Proponents of this solution point to Aristarchus' athetesis of line 92, a verse that is also missing in papyrus 12, a mid-third-century BCE text. |
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As with other volumes in this series, a solid introduction is followed by verse by verse comment on the text. |
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And that verse breaks down to a bridge of more spacey instrumentalism and a bass drum keeping time to spastically bending strings. |
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Early native Italian jocular dialogue in Latin verse are known as Fescennine verses. |
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Coming off the solo, I sang the last verse with the existing loop and then did a slow fade to end the song. |
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One couple actually stood in the center of the two lines during the whole baseball announcer verse and acted the whole thing out. |
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There is almost no rhetorical verse of the kind we find in Augustan Latin and later in Renaissance poetry throughout Europe. |
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The poet who was so courtly and gentle in his verse could be coarse and vulgar in his everyday speech. |
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Two of the pieces we will chant are pulieli which are sung within the matins, with each verse followed by Alleluia. |
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There were innumerable short parodies of Shakespeare's work, and Carroll's nonsense verse is often parodic. |
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How can the highest aspirations of verse be linked to such rhetorical devices? |
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He accepted the dodecasyllable and hendecasyllable verse forms from the very beginning, and basically never abandoned them. |
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The iambic pentameter in Elizabethan verse is so deep and rich in its poetry. |
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The two men I shared the dorm with gave me chapter and verse on the corrupt government and foreign exploitation of their resources. |
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Vordul's verse is uninspiring and sounds much more like spoken word poetry, rather than a proper rap. |
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Burnside's guitar and vocals have been sampled and mixed with a beat, some overdubs and a verse and chorus from Kid Rock. |
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The verse has on many occasions inspired the noblest thoughts of toleration and charitableness. |
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This is not to say that there will be no great actors, no great verse speakers, no great Shakespeareans in future. |
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All metric translations strictly follow the original Sanskrit verse format. |
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Haiku written before 1892 are more correctly known as hokku, the beginning verse of hakkai poetry. |
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Their verse has not the rushing speed that could pace that tempest, it has not the teeming life that would pacify the wood. |
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He has written incisive lyrics, narratives, meditations and satires in verse that is both commanding and supple. |
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And this was the case with printed miscellanies, where bawdy verse was a favorite. |
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Its sheer joy and wonder reside neither in tension nor resolve, neither verse nor chorus, but simply in dogged perseverance. |
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I wrote poems, sonnets in blank verse and long, narrative poems about people I knew, descriptive pieces. |
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One instantly recognizes his modulated and finely tuned free verse line, with its meandering parentheses and doubled back hesitations. |
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Already enamoured of the small Canadian town, he began to hymn its praises in verse which he read to public gatherings. |
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Poetry should be brief, whimsical verse about a certain cutie patootie you'd like to get to know better. |
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Much of the lightest verse of Rochester or Buckingham has as sharp a wit as one of E. C. Bentley's clerihews. |
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This verse suggests that an undermeaning should be sought, not only to the particular occasion recounted but also to the whole narrative. |
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He kept the iambic blank verse form but relieved it entirely of its poetic burden. |
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The proof of the popularity of Urdu in North India is in the sale of Urdu verse in Hindi script. |
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Other explanations of English verse use more convenient typography as substitutes for the acute accent and breve. |
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I remember reading the following verse in one of my workbooks at primary school and having to memorize it. |
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Ovid's Heroides, verse epistles from women abandoned by their famous lovers, was tremendously popular in the first decades of print. |
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The forms vary from open verse to haiku to a sonnet sequence to a villanelle. |
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Successful nonsense verse must respect the structure and syntax of a language. |
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Sarah listens to her, and then suddenly the two of them sing a verse of the song. |
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The composer's job becomes, in this case, to find a single musical stanza that suits all the verse stanzas. |
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Hurston doesn't quote the third verse of the song, which gives the point of the passage away plainly. |
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As to verse and metre, modern Heathenry like its ancient counterpart has enjoyed the use of alliterative verse or stave rhyme. |
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Really the only difference is that the terms have been Carrollised and the verse is in octameter instead of pentameter. |
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Meyer's version employs a spare free verse that is very Ibsenish, even though Ibsen composed here in rhymed octosyllables! |
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If a trochee is used in the first place of a dipody, the iambic movement of the verse is not seriously impeded. |
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Hence they are called by the name of trials, in the verse nextly preceding the text, and in innumerable other places. |
