Gerard Manley HopkinsD. Dobson, 1949 - 134 páginas |
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Página 47
... sprung and dipodic rhythm are the same comes from Hopkins ' own remarks upon the history and analogues of his new rhythm . In a first ex- planation to Bridges ( 21 August 1877 , Letters I. xxxvii ) , he not only finds it in Campbell ...
... sprung and dipodic rhythm are the same comes from Hopkins ' own remarks upon the history and analogues of his new rhythm . In a first ex- planation to Bridges ( 21 August 1877 , Letters I. xxxvii ) , he not only finds it in Campbell ...
Página 51
... In accounting for them , however , it is not necessary to second Williams ' mystical explanation ; far better to return to the cool sanity of Patmore : The law of alliteration is the only conceivable intrinsic mode 51 Sprung Rhythm.
... In accounting for them , however , it is not necessary to second Williams ' mystical explanation ; far better to return to the cool sanity of Patmore : The law of alliteration is the only conceivable intrinsic mode 51 Sprung Rhythm.
Página 107
... Sprung Rhythm or the necessities of Sprung Rhythm , as Mr Whitehall suggests , led to the repetitions . In either case , however , there was another reason for the new rhythm . For Hopkins the poem in itself was an inscape , a thing ...
... Sprung Rhythm or the necessities of Sprung Rhythm , as Mr Whitehall suggests , led to the repetitions . In either case , however , there was another reason for the new rhythm . For Hopkins the poem in itself was an inscape , a thing ...
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Términos y frases comunes
19th Century adjectives admiration alliteration Anglican Anglo-Saxon assonance Beowulf brute beauty Buckle CALIFORNIA LIBRARY called Carrion Comfort Catholic Christ Claude Colleer Abbott Collins colour compounds dear Deutschland diction dipodic rhythm Dixon Donne eccentric English poetry English verse epithets F. R. Leavis feeling flash forms friends Gerard Manley Hopkins God's Harry Ploughman heart inscape instress intensity internal rhyme Jesuit juncture Keats kind kins language Letters to Bridges linguistic literary lovely matter medieval metrical Milton mirror modern movement nature never Newman Notebooks Old English overstressing Oxford participles Patmore pattern Piers Plowman poems poet poetic precision prose reader rhetorical rhythmic Richard Watson Dixon Robert Bridges running rhythm Ruskin scansion Scotus sensuous Skylark SOLp sonnets speech spiritual SpLO SpLp SpPp sprung rhythm stanza stress sweet syllables Tennyson thee thing thought tion valour and act Victorian vocabulary Welsh poetry Windhover wordpainting words Wreck writing