The Achievement of T. S. Eliot: An Essay on the Nature of PoetryHoughton Mifflin, 1935 - 159 Seiten |
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Seite vii
... poem means . The most fatal approach to a poem is to focus merely on what it seems to state , to try to isolate its ideas from their context in order to approve or disapprove of them before having really grasped their implications in the ...
... poem means . The most fatal approach to a poem is to focus merely on what it seems to state , to try to isolate its ideas from their context in order to approve or disapprove of them before having really grasped their implications in the ...
Seite 47
... poem is going to prove difficult . The ordinary reader , when warned against the obscurity of a poem , is apt to be thrown into a state of consternation very unfavourable to poetic receptivity . Instead of beginning , as he should , in ...
... poem is going to prove difficult . The ordinary reader , when warned against the obscurity of a poem , is apt to be thrown into a state of consternation very unfavourable to poetic receptivity . Instead of beginning , as he should , in ...
Seite 52
... poem itself , as well as to induce the reader to realize , even from the moment before the poem begins , that in reading poetry every word should be paid full attention . In each case the epigraph is designed to form an integral part of ...
... poem itself , as well as to induce the reader to realize , even from the moment before the poem begins , that in reading poetry every word should be paid full attention . In each case the epigraph is designed to form an integral part of ...
Inhalt
Tradition and the Individual Talent I | 1 |
The Problem for the Contemporary Artist 3 335 55 | 34 |
The Objective Correlative | 55 |
Urheberrecht | |
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