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Today's poem is a verse from Byron's Childe Harold, speaking of pathless places. |
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But with the entry of the King we are launched upon a subscene in verse which, on the one hand, has a higher percentage of double endings. |
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These include native law texts as well as heroic prose narratives and intricately crafted rhymed verse in hundreds of different meters. |
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The portrait also contains sheets of simulated verse to emphasize that he specialized in terza rima and ottava rima. |
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He prefers to make use of old verse forms like sonnets and pantun, a four-line stanza. |
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Keimer attempted to reply in Hudibrastic verse on one occasion, but the battle of wits was no contest. |
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Finding that one verse in Virgil is worth all the clinquant or tinsel of Tasso. |
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Though occasionally the humour degenerates into facetiousness, the verbal dexterity of the verse is superb. |
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In Cyrus's version, his words are backed up in the chorus and briefly in the third verse by two male voices singing in a falsetto. |
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The resolution of a long, syllable into two shorts is a common feature of verse composition. |
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Only seventy odd years ago the whole of humanity thought that the entire universe verse was just our own Milky Way. |
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Like most pop music, this song transitions from a relatively calm verse to a more raucous chorus. |
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Yet, at a stretch, your verse reads as a kind of continuous narrative of self. |
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They composed and recited poems in a fairly simple verse form which relied heavily on alliteration and also the use of kennings. |
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The upsurge of early printed verse translations makes public a large and rapidly distributed body of foreign-born poetry. |
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Verse plays may be making a comeback, but religious verse plays may have had their day. |
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Over a span of 23 years, he received the divine revelation of the Quran, sometimes one verse or several verses at a time. |
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Think about taking away the net and writing some blank verse with some metaphors in it. |
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The Live Poets will battle it out in verse and rhyme at the popular Poetry Slam, next Wednesday, June 19, at the Rous Hotel in Lismore. |
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The artists built the city of Boston on stage, and I wrote a kind of heroic Shakespearean text in blank verse and rhyme about the city's history. |
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He experimented constantly with rhythms and stresses and verse forms, disliking and avoiding any facile flow. |
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I would sail away to fantastic places that existed only in the deep recesses of my mind and describe them in verse heavy with rhythm. |
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And the poetic rhythm and verse of the script gently takes the audience along for the ride. |
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The verse rhythm should have its effect upon the hearers without their being conscious of it. |
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His verse is both metrically and formally experimental, ranging from satire to love lyric, from sonnet to verse epistle, from elegy to hymn. |
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In English verse today, the masculine rhyme is of course the staple thing, the feminine rhyme being a somewhat rare variation. |
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The poems were written in lyrical free verse with little capitalization or punctuation, and expressed concern, anger, and hope. |
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It could be a particular song that just speaks to you, or a verse that jumps out. |
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Others have suggested that Anglo-American writers generally did not distinguish between free verse and prose poems. |
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At four cafes throughout the village contestants from the Northern Rivers and beyond vied in verse for the lucrative prize money. |
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It is as far from a literal rendering of Akhmatova's verse as it is from the book's dominant temperament. |
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These are elements that probably have more to do with free verse then they do with the traditional novel. |
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The last verse is also, inexplicably enough, a tonally inconsistent kiss-off. |
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Unlike the bush ballads of an earlier generation, however, his verse does not put a genuine vernacular to poetic uses. |
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The second verse is composed in your head between the second and third stations of your trip. |
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Johnson never claims, when writing Latin verse, to be writing formal verse imitation. |
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The author constructs a narrative that closely resembles poetry in its cadence, verse structure and imagery. |
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He muddled his way through the opening verse and belted out the chorus, creating a schizophrenic performance. |
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Robert Frost once classed poetry that way, free verse against formal verse. |
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The caricature was accompanied by doggerel verse which used Mr. Tolley's name and extolled the virtues of the chocolate. |
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Haiku originated as a simple verse form used to entertain the Japanese upper class. |
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The inscriber removed two of the column's flutes, so that five hexameters of verse could be carved upon the marble. |
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Also we should note that some English translations wrestle with the difficulty of this verse by adding a footnote. |
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His poetic emblem books in particular, written in alexandrine verse and with a moralizing tone, brought him international renown. |
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In the prosody of the postmodern lyric sentence, the prose aspect is heightened as a continuer, the verse aspect lessened as a retarder. |
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He captures the Jamaican dialect in this early verse and valorizes the speech patterns of the working class. |
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I've been thinking of doing a play, mostly in prose with verse choruses, and have got bits of the story mapped out. |
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The lines are laid out as prose, although there are a few attempts at verse format on the early pages, and sentences run on without a break. |
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There is verse here and fable, both equally creative in consonantal calisthenics and comic content. |
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And the dozens of Atlantis exercise machines each sport a small magnetic plaque with a verse of scripture. |
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In truth, much of her verse is as light as souffle but has considerably more substance. |
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Also rests are allowed for in the verse of the ancients and, though not professedly, in ours like the rests in music. |
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What depresses me more is that for our young actors, skills like speaking verse properly and voice projection are no longer a priority. |
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A controversial poet has hired a personal minder after being rugby tackled by a drinker while reciting verse in a pub. |
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This strongly implies that even in the Durham version the verse material, as in the original consort song, was meant to be sung by a treble. |
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Haiku, meaning a Japanese verse of three short, unrhymed lines, is an entirely appropriate title for Songdog's second album. |
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He was a passionate democrat and republican who wrote verse in support of these causes. |
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When Sputnik had first gone into orbit a schoolteacher asked her second-graders to write some verse on the subject. |
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It is universally agreed that the siblings referred to in this verse are uterine siblings. |
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His sectional verse anthems incorporate solos, duets, trios, and passages for organ alone. |
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Brown is less unsettled by the badness of her verse than by the popularity of her bad verse. |
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They consist of metrical, continuous verse and divide not into chapters and sections but, naturally, into verses. |
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Humor raises no such difficulty, for it is a purely formal device, more akin to the metric pattern of verse than to that of a trope. |
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I could sing the first verse and the chorus of the song, I could remember her husband's name. |
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So lest you be caught short before the Brazil game here are the words to the second verse in all their glory. |
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Five collections of verse in Oriya, and translations into English from Oriya and Bengali, testify to his trilingual creativity. |
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Accentual verse has continued to flourish, however, in a wide range of popular songs, hymns, ballads, and nursery rhymes. |
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The first verse is followed by a short chorus, where the piano doubles the melody with the synth accenting the first note. |
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Seiffert's free verse is not as good as her debonair balladry, nor are the poems of Elijah Hay equal to those of Emanuel Morgan or Anne Knish. |
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The play is written in verse which varies between alternately rhyming quatrains and stanzaic form, the effect being lyric rather than dramatic. |
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Near the end of the book with its empty gaping pages and neat writing was a verse scratched out with red pen. |
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The emphasis here is on how Donne's love poetry becomes an apology of verse itself. |
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These famous lines of Shakespeare aptly describe the human life in a nutshell as perhaps no other verse manages to do. |
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I reproduce below Duggal's translation of the invocation and the first verse followed by my rendering of the same. |
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Repeating the verse to herself, she opened the medicine cabinet and took out a first-aid kit. |
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Each camp had chaplains, cooks, camp followers, singers, and verse writers. |
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The king never attempted to verse the prince in matters of parliamentary practice, statesmanship, or foreign policy. |
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Debbie Harry sang the final verse and chorus in French, and a million teenage boys melted. |
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It's a nonsense verse used by everyone from boy scouts to football hooligans, including, presumably the Swansea massive. |
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If I click on an illuminated cherry, a 16 th-century picture of a toy appears and a verse from a nursery rhyme is spoken. |
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In his edition of 1725, the celebrated poet Alexander Pope regularized distinctions between verse and prose. |
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The Anglo-Saxon tradition of alliterating half lines in verse might be argued an equal influence. |
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In the poet's medieval French, the verse displays intricate internal rhymes and numerous alliterations. |
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Traditional poetry, with its innate rhythm and alliteration, as well as free verse focusing on social issues, flowed from her pen. |
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While there is no syllabic verse in existence that may be dated earlier than AD 650, such metres dominated for the next millennium. |
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Such verse was unknown in classical Greek but common in Latin and the Celtic and Germanic languages. |
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The oddity of this elaborate metaphor involving verse and human feet should not go unnoticed. |
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This chapter and verse makes clear that only God can be our lawgiver, judge and King. |
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Thus, the verse from Leviticus to which the Zohar refers alludes to the potential perfection that the Tabernacle could bring about. |
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Second, oddly enough, this argument doesn't prove that traditional, formal verse is better than vers libre. |
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This is in reference to Gogan's tendency to use traditional verse forms and a plethora of archaic words in his poetry. |
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He became increasingly eccentric, bursting into song or verse during parliamentary sittings and falling asleep at public meetings. |
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He was quoting, and more specifically he was quoting the first verse of the twenty-second psalm. |
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The concept of catalexis and the catalectic verse is important in the study of the anapaestic dimeter. |
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She let her eyes skim the page, not really reading it, until she got to verse thirty-nine. |
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He used most of the classic verse forms, but his distinctive contribution was his deployment of assonance, internal rhymes, and half-rhymes. |
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Eliot famously thought that no verse was free, for the poet who wanted to do a good job. |
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In one verse he introduced a sideswipe at the repressive legal system of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. |
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My eyes scanned the page until I found the third verse of the first chapter. |
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Aficionados of bobolink verse will also enjoy The Way to Know the Bobolink by Emily Dickinson. |
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I thought it a bit pompous, myself, and the third verse doesn't scan at all, but it's not so bad a song as all that. |
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This kind of annotation of the rhythmic structure of a verse is called scansion, and the basic rhythmic pattern of a poem is called its meter. |
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Just as his light verse is based on strong-mindedness, so his kindness was based on courage. |
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This lack is, I believe, linked to the general neglect of the verse historia contained in the second eclogue. |
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Is there a single verse of the Scriptures that teaches us Christ came to bring us to Heaven where we no longer can sin? |
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Syllabic verse is generally organized in four-line strophes, whereas the number of lines in a rosc passage is not fixed. |
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Although the verse refers to a judge, the rationale applies to anyone in a position of public trust. |
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His moods swings were cyclical and he was familiar with the impulse to suicide, as this verse attests. |
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It is written in rhymed tetrameters, the most artless of English metres and quite unlike the majestic blank verse of Prospero the magician. |
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The first verse of this chapter some join to the foregoing chapter, and make it the close of that. |
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After witnessing one of Sade's theatricals, she goes and purchases one of his forbidden works and pastes it inside her book of verse for ladies. |
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Johnson uses all of these devices in writing his Latin verse imitations. |
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The rhythmic cadence of the poetry was not the iambic pentameter or other such metrical patterns but free verse with words scattered randomly across the printed page. |
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In such works as the Homeric epics, stock formulas served to maintain the rhythm of the verse and were mnemonically useful for performers and listeners alike. |
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The translation is partly in free verse and partly in rhyme. |
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I've come up with a verse myself which is chalked up on the blackboard at the moment but I am hoping we can replace it with a better one written by a guest. |
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The verse form with its metrical demands, while it aided memorization, led to greater obscurity of expression than prose composition would have entailed. |
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The logic of the chorus has both eyes blacked each time, and it is no surprise that verse three finds the young man recommending non-engagement, or at least discretion. |
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I know the verse because Mrs. Bertalan used to have us do it in ninth-grade choir. |
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The pulse of the verse is kept steady but the rhythmical structure of the whole speech is given a new fluidity by Sophocles' informal treatment of metrical pause. |
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After establishing a basic rhythmic pattern and singing a verse or two, the group would dive face first into extended, complex, interactive musical free-for-alls. |
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Swinburne commanded an impressive variety of verse forms, writing in classical metres, composing burlesques, modern and mock-antique ballads, roundels, etc. |
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There is very little spectacle, beyond the sumptuous costumes, but the actors approach the verse with such attack and panache that a palpable energy is generated. |
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There will also be an unseen passage of Latin verse to be translated. |
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Making its first appearance a little over a century ago, the lure of the limerick is such that it has grown to become one of the world's most popular verse forms. |
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Assume that any biblical verse you cite has an obvious meaning, and lead your hearers to think that it is identical with the point you're trying to make. |
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He could not assume that a reader or critic would grasp the unusualness and special, idiosyncratic effect of his verse merely by observing the words on the page. |
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Viewed by the satirists Persius and Juvenal as the archetypal master of the genre, Lucilius had put a stamp on verse satire which it has retained until the 20th century. |
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She accented every note just-short of perfectly, fading her voice before a few high notes and before an emphasized verse to add to the atmosphere of the song. |
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All players had to be competent dancers and singers, but dramatists like Marlowe, Shakespeare, and Jonson replaced earlier short, rhymed verse with poetic drama. |
