Enjoying PoetryMark Van Doren W. Sloane Associates, 1951 - 556 oldal |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 3 találat összesen 48 találatból.
95. oldal
... verse , for a serious poem which yet would bear in it many marks of the author's wit . Dryden had a mind and enjoyed using it ; and he expected us to enjoy ours as we read him . He is saying here , with a formal flourish , that he ...
... verse , for a serious poem which yet would bear in it many marks of the author's wit . Dryden had a mind and enjoyed using it ; and he expected us to enjoy ours as we read him . He is saying here , with a formal flourish , that he ...
98. oldal
... verse . Such verse went long since out of fashion , but the fashion is worth knowing . The men who understood it — and none understood it better than Dryden - valued the virtues of firm- ness , intelligence , audibility , and harmony ...
... verse . Such verse went long since out of fashion , but the fashion is worth knowing . The men who understood it — and none understood it better than Dryden - valued the virtues of firm- ness , intelligence , audibility , and harmony ...
534. oldal
... verse . Verse without metrical pattern . Heptameter . A line with seven feet . Heroic couplet . A couplet in iambic pentameter . Hexameter . A line with six feet . lamb . A foot of two syllables , accented on the second . Iambic ...
... verse . Verse without metrical pattern . Heptameter . A line with seven feet . Heroic couplet . A couplet in iambic pentameter . Hexameter . A line with six feet . lamb . A foot of two syllables , accented on the second . Iambic ...
Tartalomjegyzék
A single asterisk before the title of a poem indicates that it is analyzed in the Commentaries beginning on page | 3 |
An Ode Matthew Prior Linda | 4 |
To Lucasta on Going to the Wars Richard Lovelace | 5 |
Copyright | |
68 további fejezet nem látható
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
alliteration Andrew Marvell Annabel Lee auld lang syne beauty bird blood breast breath bright child cloud cold dark dead dear death doth dreams earth Emily Dickinson eyes fair fall feet flowers gone grass grave green hair hand hath hear heard heart heaven hill iambic iambic pentameter kiss lady land leaves light live look lover Lycidas lyre mind moon morning never night o'er once Oven Bird pale Philosopher's Song poem poet poetry praise quatrain rhyme Roman Road rose round Samian wine shade shadow shine shore silent silver dawn sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep smiling song sonnet soul sound spirit spring stanza stars sweet syllables tears tell thee thine thing thou thought trees trimeter verse voice wall waves weary weep wild wind wings wonder words