The Prosodic Theory of Gerard Manley HopkinsCatholic University of America Press, 1947 - 121 pagina's |
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Pagina 70
... feet which Hopkins finds in " Christabel " and even more freely in the ballad measure , he explains to Dixon as a ... feet with three - syllabled feet . The principle is that of balancing equal strengths , comparable to the classical ...
... feet which Hopkins finds in " Christabel " and even more freely in the ballad measure , he explains to Dixon as a ... feet with three - syllabled feet . The principle is that of balancing equal strengths , comparable to the classical ...
Pagina 103
... feet " out of which accentual verse arises are actually rhythmic groups , and through the combining of a certain num ... feet accord- ing to the various positions of the stress within the unit : Feet ( and the rhythms made out of them ) ...
... feet " out of which accentual verse arises are actually rhythmic groups , and through the combining of a certain num ... feet accord- ing to the various positions of the stress within the unit : Feet ( and the rhythms made out of them ) ...
Pagina 106
... feet of either two or three syllables ; sprung rhythm differs in that it " is measured by feet of from one to four syllables , regularly , and for particular effects any number of weak or slack syllables may be used . " 18 The groups in ...
... feet of either two or three syllables ; sprung rhythm differs in that it " is measured by feet of from one to four syllables , regularly , and for particular effects any number of weak or slack syllables may be used . " 18 The groups in ...
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accent according actually alliteration analysis attempts beat beauty believed Bridges cadence calls chap common complete considered correspondence counterpoint criticism describes developed Dialogue difference distinction Dixon edition effect elements emphatic English English verse equal equivalence essay example experiments explains expression factors falling feet felt figure finds follow foot Further Letters Gerard Manley Hopkins gives Ibid ideas important interest kind kins language later lecture notes length London marked meaning measure metre metrical Milton's mind namely nature never Note-books notes object outrides parallelism Patmore Patmore's pattern Poems poet poetic poetry possible practice Preface present Press principle problem Professor prose prosody quantity reader recognized regular relation remarks rhetoric rhythmic rules running says scansion slack sound speech sprung rhythm strength stress strong structure syllables tells theories thing thought true unit unity verse whole writes written wrote York