The Dimensions of Poetry: A Critical AnthologyDodd, Mead, 1966 - 742 стор. |
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Сторінка 9
... language . Like slang , poetry plays with words and creates new forms of language . The differ- ence is that poetry's intention is serious , its form involved , and its life much longer . The doubleness of unliteral language in poetry ...
... language . Like slang , poetry plays with words and creates new forms of language . The differ- ence is that poetry's intention is serious , its form involved , and its life much longer . The doubleness of unliteral language in poetry ...
Сторінка 17
... language of poetry has sometimes a memorable rightness in the way it fits together . We like the way the phrases fall . We say them over , like a kind of magic . We can recognize the language that works and the language that doesn't ...
... language of poetry has sometimes a memorable rightness in the way it fits together . We like the way the phrases fall . We say them over , like a kind of magic . We can recognize the language that works and the language that doesn't ...
Сторінка 257
... Language HELEN DARBISHIRE Milton was by instinct first , and then by trained habit , a crafts- man . It is our luck ... language are to be got in the pages of Lycidas and Comus . First consider the decorum of his language in Lycidas ...
... Language HELEN DARBISHIRE Milton was by instinct first , and then by trained habit , a crafts- man . It is our luck ... language are to be got in the pages of Lycidas and Comus . First consider the decorum of his language in Lycidas ...
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beauty Ben Jonson bird breath bright cloud critical Danny Deever dark dead death doth dramatic dream E. E. CUMMINGS E. M. W. Tillyard earth elegy Emily Dickinson eternal eyes fair fear flowers Gerontion hair hand hath hear heard heart heaven human imagery images John John Donne John Dryden Keats kind King Kubla Khan language leaves light lines live look Lord Lord Randal love's lover Lycidas meaning metaphor Milton mind moon morning mortal Muse nature never night o'er Ozymandias pastoral pattern PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry reader rhyme rhythm rose round sense shadow Shakespeare ship sigh sing sleep song sonnets soul sound spirit stanza stars sweet symbol tears tell thee theme thine things thought tion tree verse voice W. H. AUDEN weep wind wings woods words young