Older Masters: Essays and Reflections on English and American LiteratureTo mark his seventieth birthday, Continuum published some of the critical writings of the man whom the London Times hailed as, "the preeminent English poet-critic of our time". |
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Page 26
... sort of poet who gets his poetic effects by breaking or abrogating syntac- tical laws . There seems to me no doubt that Ralegh is a poet of the first sort , and therefore that Edwards is perfectly right in his conten- tion that where ...
... sort of poet who gets his poetic effects by breaking or abrogating syntac- tical laws . There seems to me no doubt that Ralegh is a poet of the first sort , and therefore that Edwards is perfectly right in his conten- tion that where ...
Page 81
... sort . The truth is surely that many poets listen to the philosophers , and philosophize about their own activity , much less than many people imagine . There is , it may be thought , a particularly telling example of this in this very ...
... sort . The truth is surely that many poets listen to the philosophers , and philosophize about their own activity , much less than many people imagine . There is , it may be thought , a particularly telling example of this in this very ...
Page 294
... sort of poet works his way to God by learning the lessons of experience , drawing conclusions from it , and so coming upon the moral laws behind it . Another sort of poet leaps up to God by dwelling with a fervent intensity upon ...
... sort of poet works his way to God by learning the lessons of experience , drawing conclusions from it , and so coming upon the moral laws behind it . Another sort of poet leaps up to God by dwelling with a fervent intensity upon ...
Contents
Contents 1 Chaucer and One Idea of Englishness 1972 | 7 |
A Reading of The Oceans Love to Cynthia 1960 | 13 |
Shakespeare and the Practising Poet Today 1976 | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Adams admired Alciphron ambiguity appears argument Augustan Berkeley Berkeley's better C.S. Lewis called candour century Chaucer Christopher Smart contrary Cook Cook's course Cowper criticism dialogue diction Dryden Dunciad Edmund White effect eighteenth eighteenth-century Eliot England English essay example experience Ezra Pound fact feel garden glee Godolphin Goldsmith human Hymns imagination instance interest Isaac Watts J.V. Cunningham John Johnson Keats Knight's Tale Landor language Ledyard less lines literary literature London look Lyrical Ballads Lysicles Mandeville means ment metaphor metre Milton mind modern narrative nature never once passage perhaps personification philosopher poem poet poetic poetry political Pope principle prose prosopopoeia Ralegh reader rhetoric rhyme Romantic Romanticism Scott seems sense Shaftesbury Shakespeare Smart society Song Sordello sort speak spirit stanza style surely sweet Swift syntax T.S. Eliot Taylor things thought tion tradition verse Watts words Wordsworth writing wrote Yeats