The Focal Word: An Introduction to PoetryJacaranda Press, 1966 - Počet stran: 317 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 51
Strana 158
... opening stanza has the kind of stiff clumsiness one finds in children's verse . There are other blemishes , too : Fresh as a rose in June has a rather faded , literary air , which belies the freshness ; All over the wide lea is slack ...
... opening stanza has the kind of stiff clumsiness one finds in children's verse . There are other blemishes , too : Fresh as a rose in June has a rather faded , literary air , which belies the freshness ; All over the wide lea is slack ...
Strana 199
... opening - mixed with ashes and sparks - one dead , the other living , and both appearing for the first time . It is only the trumpet with its prophecy of spring that really brings the poetic power of the opening to bear on the ...
... opening - mixed with ashes and sparks - one dead , the other living , and both appearing for the first time . It is only the trumpet with its prophecy of spring that really brings the poetic power of the opening to bear on the ...
Strana 277
... opening lines , with their partial repetitions , sound more like the opening bars of a sonata than the beginning of a poem . This , together with the slack syntax and spare punctuation , is a hint to the reader to listen before he ...
... opening lines , with their partial repetitions , sound more like the opening bars of a sonata than the beginning of a poem . This , together with the slack syntax and spare punctuation , is a hint to the reader to listen before he ...
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
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