The Music, Or Melody and Rhythmus of the English Language: In which are Explained ... the Five Accidents of Speech ... and a Musical Notation ...Macredie, Skelly, 1819 - 250 páginas |
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Página xv
... living . Mr Steele has the following remark , the latter part of which I may apply here . " I made my request not to be drawn into any contest with the ancient Greeks and Romans . If it were possible for me to have a conversation with ...
... living . Mr Steele has the following remark , the latter part of which I may apply here . " I made my request not to be drawn into any contest with the ancient Greeks and Romans . If it were possible for me to have a conversation with ...
Página 21
... living Virgil , I should ask him , why these lines might not be set in the following manner , in triple measure , still pre- serving the long and the short syllables , but with an extended variety of long and longer , short and shorter ...
... living Virgil , I should ask him , why these lines might not be set in the following manner , in triple measure , still pre- serving the long and the short syllables , but with an extended variety of long and longer , short and shorter ...
Página 23
... living languages , in such a manner , as no good reader of either ever pronounces - Nay , I have strong reason to suspect whether even a Prosodian can read ac- cording to his own rules . These are only two instances of thousands that ...
... living languages , in such a manner , as no good reader of either ever pronounces - Nay , I have strong reason to suspect whether even a Prosodian can read ac- cording to his own rules . These are only two instances of thousands that ...
Página 139
... living instructor . No rules pre- sented in the dead letter , will ever make an accu- rate pronouncer , much less a good reader or speaker . Nor will mere imitation ever accomplish this im- portant purpose . The student may , it is true ...
... living instructor . No rules pre- sented in the dead letter , will ever make an accu- rate pronouncer , much less a good reader or speaker . Nor will mere imitation ever accomplish this im- portant purpose . The student may , it is true ...
Página 149
... living souls in their inanimated bodies , and thence conceiving what would be our emotions in this case . It is from this very illusion of the imagination , that the foresight of our own dissolution is so terrible to us , and that the ...
... living souls in their inanimated bodies , and thence conceiving what would be our emotions in this case . It is from this very illusion of the imagination , that the foresight of our own dissolution is so terrible to us , and that the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Music, Or Melody and Rhythmus of the English Language; In Which Are ... James Chapman Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Términos y frases comunes
accent accidents of language Æneid affections anapest ARSIS and THESIS beauty Berkeley Berkeley cadence or bar CALIFORNIA LIBRARY called CHAPTER choriambic cretic dactyl earth Elocution emphasis of sense English example eyes five cadences following lines Greek feet Hail hath hear heart heaven heavy and light heavy syllable hexametres iambus Latin languages light syllables Lord loud lov'd manner mark measure melody metre mode of scanning molossus nature never night o'er poize primus ab pronounce proper prose prosodians prosody pulsation and remission pupil Pyrrhic quantity Quintilian Rationalis reading and speaking rests or pauses rhyth rhythmus rules of prosody SELECTED AS EXERCISES shades sing six cadences soft song soul sound speech spondee sweet teach thee Thesis and Arsis thro tion triple trochee UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA vale voice wild words Δ Δ Δ را