Hugh MacDiarmid's Epic PoetryA collection of Hugh McDiarmid's poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 15
... poetic production : ' Only in the U.S.S.R. today is the trend of poetic effort towards epic - in keeping with the great enterprise afoot in that country . . . ' . As for Doughty , his genius too lay ' in the direction of epic ' . That ...
... poetic production : ' Only in the U.S.S.R. today is the trend of poetic effort towards epic - in keeping with the great enterprise afoot in that country . . . ' . As for Doughty , his genius too lay ' in the direction of epic ' . That ...
Page 44
... poetic production and described his verse as ' projective ' . ' Projective Verse ' , Olson claimed , was a new evolutionary development in poetry . The idea was to allow the poet a more immediate and direct access to the reader . The ...
... poetic production and described his verse as ' projective ' . ' Projective Verse ' , Olson claimed , was a new evolutionary development in poetry . The idea was to allow the poet a more immediate and direct access to the reader . The ...
Page 195
... poet ' ) . MacDiarmid assumes , to some extent , the character of Dicaeopolis as it is presented in the speech , but ... Poetic Faculty ' , and ' The Kulturkampf ' ' the ideal figure of whom Mr Power [ William Power , dedicatee of the ...
... poet ' ) . MacDiarmid assumes , to some extent , the character of Dicaeopolis as it is presented in the speech , but ... Poetic Faculty ' , and ' The Kulturkampf ' ' the ideal figure of whom Mr Power [ William Power , dedicatee of the ...
Contents
Hugh MacDiarmids Epic Poetry | 1 |
In Memoriam James Joyce | 59 |
The First Person | 158 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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