On the Nature of Poetry
图书信息
| 作者 | Kenneth Verity |
| 出版社 | M-Y Books |
| ISBN | 9780856832468 |
| 出版时间 | 2012-08-08 |
| 字数 | 72.8万 |
| 分类 | 进口书,外文原版书,教育,学习 |
读书简介
Some guides to a subject could more or less be written by any expert in that field, but a small minority are unique creations of a rare individual who has their own view. Unfortunately most of the latter types of guides fail to be good general guides. Verity's genius makes him the exception. This book is arranged in chronological chapters that trace the evolution of poetry as an art form. At the same time, each chapter gives a most practical explanation of how that aspect of poetry that it covers works and why. The book is immensely readable, hugely informative, and adds to the ability of the reader to enjoy and to create poetry. It is a classic.' "Epictetus" (Amazon review) 'The great merit of Verity's approach is that he quotes lavishly throughout, not only from the poems themselves, but also from a variety of critics' LIBRARY REVIEWS 'Of his first book of sonnets Kingsley Amis wrote ‘They belong within the corpus of English poetry’ Excerpts of Interview with Kenneth Verity on The Vanessa Phelps BBC Radio programme on June 2009 on the News Page (off the Home page) 'The amount of reading which underpins this book is breathtaking. The great merit of Verity's approach is that he quotes lavishly throughout, not only from the poems themselves, but also from a variety of critics ... The chapter on poetry's figurative element is a model of lucid definition and telling illustration, showing how many layers of meaning may lie behind a single word' LIBRARY REVIEWS The author writes:'The intention of this book is to examine and analyse the essential nature of the phenomenon we call poetry; to seek an understanding of the power this art form exerts over mind and heart; to comprehend its potency; and to explain its perennial ability to command the respect of mankind'. Almost a library in one volume, this unusual book, written by an accomplished poet, examines the 4000 years old phenomenon of poetry. Combining history, literature and philosophy, it explains the underlying power of this art form and how its effect is exerted over human hearts and understanding. Since the Greeks at least, poetry has been accorded pre-eminence in the arts. Poetry’s aesthetic supremacy and inhering mystery has made it the foremost form of expression when human beings need to say something important in a special way. Poetry has been defined as the best words in the best order. In poetry, the author suggests, the eternal intersects the everyday – it has been said that poetry is the language in which man explores his own amazement. He shows how poetry has provided a vehicle for inspiration and fresh ways of thinking and interpreting the perennial questions of the human race. The author makes clear that poetry ‘works’ because it acknowledges the universality of human psychology, and because it unites emotion with reason and tempers imagination with understanding. Over 200 poets from both East and West are quoted, and the work of 10 master poets is critically analysed and assessed. The major factors involved in translating poetry are discussed, particularly the difficulty of conveying the meaning without losing the spirit. The central features of inspiration and creativity are elucidated. The unbroken stream of poetry carries resonances of the growth and decay of civilisations, the vicissitudes of wars, the effects of migrations and trading, the influences of religious belief. The author considers, from his own experience, that poetry remains peerless in evaluating and articulating the riches of the human spirit.
