The Art of Reading PoetryFarrar & Rinehart, Incorporated, 1941 - 519 pages I do not believe that poetry is mysterious or esoteric. It is for all who can read, who can call words, who have rhythm enough, by nature, so that a jazz orchestra sets feet and hands in motion. Likewise, this invitation is to all. But it is, especially, invitation to those regretfully convinced that poetry is not for them, and to those who think they prefer the unequivocating directness of prose. It is invitation to labor, and after labor, entrance upon pleasure "not to be chang'd by place or time," the peculiar pleasure which poetry is. - Invitation to reading. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 69
Page 46
... beginning , had , for the sake of clarity , to be kept separate . An ideal reader , seldom encountered , would probably be able to unite all the different operations in one reading . But at the start six readings are suggested . The ...
... beginning , had , for the sake of clarity , to be kept separate . An ideal reader , seldom encountered , would probably be able to unite all the different operations in one reading . But at the start six readings are suggested . The ...
Page 356
... beginning of the day now closing , to express the poet's dissatisfactions with that day , his wish to speed it on its way ; iv is an account of his rejection of offers by death and sleep to substitute for night ; from some comment on ...
... beginning of the day now closing , to express the poet's dissatisfactions with that day , his wish to speed it on its way ; iv is an account of his rejection of offers by death and sleep to substitute for night ; from some comment on ...
Page 427
... beginning with recognition that rhythm at its simplest , for music and for poetry , is nothing more than sound and ... beginnings of rhythm THE POEM AS MUSIC 427.
... beginning with recognition that rhythm at its simplest , for music and for poetry , is nothing more than sound and ... beginnings of rhythm THE POEM AS MUSIC 427.
Contents
OUTLINE FOR A DEFENSE | 1 |
LIONS IN THE PATH | 23 |
THE READING AND THE READINGS OF THE POEM | 39 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ALFRED LORD TENNYSON ANDREW MARVELL ballad beauty beginning bird breath caesuras contrast conventional dark dead death detail Don John doth dream earth effect emotion English experience eyes fairy fear feeling garden hand hath heard heart heaven human idea imagery imagination John Donne JOHN KEATS John of Austria Keats kind King lady light lines live look meaning Milton mind Miss mood moon mother never night nightingale o'er once pattern phrase pleasure poem poet poet's prayer prose reader reading poetry rest rhythm rime rose seems Shakespeare ship sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep song sonnet soul sound spirit stars story stress Suggestions sweet syllables tears thee thine things Thomas Rymer thou thought Three Ravens tree turn verse voice WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind words