How Does a Poem Mean?Examines the value and nature of poetry, using examples of English and American poetry of the past 6 centuries. |
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Her eyes were open , but she still beheld , Now wide awake , the vision of her sleep : There was a painful change , that nigh expelled The blisses of her dream so pure and deep At which fair Madeline began to weep , And moan forth ...
When the bare eyes were before me And the hissing hair , Held up at a window , seen through a door . The stiff bald eyes , the serpents on the forehead Formed in the air . This is a dead scene forever now . Nothing will ever stir .
Bare eyes ” and “ stiff bald eyes ” are strikingly strange usages , as is " hissing hair . ” “ Hissing , " of course , is a direct reference to the fact that Medusa's hair is made of snakes . What is the force of “ bare ” and “ stiff ...
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I have experienced this book in several editions. The operative word in the title is "how." As an amateur poet for whom finding the technical construction of a "poem," or even something so prosaic as the very definition of poetry, this book over the past 40 years has been vital. Ciardi takes the word craft down to basic tools of craftsmanship, such as a pinter wild word with such basic as palate, paint, canvas, easel, brushes, etc. Probably his best chapter is that taht tells why a much beloved poem like
"Invictus" isa very bad poem, changed my whole way of looking at my own work. The example poems in the book, which have changed some from one edition to the next, are themselves very important. This is is a must book for both writers and readers.
Contenido
Walter De la Mare The Listeners | 720 |
Edwin Arlington Robinson Mr Floods Party | 738 |
John Keats The Eve of St Agnes | 744 |
Derechos de autor | |
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