目录
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgementds
Author’s Preface
Introduction
1 THE ANCIENT WORLD
Epic of Gilgamesh; Egyptian Poetry
Poetry and The Biblical Tradition
2 THE GREEKS
Homer; The Homeric Hymns
Hesiod
Greek Drama, Tragedy, Comedy
Developments in Greek Poetry
Archilochus, Sappho, Pindar, Praxilla,
Simonides, Philetas, Theocritus
Pre-Socratic Criticism of Poets
Plato's Criticism of Poets
The Loss of Greek Independence
3 THE ROMANS
Latin and Roman Poetry:
Satura, Fables; Juvenal, Epigram, Martial
Greek Influence on Roman Literature
Tragedy, Comedy, Naevius, Plautus,
Statius Caecilius, Terence, Manilius
Latin and Roman Poets: Ennius, Lucretius, Catullus
Horace, Virgil, Tibullus, Propertius, Ovid
Post-Augustan Poetry
Quintilian, Lucan
The Shift Away from Rome
4 POETRY IN THE SHADOWS
The Dark Ages
Beowulf, Caedmon
The Middle Ages
The Mystery of Allegory: Romance of the Rose,
Pearl, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,
The Vision of Piers Plowman
Figures of Speech in Medieval Poetry
A Psychological Awakening - Chaucer
A New Realism - Villon, Marot
5 HUMANISM AND SPIRITUALITY
Renaissance Italy
Dante, The Divine Comedy, The New Life
Petrarch, Canzoniere
The Development of the Sonnet: Petrarchan, Spenserian, Elizabethan
The Sonnet's Sequent History
6 THE RENAISSANCE ENTERS ENGLAND
The Elizabethans Wyatt, Earl of Surrey, Spenser
Humanism in England
Sidney, Daniel, Drayton, Kyd
Shakespeare
Plays: Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, Othello,
Shakespeare's Plays as Poetry,
The Sonnets
The Concept 'Love'
7 METAPHYSICAL POETRY
Metaphysics
Donne and the Metaphysical Poets
The Wider Dimension
The Augustan Age
8 IDEALS AND DREAMS
The Romantic Movement
Blake, Wordsworth, Byron, Keats
Shelley, Coleridge
The Post-Romantic Period
The Victorian Poets
Tennyson, Browning, Arnold,
Clough, Swinburne
German Poetry - Influence in Europe
Gerard Manley Hopkins
9 A FRESH LYRICISM
The Georgians
A.E. Housman, Davies, Walter de la Mare,
Masefield, Edward Thomas, Andrew Young,
Blunden, Owen, Sassoon, Robert Bridges, Yeats
10 NEW APPROACHES
Modern Poetry
Eliot: Plays, Poetry, Criticism
Eliot and Valéry,
The Social Poets
W.H. Auden, MacNeice, Spender, Day-Lewis,
New Apocalypse
11 DIFFERENCES WITHIN UNIVERSALITY
Oriental Poetry
India, China, Japan, Russia,
Sufi Poetry
12 SUBSTANCE AND FORM
Aristotle's Treatise on Poetry
The Structure of Poetry
Prose in a Verse-Play
Words in Their Place
Structural Analysis
Metre and Rhythm: The Metrical Foot
Sound and Rhyme
Music in Poetry
13 POETRY'S FIGURATIVE ELEMENT
Defining Poetry, Rhyme
A Sonnet Within a Play
Figurative Language
Metaphor and Analogy
Symbol and Symbolism
Image and Imagism
Epigram and Proverb
Emblem and Ensign
Allegory
Semiotics
14 THE POET AND HIS FACULTIES
The Poet
Philosophy in Poetry
Poetry the Mirror of Images
15 CREATIVITY
Making Poetry
Imagination
Interpretation
Translation
The Breath of Creativity
16 THE NATURE OF POETRY
Aesthetics: Beauty; Imitation; Expression; Form
Attitudes to Form
Temporality
Eternity
Master Poets: Homer, Hesiod, Virgil, Petrarch, Dante, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Hopkins, Yeats, Eliot
Ambiguity
The Critic
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index of Poets
General Index
- 儿童英语启蒙——从绘本、游戏到分级读物(施乐遥)
- Dup? ce te-am pierdut(Jojo Moyes)
- 姚明(1)(读书堂)
- 大白鲸童话森林·樟树公寓的十二家房客(梅瑜)
- 人机对话系统(曹均阔,陈国莲)
- 做人要大气(郑斌)
- 粗糙且含糊不清的怪盗预告信:警察厅特案专职搜查课事件簿([日] 仓知淳)
- 简单易学的基金投资(杨天南,孙振曦,贾泽亮 等)
