The Focal Word: An Introduction to PoetryJacaranda Press, 1966 - Počet stran: 317 |
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Strana 101
... conventional image of a star . Her petulance is conveyed by turning this conventional image into a conceit : the star becomes a falling star , a meteor with the brightness and destructiveness of Lightning , frightening him and Tempting ...
... conventional image of a star . Her petulance is conveyed by turning this conventional image into a conceit : the star becomes a falling star , a meteor with the brightness and destructiveness of Lightning , frightening him and Tempting ...
Strana 173
... conventional epithets , has an eighteenth - century texture . There is a lack of harmony here : the scene as described in this conventional way does not adequately account for the highly individual and significant effects it has had in ...
... conventional epithets , has an eighteenth - century texture . There is a lack of harmony here : the scene as described in this conventional way does not adequately account for the highly individual and significant effects it has had in ...
Strana 217
... conventionally romantic melancholy , represented by the conventional emblems of the opening stanza . The yielding of oneself to a mood that sorts with nightshade and yew and death - moth dulls the sensibility ; but Keats does not want ...
... conventionally romantic melancholy , represented by the conventional emblems of the opening stanza . The yielding of oneself to a mood that sorts with nightshade and yew and death - moth dulls the sensibility ; but Keats does not want ...
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alliteration beauty bird blank verse blood body bora ring breath bright charm cloud colour conventional conveyed couplet dance dark dead death delight Donne doth dream earth effect English English Poetry eternal experience expression eyes F. R. Leavis fair fear feeling flowers Gerard Manley Hopkins give grace hand hath hear heart heaven human imagination James McAuley Judith Wright Keats king King Lear kiss L. C. Knights leaves light lines living look Lord lovers Lycidas Macbeth Milton mind moon nature never night o'er passage passion phrase play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry reality realized rhyme rhythm rich satiric Scholar Gipsy seems sense Shakespeare sing sleep soft song soul sound spirit spring stanza stars suggestion surprising sweet T. S. Eliot TAMBURLAINE tears Tell thee theme things thou thought tone trees turn verse vitality voice wind words youth