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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But to her heart , her heart was voluble , Paining with eloquence her balmy side ; As though a tongueless nightingale should swell Her throat in vain , and die , heart - stifled , in her dell . A casement high and triple - arched there ...
The Heart Harvey Shapiro In the midst of words your wordless image Marches through the precincts of my night And all the structures of my language lie undone : The bright cathedrals clatter , and the moonTopped spires break their stalks ...
Down the long hill of the wind , the anarch air Shaped by his going : air become visible , bent To a blade of beauty , cruel and taut and bare , A bow of ecstasy , singing and insolent . a And the heart , too , bent to breaking ...
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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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