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Seite 16
He was , in a sense , the ideal poet , and he reached an ideal conclusion : the more we understand him , the more we can understand the essential laws of poetic genius , and the nature of poetry itself . Poetry , I have said ...
He was , in a sense , the ideal poet , and he reached an ideal conclusion : the more we understand him , the more we can understand the essential laws of poetic genius , and the nature of poetry itself . Poetry , I have said ...
Seite 44
May we understand this first as a prevision of the development of poetry , and second as a controlling theme or figure by which the poem may be linked to Shakespeare's own subsequent development ? can make poetry that attains greater ...
May we understand this first as a prevision of the development of poetry , and second as a controlling theme or figure by which the poem may be linked to Shakespeare's own subsequent development ? can make poetry that attains greater ...
Seite 262
Poetry is an expressive art , we say , and perhaps presently we are explaining that what it expresses is its poet ; a dangerous locution , because the public value of the poem would seem to lie theoretically in the competence with which ...
Poetry is an expressive art , we say , and perhaps presently we are explaining that what it expresses is its poet ; a dangerous locution , because the public value of the poem would seem to lie theoretically in the competence with which ...
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Inhalt
The Rape of Lucrece | 58 |
Sonnets | 145 |
Venus and Adonis | 405 |
Urheberrecht | |
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addressed appears argues beauty become begins called character claims course critic dark death described edition effect Elizabethan English essay evidence example experience expression eyes face fact fair feeling figure final give hand heart human idea kind lady language later less lines literary live look lover Lucrece Lucrece's marriage meaning metaphor mind mistress moral nature never object once passion Phoenix and Turtle plays poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible praise present published quatrain question reader reason reference relation rhetorical seems sense sequence Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's sonnets sonnets soul stanza story suggests sweet Tarquin tell thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy true truth turn verse whole woman writing written young youth