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Of course, it's a far cry from most of the low-key balladry of the rest of the album, and when the final verse appears, this fiery, chaotic vision suddenly seems distant. |
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But he read their blank verse cadences as cadences, and as poets writing within a Protestant tradition who were trying to also revive a mystical tradition. |
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By the time he suggests that the verse inclines towards the pentameter, it is clear that it has not occurred to him that the phrasings are of formal significance. |
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He began to experiment with verse from an early age, and read widely. |
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Well educated, he had access to Italian, French and Latin literature but chose to translate into verse the common spoken language that surrounded him on London streets. |
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She set each alternate, evenly numbered, verse to different music. |
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Later, he was taught to turn English verse into alcaics and sapphics in Horatian style, as well as imitating Virgil, Ovid and the Greek tragedians. |
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Both free verse and rhymed poetry styles are studied, including cinquain, haiku, tanka, rhopalic, echo and refrain poems, acrostics, alphabet and dictionary poems. |
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And then the joke in the last verse of watching Walter Cronkite deliver the coda. |
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What is the burlesque verse in English, is the heroic verse in French. |
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The second verse features only the guitar and Hysen until the cello comes in once again playing a more legato melody that counterpoints the guitar nicely. |
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Loop format is especially suitable in the case of the author using digital morphs to program a text so that it progresses from one verse to another. |
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The demise of the original macaronic verse is due precisely to the success of the Italian humanists in their philological recuperation of classical Latin. |
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Between 1560 and 1603 he issued a multitude of broadsheets and small volumes in verse and prose, several containing autobiographical pieces and notices of current events. |
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But then it's back to the bars as Kendrick spits the second verse of his track while a beautifully built female twerks on the driver's side of his whip. |
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They also inform the wider ontology of war in verse that emerges into the foreground of military victory to ask unanswered questions about race and class. |
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The idea that competent writers produce first-rate verse in a fit of absence of mind, not knowing it to be good, is altogether too absurd to be considered. |
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When he took it the second time, slurring the notes descending, Kyla jumped in and started singing the first verse and took the song from the top. |
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Is this why Arun Kolatkar's verse is intense, stark, echoic, potent? |
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But his verse is not without a certain Hudibrastic force, and it frequently contains graphic touches descriptive of modes of life now passed away. |
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The internal rhymes and basic iambic line broken up into free verse sounded like somebody really talking, but it was highly disciplined as verse too. |
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I haven't put chapter and verse references in my answer to Larry King. |
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I could provide chapter and verse as to the silliness of energy independence. |
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The wildly associative script skips through historical periods as well as genres, and one of the high points is an incredibly dynamic, eight-page verse monologue. |
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This time round, her verse resonates with her strokes on canvas and though this has not been deliberate, there is, as she admits, a natural affinity between the two. |
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Late in life Broome returned to Greek poetry and published a verse translation of sixteen Anacreontics in several instalments in the Gentleman's Magazine. |
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The song's arrangement is nearly perfect with Branch slowly building the first verse into a bombastic chorus in which she asks the song's title repeatedly. |
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It is envisaged that these works will help regenerate interest in the field of historical verse among both Celticists and Medievalists in general. |
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At that time the eighteen-year-old Victoria's feminine virules of sympathy and beauty were proclaimed in doggerel verse to the street ballad-reading public. |
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English pastoral was inaugurated by Spenser's verse eclogues in The Shepheardes Calendar and further developed in The Arcadia, a prose romance by Sidney. |
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His vocals on the verse are some of his most affecting and emotional yet, while the anthemic chorus provides a break of desperate hope amid the quiet despondency. |
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The words were slurred and indistinct, but after listening to a verse repeated several times, Will made out the words and knew he was right about it being a song. |
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Craig David has been to Rishi's studio giving his single Spanish a bhangra touch, even managing to sing a verse in Punjabi that had been specially written for him. |
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This concession to polytheism greatly pleased the pagans, and when Muhammad reached the last verse of the Sura, they joined in the prostration enjoined there. |
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Sole's unrhymed verse gets a little tedious after 17 tracks. |
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Structurally, many employ a standard verse and refrain alternation, punctuated by a middle eight, where the song becomes fleetingly more interesting. |
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They're poems, written in verse in the first person, elegiac in format. |
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Marlowe's plays are known for the use of blank verse and their overreaching protagonists. |
