Archive

        Displaying 1,850 digitized works
    
  1. 1151

    On Metrical Tests as Applied to Dramatic Poetry.Transactions.

  2. 1152

    On Metrical TranslationLiterary remains of Charles Stuart Calverley

  3. 1153

    On RhymeThe portrait of a scholar, and other essays written in Macedonia, 1916-1918.

  4. 1154

    On Rhythm in English VerseMilton's Lycidas,

  5. 1155

    On Sanscrit and Pra'crit Poetry (the letter i has a half circle above it in both cases)Asiatick researches, or, Transactions of the Society instituted in Bengal, for inquiring into the history and antiquities, the arts, sciences, and literature, of Asia.

  6. 1156

    On ShakespeareEssays philosophical and moral, historical and literary.

  7. 1157

    On Some of the Characteristics of Modern Poetry, and on the Lyrical Poems of Alfred TennysonThe Englishman's Magazine

  8. 1158

    On Some Technical Elements of Style in LiteratureEssays in the art of writing

  9. 1159

    On speech formation as the basis for true spelling.

  10. 1160

    On Stile and VersificationEssays philosophical and moral, historical and literary.

  11. 1161

    On Style in Literature: Its Technical Elements.The contemporary review

  12. 1162

    On teaching English,with detailed examples, and an enquiry into the definition of poetry.

  13. 1163

    On the Disposition of the Rimes in the SestinaThe Modern language quarterly.

  14. 1164

    On the Galliambic MetreThe Attis of Caius Valerius Catullus translated into English verse, with dissertations on the myth of Attis, on the origin of tree-worship, and on the Gallambic metre

  15. 1165

    On the History, System, and Varieties of Turkish Poetry.Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom.

  16. 1166

    On the Italian Pindaric and Anacaeontic Canzonets.Italian magazine.

  17. 1167

    On the Italian Pindaric and Anacaeontic Canzonets.Italian tracts; or A collection of selected pieces.

  18. 1168

    On the Metre of Pierce Plowman's VisionsReliques of ancient English poetry: consisting of old heroic ballads, songs, and other pieces of our earlier poets, (chiefly of the lyric kind) Together with some few of later date ...

  19. 1169

    On the Ode called by the Italians Petrarchesca.Italian tracts; or A collection of selected pieces.

  20. 1170

    On the Ode called by the Italians Petrarchesca.Italian magazine.

  21. 1171

    On the origin and ramifications of the English language.Preceded by an inquiry into the primitive seats, early migrations, and final settlements of the principal European nations.

  22. 1172

    On the Place and Power of Accent in LanguageHorae Hellenicæ, essays and discussion on some important points of Greek philology and antiquity;

  23. 1173

    On the Principles and Uses of Alliteration in PoetryThe Afternoon lectures on literature and art : Delivered in the theatre of the Museum of industry, S. Stephen's Green, Dublin, in April and May, 1865. Third series.

  24. 1174

    On the Pronunciation of GreekThe Classical museum.

  25. 1175

    On the Pronunciation of the LATIN TONGUE. To Mrs. ROXANA TERMAGANT.Have at you all: or, the Drury-Lane journal. By Madam Roxana Termagant.

  26. 1176

    On the Pronunciation of the Word AchesThe European magazine, and London review; containing the literature, history, politics, arts, manners and amusements of the age. By the Philological Society of London.

  27. 1177

    On the prosodies of the Greek and Latin languages

  28. 1178

    On the prosody of Paradise regained and Samson Agonistes.Being a supplement to the paper On the elements of Milton's blank verse in Paradise lost, which is printed in the Rev. H. C. Beeching's edition of Paradise lost, bk. I, Clarendon Press, Oxford.

  29. 1179

    On the relations between spoken and written language with special reference to English,

  30. 1180

    On the Sapphic and Alcaic MetresThe Classical journal.

  31. 1181

    On the Sapphic and Alcaic Metres, No. IVThe Classical journal.

  32. 1182

    ON THE SECOND CLASSICAL BOOK OF THE CHINESE. BY THE PRESIDENT.Asiatic researches; Or, Transactions of the society, instituted in Bengal, for inquiring into the history and antiquities, the arts, sciences, and literature, of Asia. Volume the first. Printed verbatim from the Calcutta edition.

  33. 1183

    On the Sound and Pronunciation of some British and German Words in the Time of the RomansTransactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom.

  34. 1184

    On the study of words

  35. 1185

    ON THE USE of MONOSYLLABLES in POETRY. By GEORGE JEFFREYS, Esq;Letters, by several eminent persons deceased. Including the correspondence of John Hughes, esq. (Author of the Siege of Damascus) and several of his friends, published from the originals: with notes explanatory and historical. By John Duncombe, M.A. One of the six preachers in christ church, Canterbury. In three volumes.

  36. 1186

    On the Vowel Point of the Hebrew LanguageThe Classical journal.

  37. 1187

    On Translating HomerThe Universal review.

  38. 1188

    On translating Homer,

  39. 1189

    On translating Homer.Last words. A lecture given at Oxford.

  40. 1190

    On VersificationThe Inspector, literary magazine and review

  41. 1191

    The origin and history of the English language :and of the early literature it embodies

  42. 1192

    Original poems, and translations,in two volumes. The author, John Dryden, Esq; ...

  43. 1193

    Original tales and ballads in the Yorkshire dialect,known also as Inglis, the language of the Angles, and the Northumbrian dialect: spoken to-day in Yorkshire, and in early times from South Yorkshire to Aberdeen,

  44. 1194

    Origins and meanings of popular phrases and names,

  45. 1195

    Origins of the English people and the English language;

  46. 1196

    Orthographical exercisesin a series of moral letters. To which is added, a selection of essays, &c. from the best English writers. By James Alderson, Master of the English Academy, Ashford, Kent.

  47. 1197

    An orthographie, conteyning the due order and reason, howe to write or paint thimage of mannes voice, most like to the life or nature.

  48. 1198

    Ossian and the Ossianic literature

  49. 1199

    Our living poets,an essay in criticism,

  50. 1200

    Outline of English grammar.

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