The Poets' World: An Anthology of English Poetry |
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Page v
... feeling , and it is worthy of corresponding efforts by its readers . It is in making these efforts that young readers enlarge , not only their appreciation of poetry , but also their capacity for thought , imagination and feeling . The ...
... feeling , and it is worthy of corresponding efforts by its readers . It is in making these efforts that young readers enlarge , not only their appreciation of poetry , but also their capacity for thought , imagination and feeling . The ...
Page xx
... feeling of man's ingratitude into a song beginning Blow , Blow Thou Winter Wind ( p . 64 ) , and if we know and love Shakespeare's poems , we shall often have a comforting sense , when some particular feeling depresses or exalts us ...
... feeling of man's ingratitude into a song beginning Blow , Blow Thou Winter Wind ( p . 64 ) , and if we know and love Shakespeare's poems , we shall often have a comforting sense , when some particular feeling depresses or exalts us ...
Page 272
... feeling . This cannot be achieved through either meaning or sound alone . It requires the combination of both . It is impossible to explain how Shakespeare fuses sense and sound to create mood , but by reading and knowing the poems well ...
... feeling . This cannot be achieved through either meaning or sound alone . It requires the combination of both . It is impossible to explain how Shakespeare fuses sense and sound to create mood , but by reading and knowing the poems well ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alfred Edward Housman ancient Mariner Arthur Waley beauty bell beneath birds blood blow BOOM boomlay breath bright chain the lions cloud cold Congo cried curse Cusha Daniel dark David Herbert Lawrence dead dear death dirge doth dream earth eyes fear Feet in Ancient fire flowers Gavin Bone Gerard Manley Hopkins glory golden green hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven hill holy John Skelton King Kubla Khan land laughed light live look Lord loud Lyke-Wake Dirge mist moon morn mov'd Mumbo-Jumbo will hoo-doo ne'er never night o'er Ozymandias poem poet poetry round sails ship sigh sing sleep song soul sound spirit stars stone stood strange sweet sword thee things thou thought Timor Mortis conturbat tree twas unto uppe voice W. H. Davies waves Wedding-Guest wild William Shakespeare wind wood