The Range of Literature: PoetryVan Nostrand, 1973 - 306 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 79
Página 386
... poet may employ rhyme to mark the ends of lines , and he nearly always makes use of other kinds of repetition , such as assonance and alliteration ( see the Glossary beginning on page 639 ) . Like rhythm itself , these effects develop ...
... poet may employ rhyme to mark the ends of lines , and he nearly always makes use of other kinds of repetition , such as assonance and alliteration ( see the Glossary beginning on page 639 ) . Like rhythm itself , these effects develop ...
Página 387
... poetic workmanship , not of raw emotion . Yet it is not without meaning , for in mocking himself so coolly Lovelace also indirectly mocks his society and our own : though poet and lady are now several centuries dead , the young man is ...
... poetic workmanship , not of raw emotion . Yet it is not without meaning , for in mocking himself so coolly Lovelace also indirectly mocks his society and our own : though poet and lady are now several centuries dead , the young man is ...
Página 388
... poet does through his fresh awareness of language is to bring us its inherited load of richness and at the same time to clear away the incrustations of careless use , so that his words have the value of both fresh bright newness and old ...
... poet does through his fresh awareness of language is to bring us its inherited load of richness and at the same time to clear away the incrustations of careless use , so that his words have the value of both fresh bright newness and old ...
Contenido
The Art of Reading Poetry 383 | 383 |
Versification 638 | 391 |
Transition to Poetry | 392 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 19 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
A. E. HOUSMAN ANDREW MARVELL beauty birds boughs bright brown clouds cold cried dark dead death doth dream e. e. cummings earth elegy Euroclydon eyes fair fall fear feel fire flowers Goddamm gone grass green Gwendolyn Brooks hair hand happy hath hear heard heart heaven hill king Lady Langston Hughes leaves light live lonely lonnë look LOUIS MACNEICE Lycidas meaning mind Miniver moon morning mountains never night pale Patrick Spence poem poet poetry praise Prufrock rhyme round sang sigh silent sing sleep Slim snow song SONNET Sonnet 23 soul sound stanza stars sweet T. E. HULME T. S. Eliot tell thee things thou thought tree turn verse voice W. H. AUDEN walk weep WILLIAM WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS wind wings word Yeats young