Quotes by Verses Truth shines the brighter, clad in verse. Alexander Pope verses poetry shining As a rapper, your verses are like a window in to who you are. Andre Benjamin verses rapper window Women are not apt to be won by the charms of verse. Bayard Taylor wooing verses charm I wrote my own verses. Anything I did, I wrote myself. Brandy Norwood verses my-own What shall one do with the verse, if he knows not That? Dante Alighieri verses ifs knows All of Victorian verse is pentameter. Derek Walcott victorian verses The form of free verse is as binding and as liberating as the form of a rondeau. Donald Hall verses binding form To this generation I would say: Memorize some bit of verse of truth or beauty. Edgar Lee Masters verses this-generation generations The rudiment of verse may, possibly, be found in the spondee. Edgar Allan Poe verses found may Many of today's verses are prose and bad prose. Eugenio Montale verses prose today The glorious Dryden, refiner and purifier of English verse, did less for rhyme than he did for metre. H. P. Lovecraft rhyme verses glorious Mostly the thought and the verse come inseparably. In my poem Poetics, it's as close as I come to telling how I do it. Howard Nemerov verses poetic literature I am not at all clear what free verse is anymore. That's one of the things you learn not to know. Howard Nemerov verses clear knows I've written probably over 200 songs that have a verse and a chorus and that's it. Hunter Parrish chorus verses song Work in the theater sharpened my verse and my cinema. James Broughton verses theater cinema And what holds good of verse holds infinitely better in respect to prose. James Payn verses prose I've read some of your modern free verse and wonder who set it free. John Barrymore verses modern wonder One mark of good verse is surprise John Betjeman verses mark surprise It should here be added that poetry habitually takes the form of verse. John Drinkwater verses form should I am reading Jonson's verses to the memory of Shakespeare; an insolent, sparing, and invidious panegyric. John Dryden verses reading memories 123»