The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

    So, soon | may I fol | -l~ow,
      When friend | -ships decay,
    And, from love’s | shining cir | -cl~e,
      The gems | drop away;
    When true | hearts lie with | -_~er’d_,
      And fond | ones are flown,
    Oh! who | would inhab | -it
      This bleak | world alone ?”
        T. MOORE:  Melodies, Songs, and Airs, p. 171.

Example V.—­Nemesis Calling up the Dead Astarte.

   “Shadow! | or spir | -_~it!_
      Whatev | -er thou art,
    Which still | doth inher | -_~it_
      The whole | or a part
    Of the form | of thy birth,
      Of the mould | of thy clay,
    Which return’d | to the earth,
      Re-appear | to the day! 
    Bear what | thou bor | -_~est_,
      The heart | and the form,
    And the as | -pect thou wor | -_~est_
      Redeem | from the worm! 
    Appear!—­Appear!—­Appear!”
        LORD BYRON:  Manfred, Act ii, Sc. 4.

Example VI.—­Anapestic Dimeter with Trimeter.

    FIRST VOICE.

    “Make room | for the com | -bat, make room;
      Sound the trum | -pet and drum;
    A fair | -er than Ve | -nus prepares
    To encoun | -ter a great | -er than Mars. 
    Make room | for the com | -bat, make room;
      Sound the trum | -pet and drum.”

    SECOND VOICE.

    “Give the word | to begin,
     Let the com | -batants in,
    The chal | -lenger en | -ters all glo | r~io~us;
     But Love | has decreed,
     Though Beau | -ty may bleed,
    Yet Beau | -ty shall still | be vic_to | -r~io~us_.” 
       GEORGE GRANVILLE:  Johnson’s British Poets, Vol. v, p. 58.

Example VII.—­Anapestic Dimeter with Tetrameter.

    AIR.

    “Let the pipe’s | merry notes | aid the skill | of the voice;
    For our wish | -es are crown’d, | and our hearts | shall rejoice. 
        Rejoice, | and be glad;
        For, sure, | he is mad,
    Who, where mirth, | and good hum | -mour, and har | -mony’s found,
    Never catch | -es the smile, | nor lets pleas | -ure go round. 
        Let the stu | -pid be grave,
        ’Tis the vice | of the slave;
        But can nev | -er agree
        With a maid | -en like me,
    Who is born | in a coun | -try that’s hap | -py and free.” 
        LLOYD:  Johnson’s British Poets, Vol. viii, p, 178.

MEASURE IV.—­ANAPESTIC OF ONE FOOT, OR MONOMETER.

This measure is rarely if ever used except in connexion with longer lines.  The following example has six anapestics of two feet, and two of one; but the latter, being verses of double rhyme, have each a surplus short syllable; and four of the former commence with the iambus:—­

Example I.—­A Song in a Drama.

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The Grammar of English Grammars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.