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Word: poem (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

This attempt to write a poem, rather than weave a brilliant picture, sets the structure of the book. He notes...

Author: By Bob Ely, | Title: Liberation of Charlie Harbutt | 2/12/1975 | See Source »

...those who don't write as they talk, including, of course, Connolly). His lifetime hobby was drawing up lists of those who made literature what it is today, culminating in that half book, half catalogue, The Modern Movement. Connolly loved the sweeping judgment: "The greatest single poem of the first half of the twentieth century . . ." turns out to be the Four Quartets. "If there is one key book of the twentieth century . . ."-a clause which, with Connolly, can lead only to Proust. But despite all those reviews in the Observer and then the Sunday Times of London...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Last Bookman | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

FELLINI'S BENEFICENT world has no visible social underpinnings. In one scene, some bricklayers building a house pause as one of the workers steps forward to recite a short "poem." "My grandfather laid bricks all his life," he says. "My father did the same. I have laid bricks all my life. But where is my house?" The question doesn't need to be answered; the worker is one of Fellini's eccentrics, tolerated in a good-natured way but not respected. Aurelio's wife locks him inside the house on the day II Duce comes to speak...

Author: By Paul K. Rowe, | Title: Fellini's Beatific Vision | 1/7/1975 | See Source »

...late, Ammons has indulged in several very long poems. They are per- haps verse rather than poetry (verse being what good poets write when they are waiting for a poem to strike). But at least it is verse of a high caliber...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Whole Look of Heaven | 12/30/1974 | See Source »

Dagger Thrust. Each age must measure its knowledge of war, its concept of force against the Iliad, and that is one reason the poem has been translated and retranslated, from Alexander Pope's resounding version in 1720 to Richmond Lattimore's literal yet poetic rendering of 1951. In Pope, for instance, dactylic hexameters were given their royally cadenced English equivalent to which Homeric heroes stepped rather like late-Renaissance princes. Robert Fitzgerald, Harvard's Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory and a poet (Spring Shade, 1971) in his own right, has cut back on the pomp without...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: War and Peace | 12/23/1974 | See Source »

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