The Journal of English Studies, Volume 2, Issue 1H. Marshall & Son., 1913 |
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Page 29
... verse , unless it be of the purely satiric kind , that it should stand farther removed than prose from con- tact with the commonplace and the sordid , and this æsthetic principle must rule its choice not only of themes and inci- dents ...
... verse , unless it be of the purely satiric kind , that it should stand farther removed than prose from con- tact with the commonplace and the sordid , and this æsthetic principle must rule its choice not only of themes and inci- dents ...
Page 63
... verse is reputed older than prose ; that it originally dealt largely with scientific matters ; and that the differentiation arose out of the natural law that the more artificial form of composition calls for the more elevated and ...
... verse is reputed older than prose ; that it originally dealt largely with scientific matters ; and that the differentiation arose out of the natural law that the more artificial form of composition calls for the more elevated and ...
Page 65
... verse , with the general implication that " prose " is unpoetic ; though all men recognise that verse may be " prosaic , " and that prose may have the characters of poetry , barring measured rhythm . It is quite task enough for any poet ...
... verse , with the general implication that " prose " is unpoetic ; though all men recognise that verse may be " prosaic , " and that prose may have the characters of poetry , barring measured rhythm . It is quite task enough for any poet ...
Page 68
... verse may be said to represent the very form and pressure of that time . And , as becomes a poet of this school , Mr. Dobson's genius is essentially city - bred . If he praises nature , it is nature as seen in a garden of the cultured ...
... verse may be said to represent the very form and pressure of that time . And , as becomes a poet of this school , Mr. Dobson's genius is essentially city - bred . If he praises nature , it is nature as seen in a garden of the cultured ...
Page 69
... verse , not of the idler , but of the industrious man of letters ? " I , " says a speaker in one of his dialogues ... verses can scarcely have been achieved without the most studious revision . His example may be recommended to those ...
... verse , not of the idler , but of the industrious man of letters ? " I , " says a speaker in one of his dialogues ... verses can scarcely have been achieved without the most studious revision . His example may be recommended to those ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acton Bond Alexander Nowell amongst artistic Baconian Benson Bishop boys C. L. THOMSON C. T. ONIONS Cambridge cards catalogue Catechism classical clear and pleasant College composition copies Corpus Christi College criticism Dean Nowell diction Dobson Edited by N. L. Education Elizabethan Elizabethan era Encyclopædia English literature ENGLISH STUDIES essay feel French Giles Fletcher Goldsmith Grammar Greek Horace Marshall Keble Keble's Latin learned lectures lending library Libraco literary London County Council M.A. Price 4d Masefield method N. L. FRAZER NONAGENARIAN notes Nowell's Oxford picture plays pleasant speech poems poetic poetry poets prose published pupils Queen reader reading reference library rhythm Richard Hakluyt Robertson school library schoolmasters second-hand secondary schools selected Shakespeare shelf shelves shillings stories style suggest taught teacher Teaching of English TEMPLE HOUSE thing Thomas Churchyard thought translation true verse W. H. D. ROUSE Whitaker Whitgift School writing