The Prelude to Poetry: The English Poets in Defence and Praise of Their Own ArtErnest Rhys Dent, 1970 - 304 |
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Strona xi
... poetic madness , and in definition of what poetry is , and how a man becomes a poet . Every man who lives in this age and desires to write poetry , ought , as a preservative against the false and narrow systems of criticism which every ...
... poetic madness , and in definition of what poetry is , and how a man becomes a poet . Every man who lives in this age and desires to write poetry , ought , as a preservative against the false and narrow systems of criticism which every ...
Strona 183
... Poet's own , either peculiar to him as an individual Poet or belonging simply to Poets in general , to a body of men who , from the circumstance of their compositions being in metre , it is expected will employ a particular language ...
... Poet's own , either peculiar to him as an individual Poet or belonging simply to Poets in general , to a body of men who , from the circumstance of their compositions being in metre , it is expected will employ a particular language ...
Strona 263
... poet , as signal in the excellence of its several adaptitudes as transcendent in the combination of effects - examples , in fact , of the whole poet's function of beholding with an understanding keenness the universe , nature and man ...
... poet , as signal in the excellence of its several adaptitudes as transcendent in the combination of effects - examples , in fact , of the whole poet's function of beholding with an understanding keenness the universe , nature and man ...
Spis treści
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THOMAS CAMPION | 61 |
SAMUEL DANIEL | 86 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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accent admiration Aeneas alwayes ancient Aristotle ballad beauty better blank verse cæsura called cause composition Dante delight diction Dimeter divine dooth doth eare effect English English poetry Epigramme Euripides example excellent expression faculty farre feelings genius Greekes harmony hath haue hexameter Homer human Iambick imagination imitation indeede kind knowledge language Latine learning Lucretius lyric manner matter measure metre metrical Milton mind Muses nations naturall nature neuer never noble objects observe Paradise Lost passion perfect Petrarch Philosopher Plato pleasure Plutarch poem Poesie poet poet's poetic poeticall poetry produced prose Reader reason rhyme rhythm Rime Ryme selfe sense Shelley shew sillables sith song Sophocles sound speak spirit Spondee stanza style Theocritus theyr things thou thought tion Trochaick Trochy true truely truth vertue Virgil vpon W. H. Auden words write written