Preface to PoetryHarcourt, Brace, 1946 - 737 pages |
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Page 115
... poetic rhythm of this ( for me ) comely and graceful Elizabethan lyric . It is still a two- or three - valued analysis , taking no account of the many differ- ent degrees of stress , of the larger movements in pitch of the mel- ody , of ...
... poetic rhythm of this ( for me ) comely and graceful Elizabethan lyric . It is still a two- or three - valued analysis , taking no account of the many differ- ent degrees of stress , of the larger movements in pitch of the mel- ody , of ...
Page 510
... poetic moods , is sufficiently related to the preceding chapter on the recurring poetic themes to warrant some comparisons and contrasts in an opening paragraph . They both represent approaches to poetry that are less well - defined ...
... poetic moods , is sufficiently related to the preceding chapter on the recurring poetic themes to warrant some comparisons and contrasts in an opening paragraph . They both represent approaches to poetry that are less well - defined ...
Page 717
... Poetic Rhythm , the chief rhythm of poetry , the feeling that results from the apperception of repeated stresses at fairly regular intervals in the undulating flow of the verses , 100 ; the poetic rhythm of " bound " verse , a sort of ...
... Poetic Rhythm , the chief rhythm of poetry , the feeling that results from the apperception of repeated stresses at fairly regular intervals in the undulating flow of the verses , 100 ; the poetic rhythm of " bound " verse , a sort of ...
Contents
ANATOMY OF THE POEMEXPERIENCE | 65 |
65 | 91 |
Visual and Other FreeImagery | 137 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
A. E. Housman aloud Amy Lowell anapestic attitudes auditory ballad Beauty breath called chapter clouds critical dead death dream E. E. Cummings earth emotional response English experience eye-movements eyes free imagery free verse Frost full meaning give hand hath heard heart heaven I. A. Richards iambic interpretation John Keats King language light listening look Lord Lord Randal Louis Untermeyer lyric metrical pattern metrical variation mind mind's-ear mood never night over-all meaning persons phrase poem poem-experience poem-reading-experience poet poetic form poetic rhythm poetry printed verses prose reader reading recorded reread rime Robert Robert Frost rose Sea-Fever sense pattern silent sing song sonnet sort soul speech stanza stanzaic form stir stressed SUGGESTIONS FOR STUDY sweet syllables T. S. Eliot thee things thou thought tion turn Vincent Millay visual voice wind words