Ripper the bard?
I'm not completely convinced that the GSG was connected to the apron piece, but I don't believe too much in coincidences.
On the other side, it doesn't surprise me in the least that a Victorian graffito might come in verse form, and I would call writing a message in verse an automatic or accidental reflex for a Victorian.
If I'm not mistaken, a Shakespearean pentameter counts as 10 syllables because the last (11th syllable) doesn't count.
To-be-or-not-to-be,-that-is-the-ques-tion. (iambic, technically 11 syllables)
The-Ju-wes-are-the-men-that-won't-be-blamed-for-no-thing. (iambic, technically 13 syllables, in French known as a 12-syllable aléxandrin)
Iambic, 13 syllables is a meter used by Homer (in the original), by the by! Insert a very big LOL here.
Originally posted by Steven Russell
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On the other side, it doesn't surprise me in the least that a Victorian graffito might come in verse form, and I would call writing a message in verse an automatic or accidental reflex for a Victorian.
Originally posted by Steven Russell
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To-be-or-not-to-be,-that-is-the-ques-tion. (iambic, technically 11 syllables)
The-Ju-wes-are-the-men-that-won't-be-blamed-for-no-thing. (iambic, technically 13 syllables, in French known as a 12-syllable aléxandrin)
Iambic, 13 syllables is a meter used by Homer (in the original), by the by! Insert a very big LOL here.
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