The Southern Review, Volume 2A. E. Miller., 1828 |
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Page 32
... reason itself , is obliged , on some occasions , to make certain sacrifices to rhyme . But this is equally true of the versification employed by Homer , and Virgil , and Milton . " He that writes in rhymes , " as Prior tells us ...
... reason itself , is obliged , on some occasions , to make certain sacrifices to rhyme . But this is equally true of the versification employed by Homer , and Virgil , and Milton . " He that writes in rhymes , " as Prior tells us ...
Page 40
... reasons . There is much weight of authority we are aware , against us . La Harpe ( vol . iv . p . 209 ) holds the opinion of Andrès . Sir William Jones , in his French dissertation on oriental poetry , says , " La rime est très ancienne ...
... reasons . There is much weight of authority we are aware , against us . La Harpe ( vol . iv . p . 209 ) holds the opinion of Andrès . Sir William Jones , in his French dissertation on oriental poetry , says , " La rime est très ancienne ...
Page 42
... reasons . The original inhabitants of Spain lost their languages and religion in those of the victorious Romans ; but we know that the Goths , though conquerors , yielded their's to the influence of the conquered in Italy , France and ...
... reasons . The original inhabitants of Spain lost their languages and religion in those of the victorious Romans ; but we know that the Goths , though conquerors , yielded their's to the influence of the conquered in Italy , France and ...
Page 46
... reason for doubting the fact , we should still say from the rhyming capabilities of the Spanish language , as will be hereafter shown , that such rhyme must have been perfectly natural , and need not be traced to a foreign source . But ...
... reason for doubting the fact , we should still say from the rhyming capabilities of the Spanish language , as will be hereafter shown , that such rhyme must have been perfectly natural , and need not be traced to a foreign source . But ...
Page 54
... reason of its vivacity and ease . But , as a written language , the French is essentially a northern dialect , on account of the excess of consonants , great numbers of which disappear in pronunciation . But , we have only to compare ...
... reason of its vivacity and ease . But , as a written language , the French is essentially a northern dialect , on account of the excess of consonants , great numbers of which disappear in pronunciation . But , we have only to compare ...
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