Poetry: A Modern Guide to Its Understanding and EnjoymentDell Pub., 1965 - 287 pagina's |
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Pagina 124
... present time , nor years unborn Could to my sight that heavenly face restore . In contrast with Jonson's terse couplets , this seems to flow in simple passionate speech without ornament or poetical ingenuity . But its rhythmical variety ...
... present time , nor years unborn Could to my sight that heavenly face restore . In contrast with Jonson's terse couplets , this seems to flow in simple passionate speech without ornament or poetical ingenuity . But its rhythmical variety ...
Pagina 132
... present , the individual with the cosmic , illusion with reality , and interweave them all into a unity . The slumber of the first line , and the sealing of the poet's spirit in total human unawareness , matches Lucy's sleep of death ...
... present , the individual with the cosmic , illusion with reality , and interweave them all into a unity . The slumber of the first line , and the sealing of the poet's spirit in total human unawareness , matches Lucy's sleep of death ...
Pagina 147
... present . The last verse drops the personal altogether in the question of the responsibility for the conflict between desire and destiny . That a supernatural being is made ac- countable for the human condition may seem an evasion that ...
... present . The last verse drops the personal altogether in the question of the responsibility for the conflict between desire and destiny . That a supernatural being is made ac- countable for the human condition may seem an evasion that ...
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword | 9 |
THE POETIC PROCESS | 11 |
Poetry and the Poet | 13 |
Copyright | |
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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