John Livingston Lowes (1867–1945) American academic
Nation (February 1916)
Tout ce qui n'est point prose, est vers; et tout ce qui n'est point vers, est prose.
Act II, sc. iv
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme (1670)
John Livingston Lowes (1867–1945) American academic
Nation (February 1916)
“The fact that you can write verse is in itself a certificate that you can write prose.”
Vachel Lindsay (1879–1931) American poet
What It Means to Be a Poet in America (1926)
F. S. Flint (1885–1960) English Imagist poet
German Chronicle, Poetry & Drama, vol. II, 1914
“Neither in prose nor verse we aught can say,
But some one said it long before our day.”
Francesco Berni (1497–1535) Italian poet
LIX, 1
Rifacimento of Orlando Innamorato
Michael Halliday (1925–2018) Australian linguist
Source: 1950s–1960s, The Linguistic Sciences and Language Teaching, 1964, p. 1.
John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Normanby (1648–1721) English poet and notable Tory politician of the late Stuart period
Essay on Poetry (published 1723).