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As a blind poet, Milton dictated his verse to a series of aides in his employ. |
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The nonsense verse of Edward Lear, along with the novels and poems of Lewis Carroll, is regarded as a precursor of surrealism. |
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Nursery rhymes and nonsense verse used to amuse or quiet children also are frequent subjects of traditional songs. |
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Relying on Qur'an, Sura II, verse 236, Nasir shows that the amount of mutat is a matter of goodwill and of custom. |
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His topics include skaldic verse, the relationship between verse and prose, Anglo-Norman and Icelandic factors, and the uses of the past. |
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The story is truly enchanting and moves along at a skitter with verse that is clever and sharp. |
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The title, Laughter Lines, is the first collection from O'Connor who has been writing his own comic verse for a number of years. |
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Similarly, the verse at the close of Through the Looking Glass is an acrostic for Alice Pleasance Liddell. |
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Terza rima follows a pattern in which each verse, or tercet, connects with the following verse through an unfailing rhyme. |
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Tragedy demanded verse, not the quotidian prose of comedy, and verse usually supplied some form of end rhyme. |
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But that does not mean that I swear by every verse that is printed in the book described as Manusmriti. |
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When he ended his verse he bade one of his pages saddle him his Nubian mare-mule with her padded selle. |
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His verse translations include the Collected Poems of Stephane Mallarme, and, with Catherine Schlegel, Hesiod's Theogony and Works and Days. |
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Gloir in bardic verse and annalistic compilations accords closely with the meaning of its English cognate, glory. |
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Although not devoid of occasional prosaism and infrequent rhetoric, this verse is superbly crafted, achieving at times high levels of precision. |
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They occur in prosodically organized verse too, but tend to be upstaged by the sense-complicating effects of sound patterning. |
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And those who disdained free verse would always be open to accusations of elitism, mandarinism. |
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The funny verse narrative plus distorted animal action portraits goes way beyond funny caricature and will leave enraptured gigglers in its wake. |
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The tanka poems are brief, descriptive, and evocative, compressed verse in five lines, varying between five and seven syllables each. |
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Otherwise, the reading is quite rewarding, for the verse abounds in similes and metaphors, in rhythmic beats and internal rhymes. |
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My spirit wilts at yet another chitarrone glissando indicating yet another verse of the aria. |
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The iamb in this line of blank verse is reversed, in imitation of Cordelia's unsprung life, into a trochee with shortened unstressed syllables. |
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Personal and moving, Wood remembers a bit of rhyme to his work, setting it out from the rest of the free verse poetry on the market. |
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The form of the song is strophic with three verses, an instrumental introduction, interludes between each verse and a postlude. |
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Whitman uses free verse to achieve effects impossible under even the broad restrictions of blank verse. |
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For they singe such a Genethliacon and byrth verse as was neuer heard of before in the worlde. |
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It is possible that he suffered a speech impediment, but this depends on a phrase in the introduction to his verse life of Saint Cuthbert. |
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It became a standard text for the teaching of Latin verse during the next few centuries. |
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Notable examples of Gaelic verse composed in this manner are the Book of the Dean of Lismore and the Fernaig manuscript. |
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So as to make it easier to locate a particular passage, each chapter was headed by a brief precis of its contents with verse numbers. |
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The blank verse of his early plays is quite different from that of his later ones. |
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The Romantic poets attempted to revive Shakespearean verse drama, though with little success. |
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The Ulster Cycle is a large body of prose and verse centring on the traditional heroes of the Ulaid in what is now eastern Ulster. |
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By his verse the minds of many were often excited to despise the world, and to aspire to heaven. |
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However, the last verse was the Cranken Rhyme, written in the late 19th century by John Davey of Boswednack. |
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It is Jonson's only pastoral drama, it was written in sophisticated verse and included supernatural action and characters. |
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These broadside ballads were in some cases newly fabricated but were mostly adaptions of the older verse narratives. |
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Despite the unconventional spelling, the verse is in Modern English, not the Middle English of the thirteenth century. |
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His system of alliterative verse is based on accent, alliteration, the quantity of vowels, and patterns of syllabic accentuation. |
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There are verse translations of the Gloria in Excelsis, the Lord's Prayer, and the Apostles' Creed, as well as some hymns and proverbs. |
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This verse form maps stressed and unstressed syllables onto abstract entities known as metrical positions. |
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The numbers correspond to the 10th verse of chapter twelve, the 11th verse of chapter thirteen, and the 12th verse of chapter fourteen. |
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Andronicus also translated Homer's Greek epic the Odyssey into an old type of Latin verse called Saturnian. |
