Literature and CriticismChatto and Windus, 1953 - 190 pages |
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Page 46
... certainty with which he half grimly and half humorously states his conclusion . The first four lines of each stanza are in the nature of introduction to something more significant , and the easy conversational tone has the appropriate ...
... certainty with which he half grimly and half humorously states his conclusion . The first four lines of each stanza are in the nature of introduction to something more significant , and the easy conversational tone has the appropriate ...
Page 87
... certainty ; a rhythm which , though possessing a certain starkness appropriate to the unelaborated and uncompromising thought , is sinewy and never brittle . The words are in the main solid - sounding , and are most economically used ...
... certainty ; a rhythm which , though possessing a certain starkness appropriate to the unelaborated and uncompromising thought , is sinewy and never brittle . The words are in the main solid - sounding , and are most economically used ...
Page 95
... certainty , the coherence , of the poetic state- ment . It seems the only possible expression for the ordering of the experience that led to the poetry . Through the low tones of the beginning of the strata- gem and the insinuating ...
... certainty , the coherence , of the poetic state- ment . It seems the only possible expression for the ordering of the experience that led to the poetry . Through the low tones of the beginning of the strata- gem and the insinuating ...
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abstract alliteration analysis Antony attitude beauty bird Bulstrode comparison complex concrete contrast convey couplet course D. H. Lawrence Dead mountain mouth death diction effect Eliot emotion emotionally emphasis Enobarbus example experience expression eyes F. R. Leavis fear feeling felt force Four Quartets George Eliot given gives Hopkins human I. A. Richards idea imagery imagination impressive inevitably instance intended ISAAC ROSENBERG kind lack language lines literary criticism living Lydgate meaning ment Milton mind movement musical nature ness obvious Paradise Lost passage perhaps phrase physical play poem poet poet's poetic thought poetry present prose prose-meaning quiet readers reveal rhyming words rhythm Ring seems sense sensuous Shakespeare Shelley's shew significance simile simple sound speech stanza stress strong suggest sweet T. S. Eliot thee things Thomas Hardy thou tion tone truth vague verse vivid W. B. Yeats whole Wordsworth