The Poet and the PoemWriter's Digest, 1974 - 482 Seiten The author summarizes his knowledge and lively opinions of the art, dealing with every aspect, from the moment of inspiration through the workshop labors, to publication and interpretation. |
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Seite 71
... fact , of having very little sense of self . Need he keep feeling himself to be sure that he is there ? The poet perceives through or by means of himself ; he then speaks through himself . Self transmits the world to him , transmits his ...
... fact , of having very little sense of self . Need he keep feeling himself to be sure that he is there ? The poet perceives through or by means of himself ; he then speaks through himself . Self transmits the world to him , transmits his ...
Seite 73
... fact Of what ? Chiefly of the objective world outside his skin . And for this he needs a second sense , a sense of fact . Much more than the ability to distinguish sense from nonsense , to know fact when it presents itself , a proper ...
... fact Of what ? Chiefly of the objective world outside his skin . And for this he needs a second sense , a sense of fact . Much more than the ability to distinguish sense from nonsense , to know fact when it presents itself , a proper ...
Seite 75
... fact , she let him go . But although we cling , now , to fact with neurotic desperation , no poet ever wrote who did not relish the still moments of ex- perience , the snowy woods , for their own sake . When a reader objects that poetry ...
... fact , she let him go . But although we cling , now , to fact with neurotic desperation , no poet ever wrote who did not relish the still moments of ex- perience , the snowy woods , for their own sake . When a reader objects that poetry ...
Inhalt
an ear for poetry | 7 |
amateur tradesman professional | 17 |
enter the critic | 27 |
Urheberrecht | |
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abstract accept alliteration anapest beat beauty become begins believe bird caesura called couplet course critical culture death diction dramatic drugs Dylan Thomas e. e. cummings editor emotion enjambed example experience eyes fact feel free verse Frost girl heart human humor iamb iambic pentameter imagery imagine important John Crowe Ransom Juliet Keats kind language literary live look lovers magazines means metaphor meter metrical mind nature never night pattern perhaps phrases play poem poet poet's poetic Pope prose published quatrain reader rhyme rhythm Romeo satire seems sense sentence Shakespeare simply song sonnet soul sound spondees stanza statement stress suggests sure symbols T. S. Eliot tell thee things thou thought tion tone trochees truth unaccented syllables verse paragraph vision W. B. Yeats words writing poetry Yeats