On Modern PoetsMeridian Books, 1959 - 223 psl. |
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110 psl.
... rhythm , and the importance of rhythm I shall discuss a little later . For the present I should like to call attention to the following line : Where thy pale form was laid with many tears . The line is perfectly iambic : 48 yet the ...
... rhythm , and the importance of rhythm I shall discuss a little later . For the present I should like to call attention to the following line : Where thy pale form was laid with many tears . The line is perfectly iambic : 48 yet the ...
156 psl.
... Rhythm , as I have used it in the past , to refer to rhythm in which two or more stresses come together , except where this occurs in standard English meter through the mere inversion of a foot . Of Sprung Rhythm ( apparently in either ...
... Rhythm , as I have used it in the past , to refer to rhythm in which two or more stresses come together , except where this occurs in standard English meter through the mere inversion of a foot . Of Sprung Rhythm ( apparently in either ...
162 psl.
... rhythm of prose , that is the native and natural rhythm of speech , the least forced , the most rhetorical and emphatic of all possible rhythms . It is even more curious to read the following comment upon this passage by so able a ...
... rhythm of prose , that is the native and natural rhythm of speech , the least forced , the most rhetorical and emphatic of all possible rhythms . It is even more curious to read the following comment upon this passage by so able a ...
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
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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 judgment 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