The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 238The "Gentleman's magazine" section is a digest of selections from the weekly press; the "(Trader's) monthly intelligencer" section consists of news (foreign and domestic), vital statistics, a register of the month's new publications, and a calendar of forthcoming trade fairs. |
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Page 345
Verse of some kind is common to all poetry . Not , necessarily , verse with an equal number of feet in each line : still less , rhyming or alliterative verse . These last are clearly accidents , extraneous ornaments of metre .
Verse of some kind is common to all poetry . Not , necessarily , verse with an equal number of feet in each line : still less , rhyming or alliterative verse . These last are clearly accidents , extraneous ornaments of metre .
Page 389
6 headed “ Is Verse a Trammel ? ” which I have printed in this number . To Mr. Omond's paper I will add the substance of an expostulation against Mr. Clive's doctrine addressed to me by a gentleman who is in the lists of the young poets ...
6 headed “ Is Verse a Trammel ? ” which I have printed in this number . To Mr. Omond's paper I will add the substance of an expostulation against Mr. Clive's doctrine addressed to me by a gentleman who is in the lists of the young poets ...
Page 515
The ' public ' never did and never will care for the highest products of human genius , whether expressed in prose or verse ; on the whole , they are rather charmed by “ jingle ' than otherwise . Shelley is quite as ' popular ' as ...
The ' public ' never did and never will care for the highest products of human genius , whether expressed in prose or verse ; on the whole , they are rather charmed by “ jingle ' than otherwise . Shelley is quite as ' popular ' as ...
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Contents
99 | 60 |
IV | 137 |
An Evening with Captain Boyton By ARCHIBALD MCNEILL | 219 |
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