How Does a Poem Mean?Houghton Mifflin, 1960 - 366 Seiten Examines the value and nature of poetry, using examples of English and American poetry of the past 6 centuries. |
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Seite 952
... pause as the dominant voice punctuation , such a reading requires little internal pause , since internal pause would make the end pauses less emphatic ) . Especially in the second verse - paragraph of the ex- cerpt , however , the ...
... pause as the dominant voice punctuation , such a reading requires little internal pause , since internal pause would make the end pauses less emphatic ) . Especially in the second verse - paragraph of the ex- cerpt , however , the ...
Seite 953
... pause at the end of the first three lines where it would normally run on . He also eliminates all internal pause in these lines . In the fourth , both the sense of the line and the final colon are pause enough , and he can accord- ingly ...
... pause at the end of the first three lines where it would normally run on . He also eliminates all internal pause in these lines . In the fourth , both the sense of the line and the final colon are pause enough , and he can accord- ingly ...
Seite 1004
... pause to the end of the second line , and then move forward again without pause to the end of the fourth line . And though there are two feminine rhymes in the first and third stanzas , even they fall into a neatly repeated pattern ...
... pause to the end of the second line , and then move forward again without pause to the end of the fourth line . And though there are two feminine rhymes in the first and third stanzas , even they fall into a neatly repeated pattern ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER ONE HOW DOES A POEM MEAN? | 665 |
CHAPTER TWO A BURBLE | 678 |
FOLK BALLADS | 685 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives Albatross anapestic Archibald MacLeish ballad beauty bird boomlay breast breath Burns caesura catalogue certainly Childe Maurice connotations Copyright dark dead death denotation diction doth dream English example eyes fact fair feel flowers foot fulcrum Hamish hand hath heart heaven iambic images Jabberwocky John Donne Karl Shapiro Keats Kenneth Rexroth language light live look Lord Mariner metaphor metrics monosyllabic moon motion move never night Note o'er passage pause phrase play POEM MEAN poet poetic poetry QUESTIONS reader Reprinted by permission rhyme Robert Frost rose round sails scansion seems sense ship silence sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep smile song sort soul sound Squid stanza statement stressed suggestion sweet symbol tell tends thee thing thou thought tone unstressed syllables voice W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden William William Butler Yeats William Carlos Williams wind words