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He adopted Greek dactylic hexameter, which became the standard verse form for Roman epics. |
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One of the last to be noted for the quality of his Latin verse well into the 19th century was Walter Savage Landor. |
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He especially praised the poetry and wit of the fairies, and the quality of the verse involved. |
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Spenser used a distinctive verse form, called the Spenserian stanza, in several works, including The Faerie Queene. |
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Milton no less than Davenant wished to write the English epic, and chose blank verse as his form. |
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At the time, poetic blank verse was considered distinct from its use in verse drama, and Paradise Lost was taken as a unique examplar. |
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Blank verse came to be a recognised medium for religious works and for translations of the classics. |
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He was suspicious of the poetic language used by Milton, whose blank verse he believed would inspire many bad imitations. |
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He is best known for his satirical verse and for his translation of Homer, and he is also famous for his use of the heroic couplet. |
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He toyed with the idea of composing a patriotic epic in blank verse called Brutus, but only the opening lines survive. |
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His first attempts at verse were often vague, languorously narcotic and lacking a clear eye. |
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Even phrases and lines of verse will reappear as much as forty years later. |
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He recorded several albums of Kipling's verse set to traditional airs, or to tunes of his own composition written in traditional style. |
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He set forth his manifesto for much of his later verse in the introduction to New Poems. |
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Two notebooks of Lawrence's unprinted verse were posthumously published as Last Poems and More Pansies. |
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When a little older, she moved on to reading the surreal verse of Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll. |
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It is a narrative poem composed in alliterative verse and is modelled after the Old Norse poetry of the Elder Edda. |
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The final line of the verse was probably the inspiration for the title of Lerner and Loewe's 1956 musical My Fair Lady. |
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The first verse is rather gentle one to react to, with one clear standing and one clear seating action, and so other actions may be given. |
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Most scholarly commentators consider these to be unproven and state that the verse is probably meant to be simply nonsense. |
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In an extra verse in one version of ABBA's On and On and On, Humpty Dumpty is mentioned as being afraid of falling off the wall. |
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The verse of the Introit is normally set as a semichoir section, returning to full choir scoring for the Gloria Patri. |
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The repetition of one chord progression may mark off the only section in a simple verse form such as the twelve bar blues. |
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As on his 1994 Last Night appearance, he sang one verse in a Welsh translation, with the chorus also translated into Welsh. |
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In January 1950 he produced, directed and starred in Christopher Fry's verse play Venus Observed. |
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He is acclaimed as the greatest speaker of Shakespearean verse this century. |
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Among the significant writers is James Fenton, mostly using a blank verse form, but also occasionally the Habbie stanza. |
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Milne contributed humorous verse and whimsical essays to Punch, joining the staff in 1906 and becoming an assistant editor. |
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Yeats, and Thomas Hardy, his poems are highly structured but flexible verse forms. |
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However, they shared with the Classic poets a set of complex metaphors and role, as the verse was still often panegyric. |
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Narrative verse looms large in the traditional folk music of many cultures. |
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Other forms of traditional narrative verse relate the outcomes of battles or describe tragedies or natural disasters. |
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When Bryn Terfel performed it at the Proms in 1994 and 2008 he sang the third verse in Welsh. |
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As king, Robert certainly commissioned verse to commemorate Bannockburn and his subjects' military deeds. |
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From an early age, Voltaire displayed a talent for writing verse and his first published work was poetry. |
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She wrote the verse with Stephen Raw, a textual artist, and a signed print of the work was sent to the couple as a wedding gift. |
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Alternatively, it can mean verse which has a monotonous rhythm, easy rhyme, and cheap or trivial meaning. |
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Where the common unit of verse is based on meter or rhyme, the common unit of prose is purely grammatical, such as a sentence or paragraph. |
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Prose lacks the more formal metrical structure of verse that can be found in traditional poetry. |
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Monsieur Jourdain asked for something to be written in neither verse nor prose. |
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When finishing a piece, the final verse has to end on a perfect cadence that is close to the home key so that the ending of the song is clear. |
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The poems, composed by more than 90 students from Weekley's classes at the continuation campus, ranged from free verse to short, crisp senryus. |
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The verse summary and its commentary are attributed to Nagarjuna by Indian tradition and Tibetan doxographers. |
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The story is also an element in Alexander Blok's 1912 verse drama The Rose and the Cross. |
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