单词 | unrhymed |
例句 | Neither the music nor the unrhymed lyrics reach any great heights of intricacy or sophistication. Theater Review: ‘Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812’ at Kazino 2013-05-17T02:00:12Z This month, EU President Herman van Rompuy published a book of Haiku, the dreamy Japanese poetry of unrhymed three-line poems comprising 17 syllables in all. EU nixes rights agency poetry contest 2010-04-29T16:01:00Z The sequence "Quilting for Childless Women" dominates this impressive, restrained collection – "Not to have children's to be unrhymed, / Undeclined, more complete than you'd really like / At the end". Poetry in brief - reviews 2011-08-12T21:55:08Z Mr. Harrison’s unrhymed verse is far less rhetorically organized than is Updike’s, but this is part of his work’s charm. Review: Men of Letters, John Updike and Jim Harrison, and Their Poems 2015-12-22T05:00:00Z His innovation, starting in the ’60s, was to introduce unrhymed free verse and even prose poetry and to write in mixed meters. A Revolutionary of Arabic Verse 2010-10-17T22:03:00Z "Our time is in need of simplicity," Van Rompuy, 62, told friends at the Belgian parliament marking the publication of 95 of his Haiku - unrhymed three-line poems with 17 syllables in all. EU president publishes Haiku poetry book 2010-04-15T17:51:00Z The stanzas are all sextains, with lines two, four and six sharing a full rhyme, and one, three and five unrhymed. Poem of the week: Going, Going... by Leah Fritz 2011-08-22T09:18:53Z Jan Levy Tranen supplies the literate lyrics, mostly unrhymed and firmly grounded in Shaw’s words, and Austin Pendleton wrote the smartly condensed book. | 'A Minister's Wife': Three Hearts Butt Heads in One Marriage 2011-05-09T02:01:03Z “For every song you ever heard, how many more have died at birth?” he wonders on his 2001 album, “Blue Boy,” suggesting a vast graveyard of unrhymed lyrics and unstruck chords. Review | Samantha Hunt is haunted by books left unfinished 2022-04-11T04:00:00Z Hayes nods to Gwendolyn Brooks’s poem “The Mother,” about abortion, and invokes Robert Lowell, the “Mayflower maniac,” whose unrhymed sonnets are a shadow text for this book. The Politics and Play of Terrance Hayes 2018-06-25T04:00:00Z In the following year, Mr H. B. Donkin in his volume Voluntaries, done for an East End hospital, included Henley’s unrhymed rhythms quintessentializing the poet’s memories of the old Edinburgh Infirmary. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 3 "Helmont, Jean" to "Hernosand" 2012-04-14T02:00:23.707Z In writing, as well as he can, one sonnet, the verse-maker will learn more than he could learn in writing half a dozen ballads or twenty volumes full of unrhymed free verse. The Circus, and Other Essays and Fugitive Pieces 2012-03-12T03:00:26.180Z The play is written in blank verse, already used in Surrey's translation from the Æneid, and perhaps adopted in imitation of the unrhymed verse of the Italian tragedies. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z Sestina, ses-tē′na, n. an old French form of verse, originally consisting of six stanzas of six unrhymed lines, with a final triplet, the same terminal words being used in each stanza, but arranged differently. Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 4 of 4: S-Z and supplements) 2012-01-30T03:00:19.113Z But the foe of rhyme is by no means limited to blank verse in support of his thesis: experiments in unrhymed metre are by no means new. The Unpopular Review, Number 19 July-December 1918 2012-01-09T03:00:24.167Z His uncontaminated mind returned to or continued the Anglo-Saxon alliterative metre and unrhymed verse; he trusted its cadence to the ear, scorning the subjection of rhyme. Amenities of Literature Consisting of Sketches and Characters of English Literature 2011-06-03T02:00:19.227Z And does Life offer us, in regard to our ideal hopes and purposes, anything but a prosaic, unrhymed, unmetrical Translation? The Campaner Thal and Other Writings 2011-04-26T02:00:29.827Z But Milton remains by far the surest and greatest instrumentalist, outside the drama, on the English unrhymed line. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 9, Slice 6 "English Language" to "Epsom Salts" 2011-02-19T03:00:59.807Z The unrhymed iambic pentameter known as blank verse is really a form of free verse; it is a modified form of the unrhymed classical measure. The Literature of Ecstasy 2011-02-16T03:00:39.843Z Milton's style in Paradise Lost is unrhymed heroic verse, which seems to move easily with the thought of the poet. Comfort Found in Good Old Books 2011-01-31T03:00:11.907Z Dr. Nott further claims the honour for Surrey of the invention of heroic blank verse; Surrey’s version of Virgil being unrhymed. Amenities of Literature Consisting of Sketches and Characters of English Literature 2011-06-03T02:00:19.227Z This is the poem—the translation is exact, the original being unrhymed, and the punctuation is the poet's— Splashing waves Rocking boat Dipping gulls— Dunes. The Adventures of Elizabeth in Rügen It is written, like all old Teutonic work of the kind, in alliterative unrhymed rhythm. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 9, Slice 6 "English Language" to "Epsom Salts" 2011-02-19T03:00:59.807Z All words that invoke God in unrhymed English are so regarded in the United States. H. R. The truth is, that these classic metres are so alien to all modern tongues, that, rhymed or unrhymed, they are doomed to failure. A Short History of French Literature The story is written in rhythmical prose, with passages where the rhythm has a more strongly accentuated quality as of unrhymed verse. An Outline of Russian Literature The ode named The Passions is the most popular; that To Evening is the classical example of perfect unrhymed verse. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 6, Slice 6 "Cockaigne" to "Columbus, Christopher" If Irving is the Claude of our unrhymed poetry, Hawthorne is its Poussin. