The Technique of English Non-dramatic Blank VerseFolcroft Press, 1970 - 129 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 20
Pagina 2
... equal intervals of time . The example thus succeeds in giving , if not a definition of verse , at least the essential material for one . Stated formally , this would be : " English verse consists of speech in which stresses occur at ...
... equal intervals of time . The example thus succeeds in giving , if not a definition of verse , at least the essential material for one . Stated formally , this would be : " English verse consists of speech in which stresses occur at ...
Pagina 4
... equal , but only nearly enough equal to seem so to the ear . Needless to say , the sense of hearing , like every other human faculty , is not accurate , but is con- tent to let approximation pass for perfection . This is particularly ...
... equal , but only nearly enough equal to seem so to the ear . Needless to say , the sense of hearing , like every other human faculty , is not accurate , but is con- tent to let approximation pass for perfection . This is particularly ...
Pagina 8
... equal . We are able to do this because , seeing the passage printed as verse , we know from experience what is expected of us . To this slight degree vision is involved in verse . The part played by the eye is , however , comparatively ...
... equal . We are able to do this because , seeing the passage printed as verse , we know from experience what is expected of us . To this slight degree vision is involved in verse . The part played by the eye is , however , comparatively ...
Inhoudsopgave
SIMPLE PHRASING | 11 |
VARIATION OF THE UNSTRESSED SYLLABLE | 23 |
PAUSES | 29 |
Copyright | |
16 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
alliteration anacrusis Ancient Mariner balance ballad meter blank verse caesura CHAPTER common considered consonants couplet definite dipodic verse dissyllabic verse division effect English verse Essay on Criticism euphony examples fact feel five-foot line foot four free verse frequently heavy unstressed syllables iambic illustrated important internal rime Kipling language latter light stressed syllables line groupings line structure loSo lyrical marked Masefield's means merely metrical pause metrical structure metrical variation metrist monosyllabic feet monotonous natural number of syllables occur onomatopoetic ordinarily ordinary oSol ottava rima passage phonetic phrases poem poetic poetry poets Pope possible practice printing prose quatrain reader refrain regular represented rhythm Richard III rime scheme sense pause sestet song sonnet sound speech Spenserian stanza stanza stanzaic style ta-tumm tercet thee thou tion trisyllabic feet trisyllabic substitution trisyllabic verse trochaic unrimed usage variation varied variety verse paragraph versification vowel words writing