Enjoyment of Poetry: With Anthology for Enjoyment of Poetry, 1-2. kötetScribner, 1951 - 329 oldal |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 3 találat összesen 82 találatból.
158. oldal
... become conscious , and that also we become more and less conscious , will agree that what makes us conscious of one thing rather than another is usually some difficulty that it presents from the standpoint of our activities . We can ...
... become conscious , and that also we become more and less conscious , will agree that what makes us conscious of one thing rather than another is usually some difficulty that it presents from the standpoint of our activities . We can ...
160. oldal
... become aware only of a tiny few , and it seemed at first reasonable to say that these few are the ones about which we do something . In 1900 Hugo Münsterberg went so far as to maintain that an excitation of our brain centers by an ...
... become aware only of a tiny few , and it seemed at first reasonable to say that these few are the ones about which we do something . In 1900 Hugo Münsterberg went so far as to maintain that an excitation of our brain centers by an ...
161. oldal
... become very clearly conscious of it . You will turn your attention to it because it contains both excitation and ... becomes emphatically a cluck - and is perhaps named a cluck with some phantom motion of your throat and tongue - you ...
... become very clearly conscious of it . You will turn your attention to it because it contains both excitation and ... becomes emphatically a cluck - and is perhaps named a cluck with some phantom motion of your throat and tongue - you ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Poetic People | 3 |
The Technique of Poetic Names | 31 |
Imaginative Realization | 39 |
Copyright | |
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Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Enjoyment of Poetry: With, Anthology for Enjoyment of Poetry Max Eastman Nincs elérhető előnézet - 1951 |
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
a-la-la action æsthetic ANDREW MARVELL beauty bird blood breath cloud cold consciousness cried dance dark dead dear death deep doth dream E. E. CUMMINGS earth emotion Excalibur experience eyes face fear feel feet flowers GEORGE MEREDITH grass Hamish hand happy hath head hear heard heart heaven hills I. A. Richards JOHN KEATS King King Arthur language laughing leaves light lips live look Lycidas MAX EASTMAN meaning metaphor mind moon morning nature never night o'er pale passion PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY poem poet poetic poetry practical pure realization rhythm rose round sense shadow sing Sir Bedivere sleep song soul sound spirit spring star stream sweet T. S. Eliot tell thee things thou thought thro tion trees truth voice WALT WHITMAN whisper wild WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE wind wings words