On Modern PoetsMeridian Books, 1959 - 223 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 13
29 psl.
... communicate feelings and perceptions more sharp and interesting , when viewed in isolation , than they frequently have a right to communicate when viewed as a part of any deducible whole . The sug- gestiveness of the details is forced ...
... communicate feelings and perceptions more sharp and interesting , when viewed in isolation , than they frequently have a right to communicate when viewed as a part of any deducible whole . The sug- gestiveness of the details is forced ...
106 psl.
... communicate the feeling proper to its individual subject . The trouble is that one does not have a poem : one has a conventional occasion for irresponsible excursions , the result being an agglomeration of minor poems very loosely ...
... communicate the feeling proper to its individual subject . The trouble is that one does not have a poem : one has a conventional occasion for irresponsible excursions , the result being an agglomeration of minor poems very loosely ...
144 psl.
... communicate some feeling and remembered sensory impression as well , and they may be made to communicate a great deal of these , but they will do it by virtue of their conceptual identity , and in so far as this identity is impaired ...
... communicate some feeling and remembered sensory impression as well , and they may be made to communicate a great deal of these , but they will do it by virtue of their conceptual identity , and in so far as this identity is impaired ...
Turinys
Introduction by Keith McKean | 7 |
T S Eliot or the Illusion of Reaction | 35 |
John Crowe Ransom or Thunder without God | 73 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 4
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accented appears artist beauty believe blank verse Bridges Christ concept Crane criticism Dante deal described detail difficulty dissyllabic doctrine Donne dramatic Eliot Emerson emotion endeavors essay evaluate express fact feeling Frost Gerard Manley Hopkins haecceity Hart Crane Hopkins human experience Ibid ideas imagine imitation impulse inscape intellectual irrelevant John Crowe Ransom kind language less literary lyric matter McLuhan meaning merely meter metrical mind moral motive nature object objective correlative obscure offers passage perception perfect perhaps philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible Pound precise Professor X prose pure Ransom rational reader reason relationship result romantic scansion seems sense sentimental sestet Shakespeare sonnet Sprung Rhythm stanza statement Stevens style syllables symbolic T. S. Eliot Tate tercet theme theory thought tion tradition understand W. B. Yeats Wallace Stevens Whitman words World's Body writes