The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 105,Oplag 1Yale Literary Society, 1939 |
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Side 15
... beauty and free- dom of the spectacle . The bird , he says , is per- forming the exploits for which it was born , exploiting its natural faculties to the utmost ; implicit here is the idea that this is pleasant in the eyes of the Lord ...
... beauty and free- dom of the spectacle . The bird , he says , is per- forming the exploits for which it was born , exploiting its natural faculties to the utmost ; implicit here is the idea that this is pleasant in the eyes of the Lord ...
Side 17
dawn - drawn Falcon " ( see Pied Beauty for Hop- kins ' love of " dappled things " ; so the bird image , too , runs through his poetry ) , while internal rime and alliteration organize and intensify the sense . The third comma marks the ...
dawn - drawn Falcon " ( see Pied Beauty for Hop- kins ' love of " dappled things " ; so the bird image , too , runs through his poetry ) , while internal rime and alliteration organize and intensify the sense . The third comma marks the ...
Side 19
... beauty of the bird , conceives it as opposite of his patient spiritual renunciation " : " The statements of the poem appear to insist that his own life is super- ior , but he cannot decisively judge between them and holds both with ...
... beauty of the bird , conceives it as opposite of his patient spiritual renunciation " : " The statements of the poem appear to insist that his own life is super- ior , but he cannot decisively judge between them and holds both with ...
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accent activity allit alliteration American ASCHENBROEDEL attitude AVENUE beauty Beer bird bird's Broadway Buckle change in tone CHAPEL ST CHAPEL STREET chevalier Christ our Lord Cleaned and Pressed College conflict CONN Coriolanus criticism dangerous democracy doubt Elm Street Empson experience eyes falcon faults feel fire force FRANK WILLIAMS Freshman FURNITURE Garage glory gone graduate hair HAND TAILORED Harkness Herbert Read highspot HULL'S human I. A. Richards Jesuit JEWELRY JOHN PAUKER kins last three lines LINCOLN ZEPHYR look lovelier meaning ment Milne mind Miss Phare octet Old Campus Opposite play plough poem poet poet's poetry Quincy RCA VICTROLAS reader REPAIRING riding rimes sense SERVICE sestet Sheff Sherwood's shining Shoes slowly smile sound sprung rhythm STREET NEW HAVEN Suits swing syllables symbolic theatre things tion tired verse Waiter walk watch Windhover Winnie-The-Pooh words writes YALE LITERARY MAGAZINE YORK ST