John Fairbairn wrote:
But in English the most famous case may be the poem "Tiger, tiger, burning bright/what immortal hand or eye/can frame thy fearful symmetry." I have noticed that people still discuss this today, but when I was young and we learned this at school, there was no problem. Eye was pronounced ee in our area (and the plural was een, just as the plural of shoe was shoen), so it did rhyme with symmetry. And, if it comes to that, thy is still in use here, oop North.
That reminded me of one of the popular folk songs sung by the Chad Mitchell Trio.
"Queen Elinor was a sick woman
And afraid that she would die,
When she sent for two friars out of France
To come to her speedily."
They pronounced speedily as speedileye instead of pronouncing die as dee.
Also, not about pronunciation, but in my dialect, back in the 19th century the past tense of
hear was
hearn. Also, from my grandmother's high school English book I learned that the plural of
pease is
peases.
I'm sure it still is. But I had thought that pease was an alternate spelling of peas.