The Collected Prose of Robert FrostHarvard University Press, 2006 - 809 Seiten During his lifetime, Robert Frost notoriously resisted collecting his prose--going so far as to halt the publication of one prepared compilation and to "lose" the transcripts of the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures he delivered at Harvard in 1936. But for all his qualms, Frost conceded to his son that "you can say a lot in prose that verse won't let you say," and that the prose he had written had in fact "made good competition for [his] verse." This volume, the first critical edition of Robert Frost's prose, allows readers and scholars to appreciate the great American author's forays beyond poetry, and to discover in the prose that he did make public--in newspapers, magazines, journals, speeches, and books--the wit, force, and grace that made his poetry famous. |
Im Buch
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... Poetry brings pollen of one flower from to another flower.35 He threw the whole machine out of his shop and out of ... Poetry Highbrow or Lowbrow.39 The ballads are one and Comus40 is the other . The distinction in Poetry has no ...
... poetry concrete images of sound - concrete tone images . Poetry is a dwelling on the fact , a gloating over the fact , a luxuriating in the fact . It's first pleasure is in the facts of the voice . So much for what the sounds of poetry ...
... Poetry is license Off hand poetry might be called licence to be wrong , wild and foolish , { sickly impossible and dangerous } . It is supposed to have won to freedom from all restraints but those of rhyme and metre and from even those ...
Inhalt
under a spell | 84 |
16 | 94 |
nor patriotism comes to an apex | 159 |
Urheberrecht | |
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