Poetry and Its EnjoymentTeachers College, Columbia University, 1957 - 322 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 21–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ xii
Thomas Henry Briggs. CHAPTER Connotation Requires Imagination PAGE 209 Connotation Requires Experience 212 Connotation Requires Time 217 Tropes for Connotation 218 Reference and Allusion in Poetry 238 Dialect 247 7. THE TECHNICAL APPEAL ...
Thomas Henry Briggs. CHAPTER Connotation Requires Imagination PAGE 209 Connotation Requires Experience 212 Connotation Requires Time 217 Tropes for Connotation 218 Reference and Allusion in Poetry 238 Dialect 247 7. THE TECHNICAL APPEAL ...
Էջ 209
... REQUIRES IMAGINATION Active and sensitive imagination is what all true poets have . To them it opens new worlds and to them it reveals meanings and significances , which they try to convey connotatively to readers of their verses ...
... REQUIRES IMAGINATION Active and sensitive imagination is what all true poets have . To them it opens new worlds and to them it reveals meanings and significances , which they try to convey connotatively to readers of their verses ...
Էջ 212
... REQUIRES EXPERIENCE Connotation requires much of a reader . In the first place , he must willingly and wholly put himself into the mood sug- gested by the artist . No poet can successfully evoke laughter or tears or arouse sentiments ...
... REQUIRES EXPERIENCE Connotation requires much of a reader . In the first place , he must willingly and wholly put himself into the mood sug- gested by the artist . No poet can successfully evoke laughter or tears or arouse sentiments ...
Բովանդակություն
CHAPTER | 3 |
A HELPFUL CONCEPT OF ART | 21 |
THE VALUES OF POETRY | 37 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
7 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieve Adelaide Crapsey alliteration Amy Lowell appeal appreciation arouse artist assonance beauty bird Browning Browning's child color composition connotative conventions convey Coventry Patmore dead death diction dream drip Edgar Lee Masters effect Emily Dickinson emotion emphasized enjoyment excerpt experience expression eyes feeling flower galloped give hath heart hill idea illustrations images imagination Keats light lines look lover lyric means memory mood moving never night Ogden Nash Onomatopoeia painting passages permission person picture pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry presented prose publishers reader response rhyme rhythm Roland Sara Teasdale sense sensuous setting sing sleep song sonnet soul sound stanza star story sweet T. S. Eliot taste tears techniques tell Tennyson thee things thou thought tion tree tropes unity verse W. H. Auden William Rose Benét wind words Wordsworth wrote young