Dylan Thomas and Poetic Dissociation, Volumen61Southern Illinois University Press, 1964 - 182 páginas |
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Página 73
David Holbrook. that it becomes meaningless in the ordinary sense of the word . We could not sigh when we heard greed ... becomes a " fire neighbour , " though one might have expected both the near and far neigh- bour to suffer from fire ...
David Holbrook. that it becomes meaningless in the ordinary sense of the word . We could not sigh when we heard greed ... becomes a " fire neighbour , " though one might have expected both the near and far neigh- bour to suffer from fire ...
Página 103
... become aware of an increasing repetition which is at first insistent , then over - insistent : green , golden , green ... becomes the child- ish self - worship of himself by the immature adult . Despite the whimsy of " once below a time ...
... become aware of an increasing repetition which is at first insistent , then over - insistent : green , golden , green ... becomes the child- ish self - worship of himself by the immature adult . Despite the whimsy of " once below a time ...
Página 152
... becomes man becomes fish becomes barnacle goose becomes featherbed moun- tain . Here is English prose whose effect is to satisfy us , even with a kind of elation . It may be an elation savoured with briny decay , but the writing moves ...
... becomes man becomes fish becomes barnacle goose becomes featherbed moun- tain . Here is English prose whose effect is to satisfy us , even with a kind of elation . It may be an elation savoured with briny decay , but the writing moves ...
Contenido
Introduction | 3 |
The True Voice of English Poetry | 17 |
Critical SelfDeception | 35 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accept adult alcoholic attitude becomes breast Captain Cat character Cherry Owens child childhood childish Country Sleep critical D. H. Lawrence D. W. Winnicott dark dead death disarming disguise dissociated dreams dust Dylan Thomas Dylan Thomas's poetry Edith Sitwell Eliot enacts English experience explore fear feel Fern Hill five-beat line flower force gesture give Hopkins's human hwyl imagery immaturity impulse infant infantile irresponsibility Jack Black Joyce Joyce's kind language Llareggub Llaregyb mature meaning meaningless metaphor Milk Wood moral mother mouth movement nature night nostalgia OGMORE Ogmore-Pritchard Olson pain perhaps phrase pity poem poet poet's poetic Polly Garter prose reader reality recoil rhythm rhythmic Richard Paget roots Rosie Probert seek seems sense sexual snart snayped sneap snitered sound special plea stanza suffering suggests symbols T. F. Powys T. S. ELIOT texture tion true voice Ulysses verbal Vernon Watkins verse vision vitality weaknesses wind words writing