Preface to PoetryHarcourt, Brace, 1946 - 737 pages |
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Page 194
... feeling . If these feelings are somewhat like those of the poet , then communication of emotion may be said to have taken place . But if the reader's feelings are of quite a different sort from the poet's , then certainly the poem has ...
... feeling . If these feelings are somewhat like those of the poet , then communication of emotion may be said to have taken place . But if the reader's feelings are of quite a different sort from the poet's , then certainly the poem has ...
Page 196
... feeling phase of the full meaning of The Village : pity for the aged , indigent , and orphans , the crippled ... feeling toward the charity cases is one of indifference or reproach or blame , though such may be the feelings of some of ...
... feeling phase of the full meaning of The Village : pity for the aged , indigent , and orphans , the crippled ... feeling toward the charity cases is one of indifference or reproach or blame , though such may be the feelings of some of ...
Page 207
... feeling I entered into the struggle carried on by the Spaniards for their deliverance from the usurped power of the French . " So the poet's feeling was one of discouragement that his own inherently freedom - loving people should stand ...
... feeling I entered into the struggle carried on by the Spaniards for their deliverance from the usurped power of the French . " So the poet's feeling was one of discouragement that his own inherently freedom - loving people should stand ...
Contents
ORIENTATION TO POETRY i Preconceptions and Pointers | 3 |
In Search of Poetry | 21 |
Language and Art | 42 |
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 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 listening look Lord Lord Randal Louis Untermeyer lyric metrical pattern metrical variation 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 sound pattern speech stanza stanzaic form stir stressed SUGGESTIONS FOR STUDY sweet syllables T. S. Eliot thee things thou thought tion tone translation turn Vincent Millay visual voice wind words