The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets: Poetic Responses to English Poetry from Chaucer to YeatsThe Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets collects together writings by all the major poetic figures from Chaucer to Yeats demonstrating their vivid responses to each other, ranging from elegiac eulogy to burlesque and satire. The anthology is arranged in two sections. Part One contains poets' writings on the nature, qualities and purpose of poetry Part Two is a chronological collection of poets' writings on their peers, with an individual entry for each poet. Each extract is presented in modernized spelling and punctuation, and is carefully annotated to provide full explanations of unfamiliar phrases and references. The index has been fully revised for this paperback edition. The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets will be stimulating and enjoyable for anyone interested in the history of English poetry, but will also be an invaluable collection of primary source material for students and their teachers. |
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Firsttime readers of this anthology mightthussoon begin to feel thatthey were confronting a body of convictions about poetry and the criticism of poetry that flew inthefaceof everything that their own literary educationand ...
Firsttime readers of this anthology mightthussoon begin to feel thatthey were confronting a body of convictions about poetry and the criticism of poetry that flew inthefaceof everything that their own literary educationand ...
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... sense ofnovelty and freshnesswith old and familiar objects; a more than usualstateof emotion with morethanusual order; judgementever awakeandsteadyself possession with enthusiasm and feeling profoundor vehement' [52 (Coleridge)].
... sense ofnovelty and freshnesswith old and familiar objects; a more than usualstateof emotion with morethanusual order; judgementever awakeandsteadyself possession with enthusiasm and feeling profoundor vehement' [52 (Coleridge)].
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'When [Shakespeare] describes any thing', writes Dryden [128], 'you more thanseeit,you feel ittoo'. Poetic discourse admits, and exploits, theinextricability of the perceived and the perceiver. Homer's attribution ofhumanlifeto arrows ...
'When [Shakespeare] describes any thing', writes Dryden [128], 'you more thanseeit,you feel ittoo'. Poetic discourse admits, and exploits, theinextricability of the perceived and the perceiver. Homer's attribution ofhumanlifeto arrows ...
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3 Itengages more than ourmerely rational selves,and 'compels us to feel that which we perceive, and to imagine that whichwe know'[62 (Shelley)]. Ina poem, writes TedHughes, 'besidesbeing told a string offacts, weare made todance them ...
3 Itengages more than ourmerely rational selves,and 'compels us to feel that which we perceive, and to imagine that whichwe know'[62 (Shelley)]. Ina poem, writes TedHughes, 'besidesbeing told a string offacts, weare made todance them ...
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To write in ordinary prose about anart whichso thoroughly transcends thehabits and categories of thought and feeling with whichordinary prose is associatedwould be to riskundermining thepoets'work in the most basic way.
To write in ordinary prose about anart whichso thoroughly transcends thehabits and categories of thought and feeling with whichordinary prose is associatedwould be to riskundermining thepoets'work in the most basic way.
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The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets: Poetic Responses to English ... David Hopkins Недоступно для просмотра - 1994 |
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a n d Abraham Cowley admired Alexander Pope Algernon Charles Swinburne allthe andthe asthe bard beauty Ben Jonson Byron bythe Chaucer Cowley Cowley’s Cowper critics delight divine Donne doth Dryden earth English Essay eternal eyes fame fancy feel fromthe genius God’s grace Greek hath heart heaven Homer Horace human imagination imitated immortal inhis inspiration inthe inthis James Thomson B.V. John John Dryden John Keats Jonson judgement Keats Keats’s living man’s Matthew Arnold Milton mind mortal Muse nature never numbers o’er ofhis ofthe passions Percy Bysshe Shelley Pindaric pleasure poem Poesy poet poet’s poetic poetry Pope’s praise prose reader rhyme Samuel Johnson Samuel Taylor Coleridge satire sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley’s shine sing song Sonnet soul Southey Spenser spirit sweet thee thepoet thine things thou thought tongue tothe truth verse Virgil voice William Wordsworth withthe wonder words write Yeats