Dylan Thomas and Poetic Dissociation, Volumen61Southern Illinois University Press, 1964 - 182 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 14
Página 64
... expression , and the incanta- tory gestures he used to work himself up to the right pitch . " ( JOHN LEHMANN , Dylan Thomas , The Legend and the Poet ; [ italics supplied . ] ) To women , of course , he had the child appeal to mother ...
... expression , and the incanta- tory gestures he used to work himself up to the right pitch . " ( JOHN LEHMANN , Dylan Thomas , The Legend and the Poet ; [ italics supplied . ] ) To women , of course , he had the child appeal to mother ...
Página 85
... expression are pitifully imprisoned . This — a prevalent meaninglessness - is the inevitable fate of the verbal artist's failure to accept responsibility to lan- guage : in the end it is order in life itself which suffers , and causes ...
... expression are pitifully imprisoned . This — a prevalent meaninglessness - is the inevitable fate of the verbal artist's failure to accept responsibility to lan- guage : in the end it is order in life itself which suffers , and causes ...
Página 135
... expression , and to large - scale dramatic works in particular , where there would be scope for all his versatility , for his gifts of humour and characterization as well as his genius for poetry " ( Daniel Jones , in the Preface ) ...
... expression , and to large - scale dramatic works in particular , where there would be scope for all his versatility , for his gifts of humour and characterization as well as his genius for poetry " ( Daniel Jones , in the Preface ) ...
Contenido
Introduction | 3 |
The True Voice of English Poetry | 17 |
Critical SelfDeception | 35 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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