OLD FAMILIAR FACES. I have had playmates, I have had companions, In my days of childhood, in my joyful school-days ; All, all are gone, the old familiar faces. I have been laughing, I have been carousing, Drinking late, sitting late, with my bosom cronies ; All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.
Page 27 - A solis ortus cardine | ad usque terrae limitem | Christum canamus principem | natum Maria virgine.