Enjoying PoetryMark Van Doren W. Sloane Associates, 1951 - 556 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 54
Página 7
... lady's throat , like the whole body of the nightingale , is where music may be said to live , singing for its own pleasure , making sound or no sound as it chooses ; wintering , or waiting , in the warmth of its own notes until it ...
... lady's throat , like the whole body of the nightingale , is where music may be said to live , singing for its own pleasure , making sound or no sound as it chooses ; wintering , or waiting , in the warmth of its own notes until it ...
Página 8
... lady's fragrant bosom , whence she will spring into future flight that contrasts with the quiet power , stated itself so noiselessly in stanza one , exerted by the causes of things . The poem returns to its beginning ; draws a circle ...
... lady's fragrant bosom , whence she will spring into future flight that contrasts with the quiet power , stated itself so noiselessly in stanza one , exerted by the causes of things . The poem returns to its beginning ; draws a circle ...
Página 48
... lady walking , and incidentally dying as she walks . The third section settles firmly into the matter - of - fact mood which the subject has turned out to deserve . In her is the end of breeding . Her boredom is exquisite and excessive ...
... lady walking , and incidentally dying as she walks . The third section settles firmly into the matter - of - fact mood which the subject has turned out to deserve . In her is the end of breeding . Her boredom is exquisite and excessive ...
Contenido
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 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 68 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
alliteration Andrew Marvell Annabel Lee auld lang syne beauty bird blood breast breath bright child cloud cold dark dead dear death doth dreams earth Emily Dickinson eyes fair fall feet flowers gone grass grave green hair hand hath hear heard heart heaven hill iambic iambic pentameter kiss lady land leaves light live look lover Lycidas lyre mind moon morning never night o'er once Oven Bird pale Philosopher's Song poem poet poetry praise quatrain rhyme Roman Road rose round Samian wine shade shadow shine shore silent silver dawn sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep smiling song sonnet soul sound spirit spring stanza stars sweet syllables tears tell thee thine thing thou thought trees trimeter verse voice wall waves weary weep wild wind wings wonder words