| John Dryden - 1882 - 502 sivua
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| John Dryden - 1895 - 266 sivua
...sense at the end of a verse, and that verso commonly which they call golden, or two 1 2 substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. Ovid, with all his sweetness, has as little variety of numbers and sound as he: he is always, as it were, upon the hand-gallop,... | |
| John Dryden - 1900 - 412 sivua
...sense at the end of a verse, and 25 that verse commonly which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. Ovid, with all his sweetness, has as little variety of numbers and sound as he : he is always, as it were, upon the hand-gallop,... | |
| John Dryden - 1900 - 420 sivua
...sense at the end of a verse, and 25 that verse commonly which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. Ovid, with all his sweetness, has as little variety of numbers and sound as he : he is always, as it were, upon the hand-gallop,... | |
| Virgil - 1902 - 554 sivua
...and two nouns. Dryden speaks of such verses as ' those which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. ' Catullus is very fond of them (cf. 64. 59, 129, 263, 264, 309, 339, 344, 383), and Virgil uses them... | |
| Samuel Edward Winbolt - 1903 - 342 sivua
...the second adjective with second noun. Cf. Dryden, 'That which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace.' There could be no better device for drawing a comparison or pointing a contrast, nor more musical in... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1904 - 352 sivua
...his sense at the end of a verse, and that verse commonly which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. Ovid, with all his sweetness, has as little variety of numbers and sound as he ; he is always, as it were, upon the hand-gallop,... | |
| Ludwig Herrig - 1906 - 844 sivua
...sense 165 at the end of a verse, and that verse commonly which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace. Ovid, with all his sweetleo ness, has as little variety of numbers and sound as he; he is always, as it were, upon the... | |
| Albert Stanburrough Cook - 1906 - 164 sivua
...verse com1 Part 5, Mot 3. - Essay on Traiulation. inouly what they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace.' Does not this look like the prefigurement of a modern inquiry into end-stopped and run-on lines ? I... | |
| Hugh Edward Pigott Platt - 1906 - 222 sivua
...Preface to Second Miscellany, speaks of the Latin verse 'which they call golden, or two substantives and two adjectives, with a verb betwixt them to keep the peace.' Such is Impiaque aeternam timuerunt saecula noctem. Such a line is constructed on the same principle... | |
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