How to Enjoy PoetrySheed & Ward, 1948 - 288 páginas Informal discussion of the appreciation of poetry. |
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Página 91
... naturally pleased with compari- sons . But again , why ? It is naturally pleasing for men to know ; comparing we attempt to know ; and successfully comparing we make and announce discovery . Knowledge grows in adding likeness to ...
... naturally pleased with compari- sons . But again , why ? It is naturally pleasing for men to know ; comparing we attempt to know ; and successfully comparing we make and announce discovery . Knowledge grows in adding likeness to ...
Página 168
... natural , readily - perceived break , or division of section from section , a division which may or may not coincide with a mark of punc- tuation . It is called the caesura , a word which means literally " cutting . " Take those lines ...
... natural , readily - perceived break , or division of section from section , a division which may or may not coincide with a mark of punc- tuation . It is called the caesura , a word which means literally " cutting . " Take those lines ...
Página 261
... natural object or activity ; a nuance of feeling ; a par- ticular relationship of men ; a truth of the spiritual order : ―whatever it may be , and whatever be the poet's connexion or absence of connexion with the thing he perceives ...
... natural object or activity ; a nuance of feeling ; a par- ticular relationship of men ; a truth of the spiritual order : ―whatever it may be , and whatever be the poet's connexion or absence of connexion with the thing he perceives ...
Contenido
Dedication V | 3 |
Chapter | 45 |
Chapter Three | 61 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Akond of Swat alliteration allusion anapæst assonance Austin Clarke beauty blow breath bright Camelot chapter course dead delight doth dust E. C. Bentley English epigram euphony example eyes fair feel feet G. K. Chesterton Gaelic ghost give gone hath hear heart heavy stresses iambs inversion Irish John Peel Katharine Tynan Lady of Shalott Lamb language light stresses living look Lord lyric Margret mean metaphor metre metrical mind motion never night once passion pause personification phrase pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry prose reader rhyme rhythm Robert Farren round SECTION sense Shakespeare short silent sing song sonnet soul sound speak speech spirit stanza stars strong stress sweet syllables talk tell thee things thou thought tion trochee verse voice vowels vowels and consonants W. H. Davies W. J. Turner wind words wren write