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5 Cards in this Set
- Front
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Patoral Elegy |
generally opening with an invocation that is followed by a statement of the poet’s grief and a subsequent description of a procession of mourners. The pastoral elegy also usually involves a discussion of fate, or some similarly philosophical topic. There are phases or movements of thought like the different patterns of emotions, shock, crying, complaining, memory, gloom, contemplation, and consolation. But more typically, the pastoral conventions include mourning by the nature and the shepherds, funeral procession, laying flowers on the dead, interruption by a divine figure or a voice which tells some truth or console the mourners. |
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Skeptical Idealism |
hope in redemption from the present social ills is not an intellectual certainty but moral obligation. Despair is self-fulfilling; we must continue to hope because, by keeping open the possibility of a better future, hope releases the imaginative and creative powers that are the only creative powers that are the only means of achieving that end. |
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poet |
doesn't focus on the particularity of individual poems but on the universal and permanent qualities and values that, he believes all great poems, as products of imagination, have in common. Shelly version of the term includes all creative minds that break out of the conditions of their not only historical time and place in order to envision such values. |
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poetry |
poetry is a mirror which makes beautiful that which is distorted the one is partial and applications to a definite period of time, and a certain combination of events which can again recur. poetry develops new and wonderful applications of the eternal truth which it, contains much like idealism. |
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ottava rima |
An eight-line stanza form, rhyming ABABABCC using iambic pentameter: Yeats " Sailing to Byzantium". Derived from the Italia poet, Boccaccio, an eight line stanza was used by fifteenth century English poets for inset passages. The form in this in this rhyme scheme was used to English poetry for long narrative by Byron's Don Jon. |