Introduction to Poetry: Poetic Expression, Poetic Truth - the Progress of PoetryJ. Murray, 1902 - 174 psl. |
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60 psl.
... utterance ; above all , he does not pretend to feel : the emotion is genuine , and the utterance direct , poeta nascitur , non fit . It is by those who come after the poets that the rules of poetry are made . § 22. Expression must be ...
... utterance ; above all , he does not pretend to feel : the emotion is genuine , and the utterance direct , poeta nascitur , non fit . It is by those who come after the poets that the rules of poetry are made . § 22. Expression must be ...
67 psl.
... utterance . From shrewd old Ennius , who declared that he never could write a line unless he had gout in his toe to rouse him out of his indifference , to this account in Matthew Arnold's Obermann of the poet's " feverish blood ...
... utterance . From shrewd old Ennius , who declared that he never could write a line unless he had gout in his toe to rouse him out of his indifference , to this account in Matthew Arnold's Obermann of the poet's " feverish blood ...
68 psl.
... utterance all the available charms of style . The ordinary man cannot know the forces that move a poet . He vaguely believes that a poet is an unpractical man speaking an unnatural language . The further the ordinary man is removed from ...
... utterance all the available charms of style . The ordinary man cannot know the forces that move a poet . He vaguely believes that a poet is an unpractical man speaking an unnatural language . The further the ordinary man is removed from ...
79 psl.
... utterance . Yet they must have possessed a true worth in politics as well as a multitude of relative and conventional values . Similarly , every new book has its true place in literature as well as the number of false places to which ...
... utterance . Yet they must have possessed a true worth in politics as well as a multitude of relative and conventional values . Similarly , every new book has its true place in literature as well as the number of false places to which ...
109 psl.
... utterance , remains an uncontrollable witness to the dependence of the present on the past . No one has been so insane as to pretend that odes and epics should be written in Volapuk . " As an innovator , Whitman failed . He had nothing ...
... utterance , remains an uncontrollable witness to the dependence of the present on the past . No one has been so insane as to pretend that odes and epics should be written in Volapuk . " As an innovator , Whitman failed . He had nothing ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Introduction to Poetry– Poetic Expression, Poetic Truth, the Progress of Poetry Laurie Magnus Peržiūra negalima - 2012 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accented Æneas Æneid alliteration amaranth ambition beauty birds blank verse breath Catullus century criticism death device drama earth effect emotion English English poetry epic epic poetry epos example expression eyes Fcap feeling flowers gods Greek hath heaven HEBRAISM AND HELLENISM heroic couplet Homer human idea Iliad instance Julius Cæsar Keats kind King language Latin LAURIE MAGNUS learned lines literary literature lives Lycidas lyrical Magdalen College matter Matthew Arnold means melody metaphor metre metrical Milton mind modern muse nature Note original Phillips piety pity poem poet poetical truth progress of poetry purist rhyme Roman Rome scansion sense Shakespeare Shelley simile song sonnet sorrow soul sound speak speech spirit stanza style sweet syllable symbols Tennyson thee things thought tion tragedy trochee true utterance Virgil winds words Wordsworth write
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