Hugh MacDiarmid's Epic PoetryEdinburgh University Press, 1991 - 235 Seiten A collection of Hugh McDiarmid's poetry |
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Seite xiv
... look at the ways they are transcribed into the verse , arguing that what emerges is not merely a spontaneous collage but a poetry whose material construction is both superficially appealing and profoundly yearning for a metaphysical as ...
... look at the ways they are transcribed into the verse , arguing that what emerges is not merely a spontaneous collage but a poetry whose material construction is both superficially appealing and profoundly yearning for a metaphysical as ...
Seite 70
... look at pictures of landscapes and scenes from daily life when the world has taken on a forty - five - degree list , when the green waves are threatening to swallow us up and the ship is breaking up ? Right now we can look and think ...
... look at pictures of landscapes and scenes from daily life when the world has taken on a forty - five - degree list , when the green waves are threatening to swallow us up and the ship is breaking up ? Right now we can look and think ...
Seite 216
... Looks at the Waste Land ' , Scot- tish Literary Journal , 14 ( 2 ) ( November 1987 ) Crawford , Tom , ' Autobiographical Anatomist : Notes on the Col- lected MacDiarmid ' , Chapman , 23-4 ( 1979 ) Cribb , T.J. , ' The Cheka's Horrors ...
... Looks at the Waste Land ' , Scot- tish Literary Journal , 14 ( 2 ) ( November 1987 ) Crawford , Tom , ' Autobiographical Anatomist : Notes on the Col- lected MacDiarmid ' , Chapman , 23-4 ( 1979 ) Cribb , T.J. , ' The Cheka's Horrors ...
Inhalt
Hugh MacDiarmids Epic Poetry | 1 |
In Memoriam James Joyce | 59 |
The First Person | 158 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Aeschylus already appeared attempt become beginning Brecht called Chapter character Clann Collected Complete consider course criticism culture described desire Edinburgh effect English epic essay example existence experience expression fact final follows function further Grieve Hugh MacDiarmid human idea identity important individual Irish kind language later Letters lines linguistic literary literature living London Looks Marxism material matter meaning Memoriam James Joyce mind move movement nature never Note notion passage perhaps person poem poet poetry political possible Pound practice present Press production published question quotation quoted Raised reader reference relation Review Scotland Scots Scottish seems sense social society spiritual struggle suggest things thought tradition translation understanding University verse vision voice whole writing written wrote