Edgar A. Poe: The Rationale of Verse, a Preliminary edition (1968), title page and table of contents


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Title page:

 

 

EDGAR A. POE

THE RATIONALE OF VERSE

A preliminary edition, incorporating
cognate documents by GOOLD BROWN,
  WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT,
  JAMES DAVENPORT WHELPLEY;

and introduction, notes, and index by

  J. Arthur Greenwood

 

Princeton, N.J.

Wolfhart Book Co.

1968

 

 

 



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Table of Contents

CONTENTS

                                       Page
Preface    viii
Introduction    viii
 
  by Edgar A. Poe:     
  Bryant    1
  Notes upon English verse    45
  [marginale on rhyme]    84
  [marginale on alexandrines]    88
  The rationale of verse: first half    93
    second half    121
  Mary E. Hewitt    152
 
  by William Cullen Bryant:     
Appendix 1A   On the use of trisyllabic feet in iambic verse    159
1B   On trisyllabie feet in iambic measure    171
 
  by Goold Brown:     
2   Versification    181
 
  by James Davenport Whelpley:     
3   The art of measuring verses    186
 
  editorial appendices     
4   False accents in Byron    206
5   Variant readings in verses cited by Poe    211
6   Leonicenus and Lily    216
7   Know you the land    219
 
   Textual notes    224
   Index    226
   Table of rhymes    263
   Chronological table    270

 


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Once more the weary prosodist picked up his rusty pen,

and blotted out six anapaests and scratched them in again,

and superscribed an oracle—of rhyme and reason bereft:

‘Verses are read from left to right, but scanned from right to left.’



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Notes:

J. Arthur Greenwood may have been Joseph Arthur Greenwood, born in 1926 or 1927. This same J. Arthur Greenwood attended Stuyvesant High School (in New York, NY) where he was on the Mathematics Team and graduated in 1943. He was a Research Associate in Mathematics at Princeton, U. He obtained his undergraduate degree from Harvard in 1946 (and in that year was a Putnam Fellow), and obtained a Ph. D from Harvard’s Department of Statistics (noted as the first awarded by that department), in 1959. He worked at Manhattan Life Insurance Company in New York, in 1950 as a statistician. He was later associated with the New York University. He co-founded Oceanweather Inc in 1977 and lived in White Plains, NY. In 1982, about July, he wrote to columnist William Safire asking if there was a word for an ex-wife-with-whom-one-is-having-an-affair, suggesting that he still had a special side-interest in language. It should be admitted, however, that the name “J. Arthur Greenwood” is a surprisingly common one, and this may not be the correct person responsible for the present work. (His mother may have been Kathryn Claire Greenwood, nee Bookbinder, who was born in 1897, died in 1985 and is buried in the McClellan Street Cemetery, Newark, NJ, in a lot belonging to her parents. Her obituary lists at least three grandchildren: Daniel, James and Julie. If there are yet descendands out there, and we would be happy to hear from them to confirm or reject our tentative identification of J. A. Greenwood.)

The text for this electronic version of this book was taken from an original printed form, revised for XHTML/CSS and to follow our own formatting preferences. Pagination of the original edition has been included. Although considerable effort has been made to be true to the original printed edition, some modifications have been made in formatting for this electronic presentation. Greenwood's study of “The Rationale of Verse” and related essays by Poe is highly idiosyncratic, in both content and presentation. Notes are generally presented as footnotes, even when they appear on pages other than those where the original reference appeared. In many cases, footnotes are stacked together such that they occupy a full page. (See, for example, page 47.) Consequently, the text often skips a full page. In some parts, it is virtually impossible to distinguish the text from the footnotes that are intended to clarify and illuminate that text (at least without a copy of that original text to follow). The use of underscoring in the original edition is problematic in HTML, where underscoring indicates a link. In the current presentation, these have generally been rendered as italics. In the index, underscores have generally been ignored, with the additional distinctions having been deemed as not being helpful.

All material in this edition is technically protected by copyright, exclusively held by J. Arthur Greenwood. Efforts to contact J. Arthur Greenwood, or locate descendates, have not proven production. No trace has been found of Wolfhart Book Co, which may have produced the book as a physical object without really having served as a publisher. Consequently, permission has not been obtained by the Poe Society of Baltimore to provide this electronic edition for academic and research purposes only. This text, then, is presented under a broad assumption of fair use, and with the idea that the author would have been pleased to have his work widely available for use, for educational purposes and without any charge for access. If a reasonable claim for copyright can be documented, please contact the Poe Society of Baltimore to arrange for permission, or to request that we remove the material.

 

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[S:0 - JAG68, 1968] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Bookshelf - EAP: The Rationale of Verse — a preliminary edition - (1968)