Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 33British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 73
... lines strikes the ear so faintly , that it is easily lost , unless all the syllables of every line co - operate together ; this co - operation can only be obtained by the preservation of every verse unmingled with another as a distinct ...
... lines strikes the ear so faintly , that it is easily lost , unless all the syllables of every line co - operate together ; this co - operation can only be obtained by the preservation of every verse unmingled with another as a distinct ...
Page 74
... line by line , that music would be lost : the individual line is right , not merely in itself , not merely in relation to the lines immediately preceding and following , but in relation to every other line in the passage . To extract ...
... line by line , that music would be lost : the individual line is right , not merely in itself , not merely in relation to the lines immediately preceding and following , but in relation to every other line in the passage . To extract ...
Page 198
... lines on the neck , another pair below the pictures ; a red line above the base - rays , another below them , a third half - way along the foot . Three red lines , spaced out , inside the mouth . The knob of the lid is complete : it is ...
... lines on the neck , another pair below the pictures ; a red line above the base - rays , another below them , a third half - way along the foot . Three red lines , spaced out , inside the mouth . The knob of the lid is complete : it is ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19467 | 7 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir H I Bell | 19 |
NATURALISTIC ETHICS Philosophical Lecture By W F R Hardie | 29 |
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