Enjoying PoetryMark Van Doren W. Sloane Associates, 1951 - 556 sidor |
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Sida 10
... stanza it is important to note that " hour " rhymes with " poor " and " secure , " and of course with the strange word " stour , " which stands for the dust , the struggle , the confusion of existence . In the second stanza " hall " and ...
... stanza it is important to note that " hour " rhymes with " poor " and " secure , " and of course with the strange word " stour , " which stands for the dust , the struggle , the confusion of existence . In the second stanza " hall " and ...
Sida 54
... stanza at last . He has long since lost contact with his subject in its purity . The quatrain of this stanza was intrinsically better than its couplets ; but it was in the quatrain that he strayed away , far- ther even than he had gone ...
... stanza at last . He has long since lost contact with his subject in its purity . The quatrain of this stanza was intrinsically better than its couplets ; but it was in the quatrain that he strayed away , far- ther even than he had gone ...
Sida 101
... stanza has three pairs of rhymes , and there are three stanzas — not a coincidence of number by any means . The progress within any given stanza is the progress of the poem as a whole . For there is progress : the stanzas are not ...
... stanza has three pairs of rhymes , and there are three stanzas — not a coincidence of number by any means . The progress within any given stanza is the progress of the poem as a whole . For there is progress : the stanzas are not ...
Innehåll
A single asterisk before the title of a poem indicates that it is analyzed in the Commentaries beginning on page | 3 |
An Ode Matthew Prior Linda | 4 |
To Lucasta on Going to the Wars Richard Lovelace | 5 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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alliteration Annabel Lee auld lang syne beauty bird blood breast breath bright cloud couplet dance dark dead dear death doth dream earth Emily Dickinson eyes fair fall feet flowers gone green hair hand hast hath hear heard heart heaven hill iambic pentameter kiss lady leaves light listen live look Lord Lord Randal lover Lycidas lyre mind Minnaloushe moon morning mother never night o'er once Oven Bird poem poet poetry praise quatrain rhyme ROBERT FROST Roman Road rose round Samian wine shade shadows shine shore silent sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep song sonnet soul sound spring stanza stars sweet syllables tears tell thee thine thing thou thought trees trimeter verse voice wall waves weary weep wild WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS wind wings wonder words