Understanding PoetryHeinemann, 1965 - 186 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 33
Seite 34
... mean little to you . That doesn't mean you are deficient in sensibility and unresponsive to poetry . It means simply that you will have to find satisfaction in other poems or other poets . I have said that a poem is an event : it is ...
... mean little to you . That doesn't mean you are deficient in sensibility and unresponsive to poetry . It means simply that you will have to find satisfaction in other poems or other poets . I have said that a poem is an event : it is ...
Seite 84
... mean nothing to a reader . However different , however individual the poet is , the value of his work lies in its use of ... means . Magic is not magic if it can be wholly explained . I would be the last to say why these poems are to me ...
... mean nothing to a reader . However different , however individual the poet is , the value of his work lies in its use of ... means . Magic is not magic if it can be wholly explained . I would be the last to say why these poems are to me ...
Seite 147
... means ' Four o'clock in the afternoon ( the time when you're broiling things for dinner ) ' and that ' slithy ' means ' lithe and slimy ' ; ' tove ' is ' a creature resembling a badger , a lizard , and a corkscrew , that nests under sun ...
... means ' Four o'clock in the afternoon ( the time when you're broiling things for dinner ) ' and that ' slithy ' means ' lithe and slimy ' ; ' tove ' is ' a creature resembling a badger , a lizard , and a corkscrew , that nests under sun ...
Inhalt
Poetry and You | 1 |
The Tree of Man | 5 |
Poetry and its Substitutes | 13 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. E. Housman achieve alliterative verse anapaestic anonymous appear ballad beauty birds blank verse Brave Benbow called century CHAPTER child Christ receive thy Coleridge composed dead death Discobolus effect Elegy element Elizabethan Emily Dickinson emotional English poetry epic express eyes feeling flower free verse heart heroic couplet Housman human iamb iambic pentameter idea imagination inspiration intellectual Keats kind Kubla Khan language lines literary live look lyric poetry magical means memory metre Milton mind modern mood narrative nature never night once origin passion perhaps poem poet poet's poetic popular primitive prose qualities reader receive thy soul rhyme rhythm rhythmical Roman sense Shakespeare simply sing Sir Patrick Spens song sonnet sound speak speech stanza sweet syllable technique tell thee thing thou thought traditional trochee true variety Wenlock Edge Whitman words write written wrote