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Word: poeticizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...whom also buy the philosophy of Max Lawrence, a Los Angeles furniture-company executive. "If man is committed to preserving his natural environment," says Lawrence, "furniture through chemistry is one of the ways he can avoid further decimation of forests. Beyond that, the furniture of chemistry, by offering fluid, poetic forms, can help to humanize the indoor environment of the future. We have passed the aesthetic of square hard-edged furniture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: The Furniture of Chemistry | 10/25/1971 | See Source »

...seventy-one, his poetic voice is strong and his speaking voice mellow, as if he just sipped a special elixir--tea and honey, perhaps. Sitting in Robert Fitzgerald's office before his afternoon reading at Boylston auditorium. Tate looks every bit the Southern gentleman--debonair, impeccably dressed, a hint of Basil Ransom, years after The Bostonians, but with the high forehead and thin, tapered fingers reserved for artists and poets...

Author: By Elizabeth R. Fishel, | Title: Afternoon with Allen Tate | 10/19/1971 | See Source »

Nevertheless, the nucleus of the group's members (John Ransom, Donald Davidson, "Red" Warren, and Tate) not only improved on their initial, poetic promise, but by 1930 had sketched a credo for the South, with the anthology I'll Take My Stand, urging agrarianism over industrialism and warning the South against becoming a replica of the North. "The culture of the soil," wrote Ransom, "is the best and most sensitive of vocations...

Author: By Elizabeth R. Fishel, | Title: Afternoon with Allen Tate | 10/19/1971 | See Source »

...Poetic models continued to figure in Tate's development for some time. "I didn't read any of T.S. Eliot till 1920," he explains, "though I'd read some of Pound. When I read Eliot, I couldn't write anything for a long time. Critics have pointed out that I'd written Eliotic poems before I read Eliot. That often happens in a certain period; people begin to do the same thing independently. But Eliot was so much more mature, you see, and I was just a boy. He rather overwhelmed me. So for awhile, I had to avoid that...

Author: By Elizabeth R. Fishel, | Title: Afternoon with Allen Tate | 10/19/1971 | See Source »

...work that includes the novel, them, winner of the National Book Award for 1969. Blind cruelty, hypersensitivity and bizarre compulsions are particularly graphic in her new book. Medical students turn flamethrowers on laboratory monkeys in the name of science. Young geniuses are made to perform like sideshow freaks. A poetic intern confesses to having broiled and eaten a human uterus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Wilder Oates | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

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