Robert Frost on WritingRutgers University Press, 1973 - 188 Seiten Robert Frost was of course a great poet, but he was equally a marvelous teacher who delighted in discussing the nature of writing. Elaine Barry has collected a superb group of Frost letters, reviews, introductions, lectures, and interviews dating all the way back to 1913. In addition to all the major Frost letters on the nature of writing thus far published, Miss Barry includes newly discovered letters and material she came upon while researching this book. Miss Barry integrates this collection of "Frost on Writing" with a shrewd and sympathetic analysis of the scope of his literary criticism. Here is Frost's view of literature and its relation to language, and beyond language, to social order. The book adds to the picture of Frost's connections with the literary figures of his time; it is both a delight and a discovery. -- From publisher's description. |
Inhalt
Marginalia | 4 |
Frost as a Critical Theorist | 10 |
Frost as a Practical Critic | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American poet Amherst Amy Lowell Anthology artistic Browne and Nichols D. H. Lawrence Dear dramatic Edward Connery Edward Thomas Edwin Arlington Edwin Arlington Robinson Emerson emotion England English Ezra Pound F. S. Flint feel fetched Franconia free verse friends Frost wrote Frost's critical give grievances hear ideas imagination intervale intonation judgments kind knew language Lawrance Thompson lines literary Louis Untermeyer lyric meaning metaphor meter mind mood never phrase Pinkerton Academy play poem poetic poetry practical criticism preface prose published reader rhythm Rinehart & Winston Robert Frost Robinson Selected Letters sentence sounds Sidney Cox Sincerely yours Robert sound of sense South Shaftsbury speaking speech stanza style suppose sure talk tell theory thing Thompson thought tion tones of voice Vachel Lindsay vocal WARREN write written Yeats York