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Word: poeticizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Simpson showed slides to illustrate the "poetic pragmatism" he uses "to deal with environmental issues...

Author: By Todd F. Braunstein, | Title: Art Reflects Nature | 10/21/1993 | See Source »

...Palace of Dreams, Ismail Kadare's most recent work to be published in English, exemplifies these thoughtful, sometimes poetic, intellectual allegories for a life in a totalitarian state. Despite the occasional awkward or forced speculation on the alienation and mayhem caused by cruel, inept bureaucracy, the novel generally succeeds in creating an interesting and often engrossing tale...

Author: By Ann M. Mikkelsen, | Title: Broken Dreams in the Balkans | 10/21/1993 | See Source »

Their life together meets a fateful disruption when they arrive in Rome and join up with a tent circus group at the edge of town. Here Gelsomina meets "The Fool" (Richard Basehart), player of the world's smallest violin. The Fool has a gentle poetic nature, and falls for Gelsomina immediately. She is so shocked that someone is being kind to her that she walks into the doorpost. But The Fool and Zampano have an old rivalry that will not die. Gelsomina blindly loves Zampano. However, she also loves The Fool. How this triangle finally resolves itself and what happens...

Author: By Irit Kleiman, | Title: Fine Fellini Flick | 10/21/1993 | See Source »

...willing to live with it and work it out on your own," she says. "A good poem is like a bouillon cube. It's concentrated, you carry it around with you, and it nourishes you when you need it." With Dove as poet laureate, Americans will get plenty of poetic sustenance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rooms of Their Own | 10/18/1993 | See Source »

This striking change in the social cast of O'Hara's life is most clearly gauged by the change in his literary tone; the small town G.I., who once wrote naive letters home suddenly began to use a cosmopolitan, often arch and usually hilarious poetic voice. At Harvard O'Hara developed his unique style, incorporating the traces of French Surrealism, American popular culture and chatty injoking that would characterize the New York poets. Disappointingly, Gooch records this artistic blossoming and social awakening without venturing much explanation for it; his careful recounting of events does little on its own to bridge...

Author: By David S. Kurnick, | Title: Parties and Poetry | 9/30/1993 | See Source »

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