| William Hone - 1827 - 858 páginas
...a thousand of his readers have any notion how his lines are to be read. To read Dryden, Pope, 8cc. you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...time, and discover the time of each word by the sense and passion." Having presumed on the wonted indulgence of friendship, by this transcription from the... | |
| William Hone - 1830 - 868 páginas
...in a thousand of his readers have any notion how his lines are to be read. To read Dryden, Pope, &c. you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...time, and discover the time of each word by the sense and passion." Having presumed on the wonted indulgence of friendship, by this transcription from the... | |
| William Hone - 1837 - 874 páginas
...a thousand of his readers have any notion how his lines are to be reac). To read Dryden, Pope, &c. you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...time, and discover the time of each word by the sense and passion." Having presumed on the wonted indulgence of friendship, by this transcription from the... | |
| William Hone - 1837 - 936 páginas
...a thousand of his readers have any notion how his lines are to be read. To read Dryden, Pope, ice. you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...time, and discover the time of each word by the sense and passion." Having presumed on the wonted indulgence of friendship, by this transcription from the... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1853 - 440 páginas
...historic of a by-gone use. NOTES ON DONNE'S POEMS* Versification of Donne. To road Dryden, Pope, &c., you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...discover the Time of each word by the sense of Passion. Doubtless, all the copies I have ever seen of Donne's Poems are grievously misprinted. Wonderful that... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1853 - 580 páginas
...historic of a by-gone use. NOTES ON DONNE'S POEMS.* Versification of Donne. To read Dryden, Pope, &c., you need only count syllables ; but to read Donne...discover the Time of each word by the sense of Passion. Doubtless, all the copies I have ever seen of Doune's Poems are grievously misprinted. Wonderful that... | |
| John Donne - 1895 - 326 páginas
...phrase of Donne's own) to " redress rough lines and make verse song." In fine, Coleridge says truly: "To read Dryden, Pope, etc., you need only count syllables;...time of each word by the sense of passion. ... In poems where the writer thinks, and expects the reader to do so, the sense must be understood to ascertain... | |
| John Donne - 1905 - 116 páginas
...apostrophes, and so miss the accent.' Donne sometimes moulded his verse more by the sense than by the sound, and used a license in versification strange to less...into two divisions, the first being of those written when one mistress after another enthralled the youthful poet's susceptible fancy in a transient bondage,... | |
| John Donne - 1905 - 118 páginas
...apostrophes, and so miss the accent.' Donne sometimes moulded his verse more by the sense than by the sound, and used a license in versification strange to less...into two divisions, the first being of those written when one mistress after another enthralled the youthful poet's susceptible fancy in a transient bondage,... | |
| Wightman Fletcher Melton - 1906 - 236 páginas
...remained fixed in the mind of Coleridge : ' To read Dryden, Pope, etc., you need only count syllables 7~) but to read Donne you must measure time, and discover the time of each word by the sense of the passion . . . [~Tn poems where the writer thinks, and expects the reader to dotso, the sense must... | |
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