The Criticism of Poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page 13
... things and ideas , and the reader understands the mind of the poet , only by allowing those symbols to re - create in his mind the appropriate things and ideas . There is a double responsibility here : the poet must choose the right ...
... things and ideas , and the reader understands the mind of the poet , only by allowing those symbols to re - create in his mind the appropriate things and ideas . There is a double responsibility here : the poet must choose the right ...
Page 136
... thing as a moral or an immoral book ; it is either well or badly written . " Mr. Somerset Maugham has said bluntly , " Art is for delight . ” On the other side we have statements such as this by ... things like the 136 THE THEORY OF POETRY.
... thing as a moral or an immoral book ; it is either well or badly written . " Mr. Somerset Maugham has said bluntly , " Art is for delight . ” On the other side we have statements such as this by ... things like the 136 THE THEORY OF POETRY.
Page 142
... things , all objects of all thought , And rolls through all things . ( WORDSWORTH : " Tintern Abbey " ) Even where , as in Keats and Byron , the Romantics are not pantheistic in their approach to Nature , there is a passionate love of ...
... things , all objects of all thought , And rolls through all things . ( WORDSWORTH : " Tintern Abbey " ) Even where , as in Keats and Byron , the Romantics are not pantheistic in their approach to Nature , there is a passionate love of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. E. Housman accent adjectives appeal beauty blank verse blow Bonny Dundee brave CHAPTER clear Coleridge colour couplet Danny Deever dark death delight diction doth duple Echoing Green emotions English example expression eyes final judgement flowers following passages free verse give green hand hath heart heaven iambic pentameters imagery images imagination Johnson judge Keats light look Lyrical melody metre metrical Milton mind modern moon mountains nature neo-Classical never night o'er Paradise Lost pattern Petrarcan pleasure poem poet poet's attitude poet's purpose prosody reader rest restricted poetry rhythmic rime-scheme rimes Romantics round scansion sense sestet Shakespeare Shakespearian silver sing skies song sonnet soul sound Spring sprung rhythm stanzas statement stress style sweet syllables system of scansion T. S. Eliot thee theme things thou thought truth versification whole wind Winter's Tale words Wordsworth write