An Edwin Arlington Robinson EncyclopediaMcFarland & Company, 2006 - 271 頁 Edward Arlington Robinson (1865-1935) was hailed by many in his day as America's foremost poet, outranking T.S. Eliot, Robert Frost, and Ezra Pound. Perhaps best known for his sonnets, he startled readers into attention and response through deliberate obscurity and ambiguity and demanding syntax. Many of Robinson's works continue to be published today, introducing him to new generations of readers. This comprehensive encyclopedia provides information on Robinson's poems - he published more than 200 - and his less well known prose works, along with entries on his family, friends, and professional associates. For entries on his writings, the year written, the setting of the work, background information, and critical commentary illuminating enigmatic passages are provided. For people, the entries provide biographical information and describe the influence the person had on Robinson's life. This encyclopedia has been extensively indexed. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 92 筆
第 103 頁
... death and resurrection was [ sic ] Christ's means of foreshadowing the Cruci- fixion and making them understand its significance . " Such was Christ's knowledge , surely ; but Robinson's poem ends without the three siblings ' fully ...
... death and resurrection was [ sic ] Christ's means of foreshadowing the Cruci- fixion and making them understand its significance . " Such was Christ's knowledge , surely ; but Robinson's poem ends without the three siblings ' fully ...
第 110 頁
... death of his beloved " ; she seems to be calling him to die , pass through the gate , and join her . John Miller explicates Robin- son's " The dark will end the dark " to mean that the dark of death will end the dark of the world ...
... death of his beloved " ; she seems to be calling him to die , pass through the gate , and join her . John Miller explicates Robin- son's " The dark will end the dark " to mean that the dark of death will end the dark of the world ...
第 152 頁
... death , because the knowledge frees the memory and enables the spirit to become aware of " a thrilled invisible advance . " Ellsworth Barnard discusses this " octave " in connection with Robinson's thoughts on " whatever . . . survives ...
... death , because the knowledge frees the memory and enables the spirit to become aware of " a thrilled invisible advance . " Ellsworth Barnard discusses this " octave " in connection with Robinson's thoughts on " whatever . . . survives ...
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常見字詞
Amaranth Annandale Arthur asks Bartholow blank verse Boston brother called Camelot Captain Craig Cestre Chard Powers Smith Colby critics dark dead death Edith Brower Edwin Arlington Robinson Ellsworth Barnard Emery Neff Emma Robinson essay eyes fate father fear feels Forest Smith Franchere Fussell Gardiner Garth Gawaine Guinevere Harry de Forest Harvard Hebron Herman Robinson Hermann Hagedorn Isaac Isolt Jasper Josephine Preston Peabody King Lancelot Larry laugh Laura light lives Louis Coxe MacDowell Colony MacKaye Malory married Mary Matthias Merlin Modred Moody narrator Night Nightingale numbered Penn-Raven Perry poem poet poetry praise published Rachel rhymes Richard Cary Ridgely Torrence Robert Mezey Robin Robinson says Robinson wrote Rollo Roosevelt Ruth Nivison Selected Letters smile son's song Sonnet Sources stanzas Talifer tells tion Torrence Tristram Untriangulated Stars wife William William Vaughn Moody woman wonders words write York Yvor Winters Zoë Zorn