Poetry: A Modern Guide to Its Understanding and EnjoymentDell Pub., 1965 - 287 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 19
Pagina 23
... complete being is involved . It is not only his " whole soul , " as Coleridge says , that is brought into activity , for poetry is as much sensuous as of the spirit . His consciousness is stored with swarms of physical and emotional ...
... complete being is involved . It is not only his " whole soul , " as Coleridge says , that is brought into activity , for poetry is as much sensuous as of the spirit . His consciousness is stored with swarms of physical and emotional ...
Pagina 270
... complete consort dancing together . " It is not subject to time or change or chance because , though it seems so warm and living , it is an image - world , existing only in its own im- perishable medium . But that is its triumph . E. M. ...
... complete consort dancing together . " It is not subject to time or change or chance because , though it seems so warm and living , it is an image - world , existing only in its own im- perishable medium . But that is its triumph . E. M. ...
Pagina 280
... complete poem of fourteen lines in iambic pentameter . Though poets have evolved many vari- ations of it , the two general types are the Petrarchan and the Shakespearean . The Petrarchan , introduced from Italy ... " in the sixteenth ...
... complete poem of fourteen lines in iambic pentameter . Though poets have evolved many vari- ations of it , the two general types are the Petrarchan and the Shakespearean . The Petrarchan , introduced from Italy ... " in the sixteenth ...
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword | 9 |
THE POETIC PROCESS | 11 |
Poetry and the Poet | 13 |
Copyright | |
14 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Poetry: A Modern Guide to Its Understanding and Enjoyment Elizabeth A. Drew Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1967 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. E. Housman beauty bird called calm Coleridge COLLECTED POEMS Copyright couplet Crazy Jane creates creative D. H. Lawrence dark dead death delight despair Donne doth Dylan Thomas earth Elizabethan emotional eternal eyes faith feel feet final fire flowers Frost give grief heart heaven Hopkins human iambic pentameter language light lines living Lord Louis MacNeice lovers lyric man's meaning metaphor mind mood moral nature never night passion physical poet poet's poetic poetry Pope prose reader rhyme rhythm rhythmical Robert Frost romantic satire says scene seems sense sensuous Shakespeare shining singing song sonnet soul speaking speech spirit stanza sweet syllables symbolic T. S. Eliot thee theme thing Thomas Hardy thou thought tion tone true verse vision voice W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden Wallace Stevens whole wind words Wordsworth writing Yeats