Papers on Shelley, Wordsworth & OthersH. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1929 - 171 pages |
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Page 21
... Metre must be retained this is the argument - because poetry written in the language of real life would be too harrowing without metre . At this much later stage , after so much more thought about the matter , we should think it reason ...
... Metre must be retained this is the argument - because poetry written in the language of real life would be too harrowing without metre . At this much later stage , after so much more thought about the matter , we should think it reason ...
Page 22
... metre has been used since the beginning of time , and that there is nothing more alive . That Words- worth , who had not seen poetic diction simply as dead , should have seen the giving up of metre as involved in the giving up of the ...
... metre has been used since the beginning of time , and that there is nothing more alive . That Words- worth , who had not seen poetic diction simply as dead , should have seen the giving up of metre as involved in the giving up of the ...
Page 24
... metre . My purpose , however , is not so much to contest Wordsworth's argument , as to call attention to the fact that it was put forward just as if , though the truth in such a vexed question as how men came to use metre , and what the ...
... metre . My purpose , however , is not so much to contest Wordsworth's argument , as to call attention to the fact that it was put forward just as if , though the truth in such a vexed question as how men came to use metre , and what the ...
Table des matières
Shelley and Francis Thompson I | 14 |
Coleridge | 39 |
Poetry and Experience | 53 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Alfoxden architectonic Arnold beauty becomes the experience Browning Byron's child cloud Coleridge contemporary Coventry Patmore critic dark dead divine Dorothy Wordsworth earth emotion ence English poetry essay expression eyes feeling flower give Golden Treasury greater greatest poetry Havelock Ellis heaven Iliad imagery judgement Keats Keats's leisure less light lines living long poem lyrical poetry man's mankind matter melody metre Milton mind mist nature never night o'er Paradise Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passed passion perhaps play poet's poetic diction praise present-day poet prose question requisite trouble reveal the secret river Thames Romeo and Juliet Samson Agonistes secret of things secret of words seen sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's poetry short poem song soul speak spirit stars Stowey Tennyson thee theme theorizing thine thir Thompson thou thought tion to-day true unconscious-mind imagination verse Whitman wind Wordsworth write written wrote