The Laws of Verse: Or Principles of Versification Exemplified in Metrical Translations, Together with an Annotated Reprint of the Inaugural Presidential Address to the Mathematical and Physical Section of the British Association at Exeter |
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Page 33
... succession ( in a sort of irregular arc of a circle ) from Maecenas ' Belvedere , as he turned his gaze further and further away from Horace's farm : an ethical and geographical refutation ( if any were needed ) of the gratuitous ...
... succession ( in a sort of irregular arc of a circle ) from Maecenas ' Belvedere , as he turned his gaze further and further away from Horace's farm : an ethical and geographical refutation ( if any were needed ) of the gratuitous ...
Page 45
... succession of allied sounds ( in especial , though not exclusively , vowel sounds ) , where the continuity is like that of the colours and tints in the solar spectrum , and the pleasure like that we feel in watching a sunset or seeing a ...
... succession of allied sounds ( in especial , though not exclusively , vowel sounds ) , where the continuity is like that of the colours and tints in the solar spectrum , and the pleasure like that we feel in watching a sunset or seeing a ...
Page 56
... succession , and we have all read in Dickens of the Mrs. General who recommended Little Dorrit , in order to give a good form to her lips , to say sometimes to herself , before entering a room , ' papa , potatos , poultry , prunes and ...
... succession , and we have all read in Dickens of the Mrs. General who recommended Little Dorrit , in order to give a good form to her lips , to say sometimes to herself , before entering a room , ' papa , potatos , poultry , prunes and ...
Page 67
... succession . I believe the safer rule to be that in general a trochee should only occur at the beginning of a line , or after a pause or close of a period , or when the second part of the foot is a monosyllable or ends a word , the ...
... succession . I believe the safer rule to be that in general a trochee should only occur at the beginning of a line , or after a pause or close of a period , or when the second part of the foot is a monosyllable or ends a word , the ...
Page 68
... succession of accentual dactyls . He rightly understands ( collected works , vol . ii . , p . 242 ) , that crime at the end of the fourth line , and tell at the end of all , are to be understood as what he calls ' cœsu- ras ; ' in plain ...
... succession of accentual dactyls . He rightly understands ( collected works , vol . ii . , p . 242 ) , that crime at the end of the fourth line , and tell at the end of all , are to be understood as what he calls ' cœsu- ras ; ' in plain ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent Alcaic stanza algebra anapaests Anastomosis Athenaeum Club Bactra beautiful believe brow C. M. Ingleby Chromatic conception Conington's crotchet diphthong disclaimed Edgar Poe English Europa exposition expression eyes faculty fair feel form of sensibility form of thought forms of intuition fraudes G. H. LEWES geometry GEORGE HENRY LEWES give induction Ingleby Intuition and Thought intuition without thought J. J. SYLVESTER Kant Kant's doctrine language Lewes Maecenas mathe mathematical mathematician matter meaning metre Metric mind notion o'er observation opinion original passage Philosophical phonetic syzygy principle priori Professor Newman Professor Sylvester Pure Reason quadric quartic quaver readers of Nature reading reference regard rendering rhyme semiquavers sense sensuous impression soul sound speak of Space spondee stanza syllable Symptosis Synectic syzygetic syzygy term thee theory thine thou tion transcendental translation trochee Tyrrhenian verse versification vowel word
Popular passages
Page 68 - In colour though varied, in beauty may vie, And the purple of Ocean is deepest in dye; Where the virgins are soft as the roses they twine, And all, save the spirit of man, is divine? Tis the clime of the East; 'tis the land of the Sun — Can he smile on such deeds as his children have done? Oh! wild as the accents of lovers' farewell Are the hearts which they bear, and the tales which they tell.
Page 68 - Wax faint o'er the gardens of gul in her bloom, Where the citron and olive are fairest of fruit, And the voice of the nightingale never is mute , Where the tints of the earth , and the hues of the sky , In colour though varied, in beauty may vie...
Page 28 - Quodcunque retro est, efficiet neque Diffinget infectumque reddet, Quod fugiens semel hora vexit.
Page 67 - KNOW ye the land where the cypress and myrtle Are emblems of deeds that are done in their clime? Where the rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, Now melt into sorrow, now madden to crime...
Page 49 - Israel's scatter'd race ; For, taking root, it there remains In solitary grace : It cannot quit its place of birth, It will not live in other earth. But we must wander witheringly, In other lands to die; And where our fathers...
Page 108 - is that study which knows nothing of observation, nothing of induction, nothing of experiment, nothing of causation.
Page 117 - Were it not unbecoming to dilate on one's personal experience, I could tell a story of almost romantic interest about my own latest researches in a field where Geometry, Algebra, and the Theory of Numbers melt in a surprising manner into one another, like sunset tints or the colours of the dying dolphin, "the last still loveliest...
Page 120 - I should rejoice to see mathematics taught with that life and animation which the presence and example of her young and buoyant sister could not fail to impart, short roads preferred to long ones, Euclid honorably shelved or buried "deeper than did ever plummet sound...
Page 139 - intellectualised these forms of the sensibility " (Meiklejohn's Translation of the " Critick," p. 198) : and lest the import of this assertion should be mistaken, he explicitly tells us that " Space and Time are not merely forms of sensuous intuition, but intuitions themselves" (Meiklejohn's Trans., p. 98): that is, sensuous intuitions, as he has been just before asserting that all human intuitions must be. It is precisely on this distinction of pure sensibility and pure thought that Kant founds...