Amy Lowell eBooks

eBooks di Amy Lowell editi da Ionlineshopping Com di Formato Mobipocket

EBOOK   9788832543513

Sword Blades and Poppy Seed. E-book. Formato Mobipocket Amy Lowell   -  Ionlineshopping.Com, 2019  - 

There are some really beautiful verses in here, and its definitely a book of poetry that you can just sit down and read. The imagery was perfect (which it should be, given she touted herself as an imagist) you could feel the blood gushing hot over your fingers in the murder poems or the warmth of the sun beating down on your face. She really mastered bringing the audience in to her world.  

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EBOOK   9788832528404

Men, Women and Ghosts. E-book. Formato Mobipocket Amy Lowell   -  Ionlineshopping.Com, 2019  - 

Part of the Imagist School, poet Amy Lowell, won a Pulitzer Price for her poetry in 1926. This is neither a book of poetry nor a book of stories. It falls delightfully somewhere in between. Narrative poems might best describe these tales. There are also lyrics in which air. Clouds, trees etc. could be describes as the main characters. The imagist school was founded by Ezra Pound but later defined by Lowell. Simple speech is favoured over lyricism, freedom of rhythm over the metrical, clarity over opacity. The fancy term for prose where anything goes sounds good, but is it?  

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EBOOK   9788829599431

A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass. E-book. Formato Mobipocket Amy Lowell   -  Ionlineshopping.Com, 2018  - 

"A Dome of Many" from Amy Lowell. American poet of the imagist school (1874-1925). Amy Lawrence Lowell (February 9, 1874 - May 12, 1925) was an American poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts, who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926. Although Amy Lowell did not look like the stereotypical poet---she was of ample build and enjoyed smoking large black cigars in public---she did write verse that was revolutionary in its time. When "Sword Blades" and "Poppy Seed" (1914) were published, she emerged as the leader of the new poetry movement called the imagist school, and so thoroughly was she identified with this new precise and delicate style that Ezra Pound jokingly proposed to retitle it "Amygism." Two of her poems, "Patterns" (1915) and "A Lady" (1914) are frequently anthologized, both demonstrating her vivid depiction of color, agility with sharp images, and precise use of words. Lowell came from a well-known and established Boston family that included James Russell Lowell as one of her predecessors and was later to produce another well-known poet in the person of Robert Lowell. Louis Untermeyer said of Amy Lowell in his introduction to "The Complete Poetical Works" (1955), that "her final place in the history of American literature has not been determined, but the importance of her influence remains unquestioned. Underneath her preoccupation with the need for novelty...she was a dynamic force." Her posthumous volume, "What's O'Clock" (1925), was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1926.

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