Articulate Energy: An Enquiry Into the Syntax of English Poetry |
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Page 106
... VERSE OF WORDSWORTH'S PRELUDE ཅ་ གྱི་ W E have to understand that when St. - John Perse speaks of the Englishman as ... verse . Only in terms of words as " fiduciary symbols " can Wordsworth's blank - verse in The 1 R. L. Brett , The ...
... VERSE OF WORDSWORTH'S PRELUDE ཅ་ གྱི་ W E have to understand that when St. - John Perse speaks of the Englishman as ... verse . Only in terms of words as " fiduciary symbols " can Wordsworth's blank - verse in The 1 R. L. Brett , The ...
Page 110
... verse in which they are presented.1 I may be misreading Dr. Leavis , but it seems to me that what is recommended here is what Perse and Valéry recommend : taking the verse at a run , not pausing on the nouns for fear they congeal into ...
... verse in which they are presented.1 I may be misreading Dr. Leavis , but it seems to me that what is recommended here is what Perse and Valéry recommend : taking the verse at a run , not pausing on the nouns for fear they congeal into ...
Page 128
... verse a language of " fixed symbols " . With free - verse the case is different . Here rhythm is set to do the work that syntax does in prose . But we can usefully re- call here the notion of a contract between poet and reader . For ...
... verse a language of " fixed symbols " . With free - verse the case is different . Here rhythm is set to do the work that syntax does in prose . But we can usefully re- call here the notion of a contract between poet and reader . For ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract according action active agree appears argument arrangement articulation asks becomes Berkeley Chinese clear close comes common concrete connection consider course criticism distinction dream effect elements energy English example experience explain expression fact feeling Fenollosa follows force function gives goes grammar hand Hence Hulme human idea images instance kind Langer language less lines literature logic matter meaning metaphor mind move movement narrative nature never night objective once particular passage pattern perhaps play poem poet poetic syntax poetry Pope possible Pound present prose question quoted reader reading relation rhetoric rhyme rhythm seems seen sense sentence significant sleep sort sound speak stand stanza statement strength structure suggest symbolist symbols syntactical taken theory things thought tion true turn verbs verse whole words Wordsworth writing