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 81, July, 1864 In the second stanza the first and third lines and the fifth and seventh are unrhymed, a variation from the original design which is not sanctioned by custom. Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 Let poets of old days be compared with poets of new, classics with romantics, rhymed with unrhymed. Essays in English Literature, 1780-1860 This Translation, though unrhymed, preserves throughout the various rhythms of the original. The Industries of Animals In his “Observations” Campion gives us a few specimen-poems written in the unrhymed metres that he proposed to introduce. Lyrics from the Song-Books of the Elizabethan Age The measure adopted is the unrhymed alliterative, characteristic of the Anglo-Saxon literature, and which had long been disused, but which retained its hold on the affections of the common people, who were of Anglo-Saxon stock. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 109, November, 1866 In the first place, the rhyming plan is unfortunate; the opening and concluding couplets of each stanza being unrhymed. Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 Longfellow's verse-for-verse unrhymed translation is far the most accurate of the English translations in verse, and is distinguished also for the verbal felicity of its renderings. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 11 Most of Shakespeare’s plays are written in blank verse, which is unrhymed iambic pentameter, called heroic verse. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10 The Guide The unrhymed line, so often but by no means uniformly resounding with a suspended clangour that is not caught up by the following stanza is distinctly reminiscent of the Alcaics of Horace. Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám and Salámán and Absál Together With A Life Of Edward Fitzgerald And An Essay On Persian Poetry By Ralph Waldo Emerson He began merrily, and in no time had us both laughing; I think the first air which he tortured to fit his unrhymed and unrhythmical words belonged once to Mozart, but I am not sure. We Three A rhyme occurring only in first and third lines gives an unmusical cast, since it causes the stanza to end unrhymed. Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 Verse; unrhymed and half-disrhythmed prose; prose pure and simple: that is what we find. The Flourishing of Romance and the Rise of Allegory (Periods of European Literature, vol. II) Here the first and third lines are unrhymed, the second and fourth, the fifth and seventh, and the sixth and eighth lines rhyme alternately in couplets. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10 The Guide The whole expedition is described in this poetical style, in three hundred and eighty-four unrhymed lines, with a curious mingling of heathen beliefs and Christian views. A Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections Their oratory was unrhymed poetry, and it had the humanity of poetry. A Short History of England Except where a popular song was adapted, the form was usually rhymed or more often unrhymed couplets. The Shanty Book, Part I, Sailor Shanties The following are the extant poems on native heroic themes, written in one or other of the dialects of the Teutonic group, and in unrhymed alliterative measures. Epic and Romance Essays on Medieval Literature To his conservative father, the Messias, as written in unrhymed verse, was a monstrosity in German literature, and he refused to give it a place in his library. The Youth of Goethe The poems of Koltzov are written, for the most part, in an unrhymed verse; the sharp, well-defined accent in Russian amply satisfying the ear, as in German. Russia As Seen and Described by Famous Writers Like the poems of Ambrose and Prudentius, they are in classical metres, unrhymed, and based upon quantity, not accent, and they have the same general character, doctrinal rather than humanly tender. Christmas in Ritual and Tradition, Christian and Pagan Moreover it would be wrong to suppose that this earlier blank verse was always stilted and cut up into end-stopt lines and unrhymed couplets. The Growth of English Drama The poem is a monologue, in unrhymed hexameters and pentameters. An Introduction to the Study of Browning Verse—or at any rate, unrhymed iambic verse—is easier to write than prose, if you care to leave out the emotion which makes verse characteristic and worth writing. On the Art of Writing Lectures delivered in the University of Cambridge 1913-1914 This used poetic language, but the text was unrhymed and its metre irregular. Bearslayer A free translation from the unrhymed Latvian into English heroic verse In this unrhymed poem, assonance is very carefully avoided. Frédéric Mistral Poet and Leader in Provence Milton wrote the story of the Fall of Man: he told it in some thousands of lines of decasyllabic verse unrhymed; he measured these lines out with exquisite cadences. On The Art of Reading It was probably because of this inconsistency that no reviewer treated the book as an experiment in English unrhymed verse, though this was the aspect of it which most interested the writer. More Translations from the Chinese In three of these comedies rhyme can hardly be said to be beaten; that is, the rhyming scenes are on the whole equal to the unrhymed in power and beauty. A Study of Shakespeare Determinations of the minimal satisfactory verse pause were made with a view to comparing the minimum in unrhymed with that in rhymed verses. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. A second consequence of this stronger stress is that verse is written without rhyme; the entire Poem of the Rhone is written in ten-syllable feminine verses unrhymed. Frédéric Mistral Poet and Leader in Provence Collins' "Ode to Simplicity" is in the stanza of the "Nativity Ode," and his beautiful "Ode to Evening," in the unrhymed Sapphics which Milton had employed in his translation of Horace's "Ode to Pyrrha." A History of English Romanticism in the Eighteenth Century If, in two or three instances, I have left a line unrhymed, I have balanced the omission by giving rhymes to other lines which stand unrhymed in the original text. Faust The level regularity of its unrhymed scenes is just like that of the weaker portions of Titus Andronicus and the First Part of King Henry the Sixth—the opening scene, for example, of either play. A Study of Shakespeare In the case of unrhymed verses, with long verse pause, the cone is often very much elongated, and it is quite impossible to say where the sound ceases. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. It was an unrhymed song out of Saturnalia, it was the luminous, passionate nocturne of the streets. The Divine Fire In these exquisite formal unrhymed lines, Collins has summed up his view and dream of life. The Art of Letters A literal translation is always possible in the unrhymed passages; but even here Mr. Hayward's ear did not dictate to him the necessity of preserving the original rhythm. Faust The hymns were unrhymed and unmetrical, but they may have been written in the form of alphabetical acrostics, such as appear in the 119th and a few other Psalms. Chapters on Jewish Literature As compared with unrhymed verse, the pause is in general decidedly shorter. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. Again, considerable portions of his lyric verse consist merely of prose, cut into lines of different length, in imitation of the unrhymed measures of the Greek poet, Pindar. Matthew Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum and Other Poems It is divided into nine dreams, and is in the unrhymed, alliterative, first English manner. A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature It is unrhymed; for that terrible tale can dispense, in English, with soft echoes at the end of lines. Essays Æsthetical The natural images and similes so common in their wild, abrupt, unrhymed chants and songs showed how closely they watched and sympathised with nature. The Long White Cloud There is a variety of forms possible to the unrhymed verse, but that with the climax at the close is decidedly the most frequent. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. At intervals, however, Arnold was nobly lyrical, and strangely, too, at times, in those same uneven measures in which are found his most signal failures—the unrhymed Pindaric. Matthew Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum and Other Poems The poem is in the old English unrhymed, alliterative verse, and "marks the revival of the English mind and spirit." A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature “Paradise Lost,” conceived in Milton’s brain, could not utter itself in any other mode than the unrhymed harmonies that have given to our language a new music. Essays Æsthetical Each one was elaborately addressed and furnished with a rhymed or unrhymed tag that often hid a sting beneath its clownish exterior. The Soul of a Child In the unrhymed stanzas the verse pause varies widely, and may be as large as three times the foot pause. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. These verses lose their merit of a touching simplicity in an unrhymed translation; but they will serve to show the habitual temper of her mind. Summer on the Lakes, in 1843 Of late, Italy has claimed the lion's share in these unrhymed sketches of Mrs. Browning in the négligée of home. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861 And will my name wake moods as amorous As that of Abelard or Launcelot Arouses? be recalled when Pyramus And Tristram are unrhymed of and forgot?— The Certain Hour I cannot see that Miss Lowell's use of unrhymed 'vers libre' has been surpassed in English. A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass Verse pauses in unrhymed stanzas, together with the foot pause within the verse. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. Miss Ludvigsen had written an unrhymed song about true love, which was sung at the feast, and Louisa eclipsed all the other bridesmaids. Tales of Two Countries The unrhymed songs of The Princess are full of these delicate modulations of sound. A Study of Poetry And with perfect assurance they tacked on to their music verses in rhyme, or unrhymed, written in the style of an elementary school or a decadent feuilleton. Jean Christophe: in Paris The Market-Place, Antoinette, the House A great deal of unrhymed poetry is yet to be written in the various standard rhythms and in carefully fashioned metres. Toward the Gulf There are as wide, isolated variations as in the case of unrhymed material. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. In all the stanzas but the last, the last line in each hangs unrhymed: in the last the rhyming is fulfilled. England's Antiphon The Campion connection interests me personally because Campion was the protagonist of unrhymed lyrical verse—my special metrical hobby. The Adventure of Living : a Subjective Autobiography A passage or two of the unrhymed thoughts, with long periods of interval, will suggest the course of her mental history. The Emancipated The princess was a poem, unlettered and unrhymed. The Puppet Crown Of 43 unrhymed stanzas there are 19 which show a decidedly long pause at the close of some one of the verses. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory. The lines were unrhymed, such as a deaf person can make. Notre-Dame De Paris I prefer to call them poems in "unrhymed cadence", for that conveys their exact meaning to an English ear. Sword Blades and Poppy Seed The desire to "quintessentialize", to head-up an emotion until it burns white-hot, seems to be an integral part of the modern temper, and certainly "unrhymed cadence" is unique in its power of expressing this. Sword Blades and Poppy Seed |
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