The Dimensions of Poetry: A Critical Anthology |
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Page 168
... human mind and obscurely remote in human prehistory . The pattern it offers is familiar not because we know mythology but because we are human and are born with instinctual human knowledge within us . Thus the myth merely dramatizes ...
... human mind and obscurely remote in human prehistory . The pattern it offers is familiar not because we know mythology but because we are human and are born with instinctual human knowledge within us . Thus the myth merely dramatizes ...
Page 252
... human , ye of human gods . So ye shall die perhaps , by putting off Human , to put on gods , death to be wished , [ 710 ] 215 220 225 [ 720 ] Though threatened , which no worse than this can bring . [ 715 ] And what are gods that man ...
... human , ye of human gods . So ye shall die perhaps , by putting off Human , to put on gods , death to be wished , [ 710 ] 215 220 225 [ 720 ] Though threatened , which no worse than this can bring . [ 715 ] And what are gods that man ...
Page 350
... humanity , and therefore includes women — the “ female will " in Blake becomes associated with women only when women dramatize or mimic the above relation in human life , as they do in the Courtly Love convention . The female figure ...
... humanity , and therefore includes women — the “ female will " in Blake becomes associated with women only when women dramatize or mimic the above relation in human life , as they do in the Courtly Love convention . The female figure ...
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Common terms and phrases
beauty Ben Jonson bird breath bright cloud critical Danny Deever dark dead death doth dramatic dream E. E. CUMMINGS E. M. W. Tillyard earth elegy Emily Dickinson eternal eyes fair fear flowers Gerontion hair hand hath hear heard heart heaven human imagery images John John Donne John Dryden Keats kind King Kubla Khan language leaves light lines live look Lord Lord Randal love's lover Lycidas meaning metaphor Milton mind moon morning mortal Muse nature never night o'er Ozymandias pastoral pattern PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry reader rhyme rhythm rose round sense shadow Shakespeare ship sigh sing sleep song sonnets soul sound spirit stanza stars sweet symbol tears tell thee theme thine things thought tion tree verse voice W. H. AUDEN weep wind wings woods words young