Poetry: A Modern Guide to Its Understanding and EnjoymentDell Pub., 1965 - 287 pagina's |
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Pagina 20
... poet , but it is his " speech " which produces that result . And since " to purify the dialect of the tribe ” is the transla- tion of a line of Mallarmé , Eliot has smuggled in the sug- gestion that the poetic heritage from the past is ...
... poet , but it is his " speech " which produces that result . And since " to purify the dialect of the tribe ” is the transla- tion of a line of Mallarmé , Eliot has smuggled in the sug- gestion that the poetic heritage from the past is ...
Pagina 21
... poets that an essential doubleness exists at the heart of poetic creation itself and of any analysis of it . The poet has a twofold nature , as man and as artist ; poetry comes from a twofold source - a mysterious inner compulsion and a ...
... poets that an essential doubleness exists at the heart of poetic creation itself and of any analysis of it . The poet has a twofold nature , as man and as artist ; poetry comes from a twofold source - a mysterious inner compulsion and a ...
Pagina 70
... poetic diction ; certain marked characteristics belong to each tradition . Before the enormous development of lan- guage which the Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists illustrate , the early Elizabethan lyrists sang in a very sim- ple ...
... poetic diction ; certain marked characteristics belong to each tradition . Before the enormous development of lan- guage which the Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists illustrate , the early Elizabethan lyrists sang in a very sim- ple ...
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword | 9 |
THE POETIC PROCESS | 11 |
Poetry and the Poet | 13 |
Copyright | |
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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