The Poetry of Thomas HardyPatricia Clements, Juliet Grindle Barnes & Noble, 1980 - 194 pages These essays deal with Hardy's craft; the poems in their various landscapes and the patterns and relationships between ideas or experience and their expression in sensory language. |
Contents
As Rhyme Meets Rhyme in the Poetry of Thomas | 18 |
Meaning in Hardys | 33 |
The Mellstock Quire and Tess in Hardys Poetry | 52 |
Copyright | |
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alliteration ballad birds caesurae chapter cold consciousness cosmic dead death describes Dewy dream Dynasts E. H. Gombrich effect emotion English enjambement evolution experience eyes face feeling fiction Fore Scene George Meredith Greenwood Tree grief Hardy's poems Hardy's poetry harshness Hartmann's human iamb idea ideal imagination Immanent irony J. O. Bailey journey Jude Jude the Obscure landscape leaves living look lovers man's meaning Mellstock Quire memory Meredith metaphor metre metrical mind mirror moon narrator nature never night novel Oedipus pain past pathetic fallacy pattern phrase pilgrimage Pities play poem's poet poet's poetic present prose prosody quire reader regret repetition rhyme rhythm says seems sense shape song sound speaker Spirit stanza stress suggests T. S. Eliot Teiresias Tess Tess's things Thomas Hardy thought Time's Tom Paulin Unconscious verb verse vision voice vowels Well-Beloved Wessex Poems woman words