Making Your Own Days: The Pleasures of Reading and Writing PoetryScribner, 1998 - 317 páginas This book makes the somewhat mysterious subject of poetry clear for those who read it and for those who write it and for those who would like to read it and write it better. Koch accomplishes this revelation of poetry by presenting the idea that poetry is a separate language, a language in which music and sound are as important as syntax or meaning. Thus he is able to clarify the many aspects of poetry: the nature of poetic inspiration, what happens when a poet is writing a poem, revision, and what actually goes on while one is reading a poem - how confusion or only partial understanding eventually leads to truly experiencing a poem. Among the poets whose work is included are Homer, Ovid, Sappho, Shakespeare, Byron, Dickinson, Baudelaire, Li Bei, Stevens, Williams, Lorea, Ashbery, and Snyder. |
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Página 112
... reader to know what to expect in reading it . Knowing , for example , the importance of sound in poetry , the way its language is led along musically from one word to another , that it is inclined toward personification and apostrophe ...
... reader to know what to expect in reading it . Knowing , for example , the importance of sound in poetry , the way its language is led along musically from one word to another , that it is inclined toward personification and apostrophe ...
Página 123
... reader gets . There are , it should be added , poems that are deliberately and perhaps permanently unclear - see , for example , those of Ashbery and Ceravolo in the anthology . Poets may wish to give , and readers be interested in the ...
... reader gets . There are , it should be added , poems that are deliberately and perhaps permanently unclear - see , for example , those of Ashbery and Ceravolo in the anthology . Poets may wish to give , and readers be interested in the ...
Página 292
... reader , along with the speaker , is comforted at the end by the snow , which has created a " white city " of another kind . None of this is explicitly stated ; the reader has one experience after another , and the understanding of the ...
... reader , along with the speaker , is comforted at the end by the snow , which has created a " white city " of another kind . None of this is explicitly stated ; the reader has one experience after another , and the understanding of the ...
Contenido
A Brief Preface | 13 |
The Two Languages | 19 |
Music | 27 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Making Your Own Days: The Pleasures of Reading and Writing Poetry Kenneth Koch Vista previa limitada - 1999 |
Making Your Own Days: The Pleasures of Reading and Writing Poetry Kenneth Koch Vista de fragmentos - 1999 |
Términos y frases comunes
anthology apostrophe Auden beauty blackbird blank verse blue comparisons Copyright D. H. Lawrence dawn death dream earth Elegy emotional everything example excitement experience eyes EZRA POUND feel flower Frank O'Hara give guage hear heart iambic iambic pentameter idea inspiration James Schuyler John Ashbery Juliet Keats Kenneth Koch kind language of poetry Li Bai lines live long poems look lovers meaning meter Mina Loy moon never night non-metrical ordinary personification plays pleasure poet poet's poetic poetry language prose reader Reprinted by permission rhyme rhythm Rilke Romeo seems sensations sense shadow Shakespeare Shelley sleep song sonnet sound speak stanza sweet syllables T. S. Eliot talking thee things thou thought tion translation tree W. H. Auden walk Wallace Stevens Whitman William Carlos Williams Williams wind woman words Wordsworth writing poetry wrote Yeats Yeats's