How to Enjoy PoetryPiatkus, 1983 - 160 sider Surveys narrative and lyrical poetry in the English language and discusses the craft of the poet. |
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Side 138
... pattern of stresses . The only technical device employed , apart from the syllable count , is the rhyming , or rather the near - rhyming , of each couplet . It is probably a good idea , though by no means obligatory , to use rhyme when ...
... pattern of stresses . The only technical device employed , apart from the syllable count , is the rhyming , or rather the near - rhyming , of each couplet . It is probably a good idea , though by no means obligatory , to use rhyme when ...
Side 139
... pattern borrowed from Alfred , Lord Tennyson . All I wish to do though is something simple as this : tell you how I still taste your last kiss , and say , like any dunce , how much I love you . In the first stanza I have chosen to vary ...
... pattern borrowed from Alfred , Lord Tennyson . All I wish to do though is something simple as this : tell you how I still taste your last kiss , and say , like any dunce , how much I love you . In the first stanza I have chosen to vary ...
Side 143
... pattern of darkness and light click ! the music is finished and leaves the air blank but the women outside still dance When I was shown this I made a few suggestions , simply about the choice of language , and the student went away to ...
... pattern of darkness and light click ! the music is finished and leaves the air blank but the women outside still dance When I was shown this I made a few suggestions , simply about the choice of language , and the student went away to ...
Indhold
Introduction by Melvyn Bragg | 7 |
What is poetry? | 11 |
Appreciating poetry | 21 |
Copyright | |
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ballad beauty blank verse Bleaney celebrating CHANGING FACE chapter Charles Causley composed contemporary course dance death Donne Dylan Dylan Thomas Edmund Waller emotion employed English language English poetry English Verse example experience eyes Faber FACE OF POETRY feeling free verse guage heart iambic pentameter imagery images imagination John Keats kind lines literary literature lyrical poem meaning metaphor metre metrical modern move narrative nature night original Oxford Book pattern perhaps Philip Larkin pleasure poet POET'S CRAFT poetic POETRY POETRY POETRY Shakespeare Pope produced prose prosody quatrain reader reading rhyming forms rhythms Romantics satire sense sestet simple Sir Patrick Spens song sonnet sound speech stanza forms stress style syllables syntax Tennyson tetrameter thee thing Thom Gunn Thomas thou tion tive traditional twentieth century verbal verse forms Victorians to 1960 W. H. Auden Wilfred Owen wish words Wordsworth writing written wrote