Periods of European Literature, Volume 5George Saintsbury William Blackwood, 1923 |
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Página 268
... decasyllable , the strict and definite prosody of their Italian models practically kept them from the licence which Chaucer's occasional indulgence in nine- syllabled lines , and his not infrequent admission of trisyllabic feet , had ...
... decasyllable , the strict and definite prosody of their Italian models practically kept them from the licence which Chaucer's occasional indulgence in nine- syllabled lines , and his not infrequent admission of trisyllabic feet , had ...
Página 270
... decasyllables and masculine rhymes . On the other hand , the couplet - ending to an English ear does very much to clench and impress that single , or at anyrate prominent , meaning which is so much of the essence of the Sonnet . To say ...
... decasyllables and masculine rhymes . On the other hand , the couplet - ending to an English ear does very much to clench and impress that single , or at anyrate prominent , meaning which is so much of the essence of the Sonnet . To say ...
Página 275
... decasyllables , rhymed in awk- ward alternation , remind one much more of the hobble or stagger of Lydgate or Occleve than of their actual author , though no doubt Wyatt was presuming , as his successors down to Donne afterwards ...
... decasyllables , rhymed in awk- ward alternation , remind one much more of the hobble or stagger of Lydgate or Occleve than of their actual author , though no doubt Wyatt was presuming , as his successors down to Donne afterwards ...
Página 276
... decasyllable not seldom . And it was certainly not beyond the reach of a comparatively moderate in- genuity , at the time when rhyme was already decried as a barbarous invention , to ask itself , " Why should I not strike the rhyme out ...
... decasyllable not seldom . And it was certainly not beyond the reach of a comparatively moderate in- genuity , at the time when rhyme was already decried as a barbarous invention , to ask itself , " Why should I not strike the rhyme out ...
Página 355
... decasyllable , and is still more speedily pro- nounced in comparison to its length ; but six or seven hundred must be a liberal allowance in this case . would follow that an audience must have sat for some sixty mortal hours while the ...
... decasyllable , and is still more speedily pro- nounced in comparison to its length ; but six or seven hundred must be a liberal allowance in this case . would follow that an audience must have sat for some sixty mortal hours while the ...
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actual admirable appears Ariosto Ascham Bembo better blank verse certainly chapter character charm Chaucer Cinthio classical comedy Courtier critical curious Cymbalum deal decasyllable dialogue doubt drama earlier early edition England English Epigrams Epistolæ Erasmus extent fact famous farce fifteenth Firenzuola Folengo France French Gargantua genius German Greek hendecasyllable Heptameron Humanist humour imitation important influence interest Italian Italian Literature Italy kind language later Latin Latin verse least less literary literature Louise Labé Lucian Luther lyrical Macaronic Machiavelli Marot matter mediæval merely metre modern moral Muretus never once original Orlando Pammachius Pantagruel Panurge partly perhaps period Petrarch pieces play poems poet poetical poetry Politian pretty probably prose Rabelais readers Reformation remarkable Renaissance rhyme Romance satire scholar seems sense side sixteenth century sometimes sonnet stanza story style things thought tion tongue translation vernacular vols volume whole writers