The Act of Poetry: A Practical Introduction to the Reading of PoemsRandom House, 1970 - Всего страниц: 320 |
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Стр. 155
... rhythms of his own poems prove how power- fully they can work despite their outward silence . One not very subtle example will demonstrate how a poetic rhythm can come off the page and begin pulsing within the reader : How They Brought ...
... rhythms of his own poems prove how power- fully they can work despite their outward silence . One not very subtle example will demonstrate how a poetic rhythm can come off the page and begin pulsing within the reader : How They Brought ...
Стр. 168
... rhythm is the first line of Hamlet's first act soliloquy : O , that this too , too solid flesh would melt . . . How neatly this rhythm fits Hamlet's personality : quick and im- pulsive at the offset , then immobilized by inner conflict ...
... rhythm is the first line of Hamlet's first act soliloquy : O , that this too , too solid flesh would melt . . . How neatly this rhythm fits Hamlet's personality : quick and im- pulsive at the offset , then immobilized by inner conflict ...
Стр. 195
... rhythm of expectation . We have already noted this sort of calculated surprise . In rhyme , expressive variation is often achieved by slant rhyme , and in rhythm by foot substitution . In the stanzaic structure of a poem it can take ...
... rhythm of expectation . We have already noted this sort of calculated surprise . In rhyme , expressive variation is often achieved by slant rhyme , and in rhythm by foot substitution . In the stanzaic structure of a poem it can take ...
Содержание
The Reader as Artist | 3 |
The Excite | 38 |
The Images | 70 |
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The Act of Poetry: A Practical Introduction to the Reading of Poems Christopher Collins Просмотр фрагмента - 1970 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
A. E. Housman accents beauty bird blood breast breath bright child cloud cold context Copyright dark dead death doth dream E. E. Cummings earth example eyes father fear feel feet flowers foot Gerard Manley Hopkins hair hands hath hear heard heart heaven human iamb iambic pentameter Karl Shapiro language leaves light live look loud man's meaning metaphor meter mind moon morning mother move never night o'er object person POEMS FOR COMPARISON poet poet's poetic poetry rain reader rhyme rhythm Richard Cory Richard Wilbur Robert Frost sails sense sestet ship sigh silent sing slant rhyme sleep song sonnet soul sound spirit stanza star strange sweet syllables symbol T. S. Eliot thee things thou thought trees trochee Ulysses verbal verse voice W. H. Auden walk Wallace Stevens wind words youth