Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 21British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 269
... poem ' . He demonstrates , however , that the poet in the act of compo- sition was doing much the same thing . That poets have so seldom written even their ' songs ' expressly for , and to , music suggests that they are well content to ...
... poem ' . He demonstrates , however , that the poet in the act of compo- sition was doing much the same thing . That poets have so seldom written even their ' songs ' expressly for , and to , music suggests that they are well content to ...
Page 294
... poetic mind this last process , inscrutable trans- mutation , eventuated in this magical lyric . Its elements , that is , were chiefly borrowed ; in essence it was solely his own . The poem is founded on facts originally based four ...
... poetic mind this last process , inscrutable trans- mutation , eventuated in this magical lyric . Its elements , that is , were chiefly borrowed ; in essence it was solely his own . The poem is founded on facts originally based four ...
Page 295
... poem is not of an equally fine texture and poetic intensity throughout . How could it possibly be ? Its conclusion a little flags , its imaginative coherence wavers . There are tinges of the too fantastic and of the prosaic ...
... poem is not of an equally fine texture and poetic intensity throughout . How could it possibly be ? Its conclusion a little flags , its imaginative coherence wavers . There are tinges of the too fantastic and of the prosaic ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19345 | 5 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By J W Mackail 19 | 8 |
SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS Master Mind Lecture By Étienne Gilson | 29 |
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