The Sewanee Review, Volume 52T. Hodgson, 1944 - American fiction |
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Page 246
in , which suggests , to the poet , death . But the death - wish of the sixth stanza is concerned with something wholly distinguishable from the spectacles of pain and destruction enumerated previously , before the poet had gone into ...
in , which suggests , to the poet , death . But the death - wish of the sixth stanza is concerned with something wholly distinguishable from the spectacles of pain and destruction enumerated previously , before the poet had gone into ...
Page 433
... poet com- bines the two as closely , for although the dualism of life - death , body - soul , and sex - sin are not reconciled in Thomas's poetry , these elements often merge . It would be incorrect to conclude that the content of the ...
... poet com- bines the two as closely , for although the dualism of life - death , body - soul , and sex - sin are not reconciled in Thomas's poetry , these elements often merge . It would be incorrect to conclude that the content of the ...
Page 513
... poet does not mean that it involves the poet as subject . Aristotle said : " The poet should say very little in propria persona . " Without stopping to discuss what might be discussed for so long , note that the principle so stated by ...
... poet does not mean that it involves the poet as subject . Aristotle said : " The poet should say very little in propria persona . " Without stopping to discuss what might be discussed for so long , note that the principle so stated by ...
Contents
Fulton A | 14 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe R M Weaver | 24 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe | 34 |
Copyright | |
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