The Poet and the PoemA discussion of the poet's inherent attitudes, the more technical matters of verse writing, and the application of principles to actual practice. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 25
Page 50
... syllables and stress , both of which are much more significant in poetry than in prose . There are poems measured by syllables alone and by stress alone , but the peculiarly difficult and enchanting characteristic of English poetry is ...
... syllables and stress , both of which are much more significant in poetry than in prose . There are poems measured by syllables alone and by stress alone , but the peculiarly difficult and enchanting characteristic of English poetry is ...
Page 51
... syllable by whispering it , by shrilling it , growling it , extending it or cutting it off sharply . Moreover , stress of a syllable has meaning only in relation to the syllables before and after it . The middle syllable in completely ...
... syllable by whispering it , by shrilling it , growling it , extending it or cutting it off sharply . Moreover , stress of a syllable has meaning only in relation to the syllables before and after it . The middle syllable in completely ...
Page 54
... syllables and strong ones , etc. ) ; but too much refinement begins to defeat the usefulness of the analysis . I recommend what may seem a roughshod treatment . Read the passage as naturally as possible - ignoring the underlying iambic ...
... syllables and strong ones , etc. ) ; but too much refinement begins to defeat the usefulness of the analysis . I recommend what may seem a roughshod treatment . Read the passage as naturally as possible - ignoring the underlying iambic ...
Contents
FOOTHILLS OF PARNASSUSOR WHY BOTHER? | 14 |
Six Senses of the Poet | 20 |
Pole Vaulting Does Not Require an Individual Style | 34 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accent alliteration amateur anapest beat become begin better bird cadence century clichés color complex conventional counterstatement couplet course critical death deliberately diction Donne doublevision dramatic Dryden Dylan Thomas E. E. Cummings effect Emily Dickinson emotional English example experience eyes fact feeling feminine rhymes free verse Frost give hear humor iamb iambic iambic pentameter imagine imply kind language less light literary look Marianne Moore meaning metaphor meter metrical mind Miniver Miniver Cheevy mystery never notice pattern pentameter perhaps phrase poem poet poet's poetic prose quatrain reader reason rhyme rhythm satire seems sense sentence Shakespeare shape sleep sonnet soul sound spondees stanza statement stress suggest sure sweet syllables symbols thing thou thought thump tion tone trochees units values variety verse voice W. B. Yeats Westron words writing poetry Yeats