The Groundwork of CriticismOxford University Press, 1947 - 175 pages |
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Page 78
... earth is sustained in the first two lines . In the third line there is a change of figure . The earth is compared no longer with a person , but with a place . In the fifth there is a return to the original figure , the notion of the ...
... earth is sustained in the first two lines . In the third line there is a change of figure . The earth is compared no longer with a person , but with a place . In the fifth there is a return to the original figure , the notion of the ...
Page 151
... earth , Whose dawn draws gold from the roots of darkness Not shy of light nor shrinking from shadow Like Jesuits in jungle we journey Deliberately bearing to brutish tribes Christ's assurance , arts of agriculture As a train that ...
... earth , Whose dawn draws gold from the roots of darkness Not shy of light nor shrinking from shadow Like Jesuits in jungle we journey Deliberately bearing to brutish tribes Christ's assurance , arts of agriculture As a train that ...
Page 172
... earth , and fill ( Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air ) With living hues and odours plain and hill : Wild Spirit , which art moving everywhere ; Destroyer and Preserver ; hear , oh , hear ! 2. Thou on whose stream , mid the ...
... earth , and fill ( Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air ) With living hues and odours plain and hill : Wild Spirit , which art moving everywhere ; Destroyer and Preserver ; hear , oh , hear ! 2. Thou on whose stream , mid the ...
Other editions - View all
Groundwork of Criticism Judging Poetry (Classic Reprint) Stanley C. Glassey No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
ALEXANDER POPE alley anapaests bear beauty breath Cheddar Pinks conceit dactyl daffodils dance dark darling dead death doth dreams dying earth echoes Elegy emotive example expression eyes Faerie Queene fancy feel feet figurative language flowers following passage following poem foot Hamlet hath hear heart heaven human iambic idea imagery images inverted stress LAURENCE BINYON light lines lives LORD TENNYSON Lycidas lyric maid MATTHEW ARNOLD metaphor metre mind moon narrative poems nature ne'er o'er pale phrase plays poet poet's poetry questions printed Read carefully rhyme rhythm ROBERT ROBERT BURNS round Sally satiric scene sense Shakespeare's sing sleep song sonnet soul sound speech spirit spondee stanza stars STEPHEN SPENDER stressed syllable strong stress suggests sweet T. S. Eliot thee theme thine things thou thought trochees unstressed verse W. B. Yeats Wilfred Owen WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind words