The English of Shakespeare: Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius CaesarE. Ginn, 1871 - 386 страници |
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Страница 18
... verse and punctuation affecting the sense ) which must be admitted to be either clearly wrong , or in the highest de- gree suspicious , probably amounts to not less than twenty on an average per page , or about twenty thousand in the ...
... verse and punctuation affecting the sense ) which must be admitted to be either clearly wrong , or in the highest de- gree suspicious , probably amounts to not less than twenty on an average per page , or about twenty thousand in the ...
Страница 28
... verse is a thing altogether dis- tinct from the music of verse . The one is matter of rule , the other of taste and feeling . No rules can be given for the production of music , or of the musical , any more than for the production of ...
... verse is a thing altogether dis- tinct from the music of verse . The one is matter of rule , the other of taste and feeling . No rules can be given for the production of music , or of the musical , any more than for the production of ...
Страница 29
... Verse is sometimes the more effective for being unmusical . The mechani- cal law or form is universally indispensable . It is that which constitutes the verse . It may be regarded as the substance ; musical character , as the accident ...
... Verse is sometimes the more effective for being unmusical . The mechani- cal law or form is universally indispensable . It is that which constitutes the verse . It may be regarded as the substance ; musical character , as the accident ...
Страница 30
... verse . The -my of enemy , for instance , or the in- of intercept , is always so accounted in heroic verse , in virtue of the true accent upon en- and upon -cept ; but in dactylic or anapæstic verse , these syllables , although ...
... verse . The -my of enemy , for instance , or the in- of intercept , is always so accounted in heroic verse , in virtue of the true accent upon en- and upon -cept ; but in dactylic or anapæstic verse , these syllables , although ...
Страница 31
... verse does not readily admit . - 3. It is by no means necessary ( though it is com- monly stated or assumed to be so ) that the syllables alternating with the accented ones should be unac- cented . Any or all of them may be accented ...
... verse does not readily admit . - 3. It is by no means necessary ( though it is com- monly stated or assumed to be so ) that the syllables alternating with the accented ones should be unac- cented . Any or all of them may be accented ...
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accent adverb annotator Antony and Cleopatra appear bear blood Brutus Cæs called Capitol Casca Cassius Chaucer Cicero Cinna Collier common commonly Compare conjecture Coriolanus death Decius dissyllable doth Dyce English Enter Exeunt expression fear formerly French give Grammar Hamlet hand hath hear heart hemistich Henry honor Hudson ides of March instance Julius Cæsar King language Latin look lord Lucilius Lucius Macbeth Malone Mark Antony meaning Merchant of Venice merely Messala Milton modern editors night noble Octavius old copies original edition original text passage Philippi phrase Pindarus Plutarch poet Portia present Play printed probably pronoun prosody reading regard Roman Rome Saxon SCENE Second Folio seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shrew signifying speak speare speech spirit stage direction stand Steevens substantive syllable thee thing thou tion Titinius verb verse White Winter's Tale word writers