The Spectator, Volume 1George Gregory Smith Dent, 1945 |
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Pagina 117
... Verse in the Greek Tongue was the most proper for Tragedy : Because at the same time that it lifted up the Discourse from Prose , it was that which approached nearer to it than any other kind of Verse . For , says he , we may observe ...
... Verse in the Greek Tongue was the most proper for Tragedy : Because at the same time that it lifted up the Discourse from Prose , it was that which approached nearer to it than any other kind of Verse . For , says he , we may observe ...
Pagina 184
... Verses , and by that Means written , after the Manner of the Chinese , in a perpendicular Line . But besides these there are Compound Acrosticks , where the principal Letters stand two or three deep . I have seen some of them where the ...
... Verses , and by that Means written , after the Manner of the Chinese , in a perpendicular Line . But besides these there are Compound Acrosticks , where the principal Letters stand two or three deep . I have seen some of them where the ...
Pagina 185
... Verses were good for nothing . And upon my asking his Reason , he said , Because the Rhymes are too common ; and for that Reason easie to be put into Verse . Marry , says I , if it be so , I am very well re- warded for all the Pains I ...
... Verses were good for nothing . And upon my asking his Reason , he said , Because the Rhymes are too common ; and for that Reason easie to be put into Verse . Marry , says I , if it be so , I am very well re- warded for all the Pains I ...
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