Articulate Energy: An Enquiry Into the Syntax of English Poetry |
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Page 81
... gives to his narratives a syntax as of the proposition , so as to bring out the logic of the moral law that informs his stories and gives them their symbolic meanings : Pity would be no more If we did not make somebody Poor ; And Mercy ...
... gives to his narratives a syntax as of the proposition , so as to bring out the logic of the moral law that informs his stories and gives them their symbolic meanings : Pity would be no more If we did not make somebody Poor ; And Mercy ...
Page 94
... gives poetic pleasure , and it differs from other kinds of syntax only in this - that the pleasure it gives has nothing to do with mimesis . On these terms , any amount of older poetry can be seen to employ syntax - like- mathematics ...
... gives poetic pleasure , and it differs from other kinds of syntax only in this - that the pleasure it gives has nothing to do with mimesis . On these terms , any amount of older poetry can be seen to employ syntax - like- mathematics ...
Page 104
... give it meaning in the context of the whole . This , as we saw , is the contract implicit in Keats's " leaden - eyed ... gives the " things " as they go along , but asks us to wait till the end before we see the connection between them ...
... give it meaning in the context of the whole . This , as we saw , is the contract implicit in Keats's " leaden - eyed ... gives the " things " as they go along , but asks us to wait till the end before we see the connection between them ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract argument articulation authentic syntax Berkeley Chinese Coleridge common concrete context copula criticism dream effect Eliot Elizabeth Sewell energy English Ernest Fenollosa essay example experience extensive manifold Ezra Pound fact feeling fiduciary symbols form of thought Frye function grammar grammarian H. M. McLuhan Hence Hofmannsthal Hugh Kenner Hulme's human idea images instance Kenner Kenyon Review kind language Leavis lines literature logic logician meaning metaphor metre mind modern poetry movement narrative nature Northrop Frye nouns objective passage pattern philosophy poem poet poet's poetic syntax Pope post-symbolist Prelude propositional prose pseudo-syntax reader rhetoric rhyme rhythm Sackville seems sense sentence Shakespeare Sidney's significant Sir Herbert Read sleep sort speak St.-John Perse stanza structure Susanne Langer symbolist syntactical forms syntax in poetry T. E. Hulme theory things tion transitive verb true Valéry verbal verbs verse W. R. Rodgers whole words Wordsworth writing Yeats