「POEM」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)6ページ目
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"There is not a really bad | poem in the book,” literary critic Desmond Pacey sai |
It is a rhetorical and didactic | poem in the taste of his time, and owed much to the |
‘The Nightingale,' a | poem in stanzas of sixteen lines, has a dedication t |
seudonymous translations of a single Baudelaire | poem, in a competition for the Sunday Times, run by |
epresents The Awntyrs off Arthure, an Arthurian | poem in a rhymed alliterative stanza similar to Swet |
e was awarded a government honor for the latter | poem in 1941. |
The | poem In Flanders Fields, by John McCrae, continues t |
here by his calligraphic reproduction of a Tang | poem, in praise of chrysanthemums. |
his with a laurel crown and a silver dish for a | poem in honour of the new town hall. |
The preface to this | poem in the original manuscript had: ”Written on the |
asidah is four types, 1. Hamd (Hymn) 2. Naat (A | poem in praise of Prophet Muhammad 3. Manqabat (A po |
edding of Amor and Psyche) and in Vespa's short | poem in the Anthologia Latina about the litigation b |
Reger wrote his first setting of the | poem in 1912 in Meiningen, where he worked since 191 |
Elgar set the | poem in 1917, with the title "Fate's Discourtesy", a |
"O Fortuna", the first | poem in the Schmeller edition, completes this circle |
rom which he was expelled in 1830 for writing a | poem in praise of the July Revolution in France. |
n the Rhysling Award three times: for Best Long | Poem in 1994, and for Best Short Poem in 1980 and 19 |
Moss published another noted | poem in 1783, titled The Imperfection of Human Enjoy |
e occasion Tennyson wrote as an epilogue to his | poem In Memoriam (1850), an epithalamium (nuptial po |
The Wandering Jew, A | Poem in 4 Cantos by Percy Bysshe Shelley. |
Alternate names for the | poem include the Poem of the Righteous Sufferer or t |
Key differences adduced by Hahn from the longer | poem include rapid pacing, more explicit character m |
The | poem included a reference to Machiavelli's dictum th |
etry from an early age: by the age 20, he had a | poem included in an imperial anthology (the Fugashu |
The | poem includes a simile comparing a warrior to King A |
The names of the people in the | poem, including Beatrice herself, are employed witho |
To the historian, the exul's | poem indicates the high value ascribed to generosity |
In Dante's Divine Comedy | poem Inferno, Dante says that he saw Giovanni in the |
A | poem inscribed to Queen Christina of Sweden, a liter |
ne's from Seinfeld were a good thing, the prose | poem insists upon its significance by becoming the i |
Turner (1961) was a tone | poem inspired by the English painter William Turner. |
character of David Brent reads extracts of the | poem interjected with derisive comments such as "You |
aming devices, were composed to set the central | poem into a prose "folk-book", as the compilers of t |
He was the author of The Sabine Farm, a | poem: into which is interwoven a series of translati |
The | poem invokes Mirth and other allegorical figures of |
The central | poem is from another source. |
Only the first half of the epic | poem is adapted, leaving out the narratives of the e |
The | poem is preserved only in the Exeter Book, one of th |
Einion's sole surviving | poem is a eulogy to prince Llywelyn ap Iorwerth (Lly |
The | poem is calm and has a docile nature to it, but the |
Since the | poem is in public domain it should be listed in full |
The theme of the | poem is the struggle of two poor working class lover |
5) and Bannatyne (1568) manuscripts, though the | poem is thought to be 50-70 years older than the ear |
Saxon poet wrote much later in the century, his | poem is generally based on trustworthy sources like |
The | poem is thoroughly Christian in ethos. |
Each | poem is an instant in a developing relationship, and |
The text of the | poem is preserved in the Asloan (c. |
This | poem is best known as part of the Yom Kippur mussaf |
Belinda, the heroine of Pope's | poem, is attended by a small army of sylphs, who fos |
