Essays and IntroductionsMacmillan, 1961 - 530 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.3. rezultāts no 86.
51. lappuse
... becomes like a stone , and it seems to me , though doubtless naturalistic reason would call it auto - suggestion or ... become uneasy , and have torn up some paragraph , not for any literary reason , but be- cause some incident or some ...
... becomes like a stone , and it seems to me , though doubtless naturalistic reason would call it auto - suggestion or ... become uneasy , and have torn up some paragraph , not for any literary reason , but be- cause some incident or some ...
223. lappuse
... become louder by becoming less articu- late , by discovering some new musical sort of roar or scream . As poetry can do neither , the voice must be freed from this competition and find itself among little instruments , only heard at ...
... become louder by becoming less articu- late , by discovering some new musical sort of roar or scream . As poetry can do neither , the voice must be freed from this competition and find itself among little instruments , only heard at ...
231. lappuse
... become the most noble poetry , and there is no observation of life , because the poet would set before us all those ... become a player of old women on the Noh stage . If he would become famous as a Noh player , XIJ she said , he must ...
... become the most noble poetry , and there is no observation of life , because the poet would set before us all those ... become a player of old women on the Noh stage . If he would become famous as a Noh player , XIJ she said , he must ...
Saturs
WHAT IS POPULAR POETRY? | 3 |
SPEAKING TO the Psaltery | 13 |
MAGIC | 28 |
Autortiesības | |
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ancient artist beauty become believe Blake body called cave colour Dante death delight desire Divine Divine Comedy drama dream ecstasy emotion energy eternity eyes Faerie Queene FLORENCE FARR fountain gathered genius heard heart images imagination intellect Ireland Irish John O'Leary knew Lady Gregory light Lionel Johnson literature lived look Louis Lambert lovers lyric Master Matthew Arnold meditation memory mind modern mood moon moral move movement nature never once painting passed passion perfect perhaps philosophy play players poems poet poetry praise remember rhythm Richard II saint Samādhi seemed sense shadow Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's sleep song sorrow soul speak Spenser spirit spoke story sweet symbols Synge theatre things thought tion told tradition understand verse vision voice W. B. YEATS William Blake William Morris woman women words write wrote young Young Ireland