An Introduction to PoetryMacmillan, 1923 - 524 psl. |
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21 psl.
... lyric but also the ballad , which in poetry is classed separately and will be discussed in a later chapter . The song is the simplest and yet perhaps the most enduring form of either music or poetry . It is the oldest form of music and ...
... lyric but also the ballad , which in poetry is classed separately and will be discussed in a later chapter . The song is the simplest and yet perhaps the most enduring form of either music or poetry . It is the oldest form of music and ...
22 psl.
... lyrics like " Crossing the Bar " which , though repeatedly set to music , still lack an ideal musical setting . The ... lyric , then , gives us the idea or theme and calls up appropriate pictures in language which is rich in suggestion ...
... lyrics like " Crossing the Bar " which , though repeatedly set to music , still lack an ideal musical setting . The ... lyric , then , gives us the idea or theme and calls up appropriate pictures in language which is rich in suggestion ...
23 psl.
... lyric are written by different persons . Ordinarily a musician like Schubert composes a melody for a poem like Shakespeare's " Hark , Hark , the Lark , " or a poet like Mrs. Howe writes words for a well - known melody , as she did in ...
... lyric are written by different persons . Ordinarily a musician like Schubert composes a melody for a poem like Shakespeare's " Hark , Hark , the Lark , " or a poet like Mrs. Howe writes words for a well - known melody , as she did in ...
34 psl.
... lyric . The best known of all Scottish love songs is " Annie Laurie . " The poem was originally written by Annie Laurie's lover , William Doug- las ; but it was given its final form by Lady John Scott , to whom the air also has been ...
... lyric . The best known of all Scottish love songs is " Annie Laurie . " The poem was originally written by Annie Laurie's lover , William Doug- las ; but it was given its final form by Lady John Scott , to whom the air also has been ...
36 psl.
... lyrics , such as " O Mistress Mine , " " Under the Greenwood Tree , " and " Tell me Where is Fancy Bred . " Perhaps the best of all his songs is " Hark , Hark , the Lark , " which in Cymbeline is sung at dawn by a lover just outside his ...
... lyrics , such as " O Mistress Mine , " " Under the Greenwood Tree , " and " Tell me Where is Fancy Bred . " Perhaps the best of all his songs is " Hark , Hark , the Lark , " which in Cymbeline is sung at dawn by a lover just outside his ...
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Alfred Noyes American poets Amy Lowell anapestic beauty blank verse breath Browning Burns Byron called contemporary couplet dactylic Danny Deever dark dead death Dobson doth dream earth Edgar Lee Masters Edwin Arlington Robinson Elegy England English poetry eyes fair feet flowers following poem free verse glory Gray hath hear heart heaven heroic couplet hills Hymn iambic iambic pentameter John John Masefield Keats King Kipling lady land light verse lines Longfellow Lord lyric Maryland Masefield melody meter Milton never night o'er poet poet's poetic prose quatrain quote rhyme rhythm rime Ring Robert romantic rose Shakespeare sing sleep song sonnet soul sound stanza stars sweet syllables tell Tennyson thee thine things thou thought trees trochaic vers de société Whitman wild William William Wordsworth wind words Wordsworth write written wrote
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271 psl. - Homer ruled as his demesne ; Yet did I never breathe its pure serene Till I heard Chapman speak out loud and bold : Then felt I like some watcher of the skies When a new planet swims into his ken ; Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes He stared at the Pacific — and all his men Look'd at each other with a wild surmise — Silent, upon a peak in Darien.
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