Melodious Guile: Fictive Pattern in Poetic LanguageDemonstrating a poet's imaginative ear and a critic's range of concern, John Hollander here writes about the melodious guile with which poetry speaks to us. Through analysis of formal and rhetorical patterns in examples chosen from the whole spectrum of English and American poetry, Hollander describes how poems form self-reflexive parable in order to represent realms beyond themselves. As astute a book about poetry as anyone has produced in the last five years.--David Lehman, Newsday A lively and enlivening work of criticism.--Library Journal Hollander, himself a fine poet, is such a generalist; and Melodious Guile, to my mind the best of his critical books, takes its place . . . among the very few enjoyable and enriching studies of how poetry works.--Alastair Fowler, London Review of Books An incisive display of beautifully integrated erudition. John Hollander demonstrates, just as post-structuralism is waning, that there are other, more cogent theoretical terms for thinking about poetry and for a return to the reading of poetry.--Robert Alter, University of California, Berkeley Nominated for a 1988 National Book Circle Award in Criticism |
Contents
Questions of Poetry | 18 |
Poetic Answers | 41 |
Poetic Imperatives | 64 |
Bondage Work | 85 |
Necessary Hieroglyphs | 111 |
Some Notes on Refrain | 130 |
Spensers Undersong | 148 |
A Long Line | 164 |
The Poetics of Character | 194 |
Examples and Fictions | 207 |
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Common terms and phrases
addressed alliteration answer appear beauty become beginning called changes character comes command complex concerned consider continue course dead death discourse discussion earlier echo effect English example fact fall fiction figure final force frame give hand hear human imagination imperative instance invoked kind language later less light linguistic literal live Lost lyric matter meaning merely metaphor Milton mind mode moral move Muse nature never notion observe once opening original particular pattern perhaps person philosophical phrase play poem poet poetic poetry present question reader reading refrain relation remarkable remember represents resonant rhetorical rhyme river scheme seems sense sing song sonnet sort sound speak Spenser stanza story structure suggest tell thing thought trope true truth turn verse voice whole word writing