10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «DISPONDAIC»
Discover the use of
dispondaic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
dispondaic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Scribit Mater: Mary and the Language Arts in the Literature ...
... combinations of trochees and dactyls. in the spondaic line, different line
lengths produce different kinds of poems.114 Thus, an example of a dispondaic
poem— one with two spondaic stresses per line—would be written as follows: “o
Maria/ ...
2
Select Poems of Catullus
27 dispondaic endings, of which 8 are preceded by a dissyllable containing two
shorts (~— ~). Dispondaic endings are comparatively rare in Lucretius, and a
trispondaic ending is unknown. In Virgil spondaic endings are imitations from the
...
Gaius Valerius Catullus, Francis Peacock Simpson, 1879
6a), the sole example of a dispondaic followed by a diiambic (at 48. la), and the
only unambiguous example of the major ionic ending (at 47. 9b), all cluster in the
description of the tribute brought to Yudhisthira. The identification of the ...
4
Musical Aesthetics: From antiquity to the eighteenth century
Does the pyrrhic foot or spondaic or anapestic or dactylic or proceleusmatic or
dispondaic delight us for any other reason than its comparing the one of its parts
to the other by an equal division of itself? And what beauty does the iamb,
trochee, ...
5
Latin Hexameter Verse: An Aid to Composition; with Key
Lucretius and Catullus use dispondaic quadrisyllables (not proper names)
frequently. Cf. Catullus lxviii. 65Jam Castoris implorata (elegiac) ; and elsewhere
admirantes adludebant ; in Lucretius—naturai, aeternumque (though no
spondaics ...
6
Late Beethoven: Music, Thought, Imagination
132 (Beethoven): Assai sostenuto, 22; dispondaic sequences in, 268n38; healing
power, 61-62, 235, 236; Molto adagio, 23$, 237; and Ninth Symphony
instrumental finale, 217; religious expression in, 62, 200 Symphonies,
Beethoven's, ...
7
The Poetry of the Future
spondaic, molossian, or dispondaic, according as the syllables are weak or
strong ; for there is not even the suspicion of any rhythm in any of these so-called
feet, for the ample reason that rhythm rests on what they have not — a relief of
strong ...
James Wood Davidson, 1888
8
A primer on the language theory of St. Augustine
What we love in sensible harmony, says the Master, is the "equality of equally
measured intervals" (6.10.25). The pyrrhic or dispondaic foot pleases us only
because we judge it and its parts equal to other pyrrhic and dispondaic feet and
their ...
9
Theatron: Rhetorische Kultur in Spätantike und Mittelalter / ...
Broadly speaking there are two basic types of cadence – dispondaic/epitritic on
the one hand, or iambic/trochaic on the other. The third possibility is that of a
stringing together of words which does not create rhythmicity. Spondaic and
epitritic ...
10
Inlaboratus Et Facilis: Aspects of Structure in Some Letters ...
138: possibly the colon may be divided after quidam. 141-142: p. 92, n. 19 145: p.
164 142: p. 125 148-150: p. 92, n. 19 1 Cf. 80.89 and 122.22. Ait as one syllable
would produce — a derivative of the dispondaic group (Miiller's D3) ...