The imagery of Keats and ShelleyArchon Books, 1962 - 296 páginas |
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Página 10
... realizing sense of , take in , whatever it is that is being meant — which is not necessarily any physical thing . But if we say ' a realizing sense , ' we must remember that this is not any ' sense ' necessarily , such as sense ...
... realizing sense of , take in , whatever it is that is being meant — which is not necessarily any physical thing . But if we say ' a realizing sense , ' we must remember that this is not any ' sense ' necessarily , such as sense ...
Página 20
... realized and is mistaken for literal statement . Even the most artistic prose is not entirely free from dead meta- phor , for prose is often impelled to seek for its purpose what is closest to hand ; but good poetry must shun it like ...
... realized and is mistaken for literal statement . Even the most artistic prose is not entirely free from dead meta- phor , for prose is often impelled to seek for its purpose what is closest to hand ; but good poetry must shun it like ...
Página 113
... realized by virtue of the image of touch which accompanies it . " Coolness to the eye , " although instantaneous in effect , proposes a sense- relationship familiar to most of us , and generally ac- cepted as normal . On one occasion ...
... realized by virtue of the image of touch which accompanies it . " Coolness to the eye , " although instantaneous in effect , proposes a sense- relationship familiar to most of us , and generally ac- cepted as normal . On one occasion ...
Índice
Poetic Imagery | 3 |
Imagery of Sensation | 26 |
Synaesthetic Imagery ΙΟΙ | 101 |
Página de créditos | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract actuality aesthetic Agnes Alastor Beauty body Brooks characteristic clouds cold color complex concept concrete Criticism dome earth effect elements Eliot emotion empathy Endymion Essays eternal Eve of St example experience expression feeling figures flowers fused fusion Grecian Urn Heaven Hulme human Hyperion I. A. Richards Ibid imagination intense John Crowe Ransom John Keats Keats's poetry kinesthetic Lamia light lines Literary meaning metaphor metaphysical mind motion motor nature Nightingale object Ode on Indolence Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche odor organic passage perceptions Percy Bysshe Shelley physical poem poet poetic imagery Prometheus Unbound prose Queen Mab Ransom reader relationship rich Romantic Romantic poetry Romanticism scene sensation sense sensory sensuous shapes Shelley Shelley's poetry soft soul sound spirit stanza Stood Tiptoe suggestion sweet symbols synaesthesia synaesthetic synaesthetic imagery Tate theory things thou thought tion unity veil verse visual words