This | poem is considered to be one of the great works of S |
The | poem is well-preserved and coherent. |
Perhaps his best-known | poem is "Grass". |
Aside from his hymns, Rankin's best known | poem is "The Babie," in broguish style of Robert Bur |
The | poem is notable for its interesting portrayal of a h |
The | poem is a dramatic representation of Cromwell addres |
The manuscript on which the | poem is found, (Sloane 2593, ff.10v-11), is held by |
The | poem is a lively debate between two unnamed men-a yo |
st stanza to any national cemetery in which the | poem is missing. |
The rest of the | poem is a ferocious attack on the morals of the baro |
d major book published in Albanian and that the | poem is the first form of poetry in Albanian found y |
The | poem is concerned with the Second Coming of Christ ( |
The | poem is part of the Empfindsamkeit movement of the 1 |
His most famous | poem is "Come whoam to thi childer an' me", 1856. |
e - a definite time, place, season in which the | poem is set - and background elements characteristic |
This particular | poem is without doubt verse-mode, not prose-mode. |
The | poem is also very popular among the liberals in Bang |
The | poem is influenced by the ballads of Rudyard Kipling |
His most renowned | poem is "Old Ironsides". |
Barbour's style in the | poem is vigorous, his line generally fluid and quick |
Perhaps his most famous | poem is The Lament for the South, which James Highto |
The | poem is in the Scots language. |
The | poem is an imaginary conversation between Iqbal and |
"Ode To Venus Callipgye" - This | poem is a praise to Venus. |
"Sonnet to the Virgin Mary" - This | poem is a praise to the Virgin Mary. |
The | poem is written in hexameters with Leonine internal |
The | poem is in two sections: the first is a praise of cr |
This | poem is a first-person, mystical narrative of the so |
The | poem is significant for its early mention of King Ar |
The | poem is an argument between Alithia (truth) and Pseu |
The | poem is based, not directly on the New Testament, bu |
hough composed more than two centuries ago, the | poem is still one of the most popular poems of Malay |
Adams Bellows says in his commentaries that the | poem is a masterpiece with an "extraordinary degree |
This | poem is the main authority for John Claymond's life. |
Although the | poem is Christian in content, and the use of rhyme r |
The | poem is located in a codex of Old English biblical p |
The | poem is still popular and learned in German schools. |
Rhythmically, the | poem is an imitation of Venantius Fortunatus' Pange, |
obscene and crude, it cannot be denied that the | poem is a very courageous attempt to go against the |
Angelbert's | poem is preserved in manuscript BnF lat. |
The | poem is devoted to the struggle against evil and for |
The | poem is especially notable for its striking and enig |
The nine-minute symphonic | poem is based on the ancient legend which tells how |
miracles: a first book of poetry in which every | poem is a gem" by the Newsletter of the Association |
The original authorship of the | poem is disputed, with dozens of people claiming to |
The | poem is from "Songs of Childhood and other Verses" b |
Only the beginning of the | poem is extant. |
The | poem is about the shieldmaiden Hervor and her visiti |
Ranabai's | poem is traditionally called a pada, a term used by |
His most famous | poem is De bello Troiano ("On the Trojan War") in si |
The | poem is also printed inside the CD release of "Fluor |
Among the episodes described in Williams' | poem is the 1827 leap over the falls by Sam Patch, w |
ew-fangled Gentlewomen (1595), a coarse satiric | poem, is also ascribed to Gosson. |
killer's point of view, but the purpose of the | poem is not to tackle the challenge of 'building a s |
The | poem is set in Holbeck Cememtery on Town Street. |
The text of the | poem is given below in Japanese, as a transliteratio |
This short metaphorical | poem is composed in mathnawi form. |
a that Judas intended to betray Christ, and the | poem is a defence of Judas, in which the entire stor |
The | poem is one of Lovelace's best known works, and its |
ous claims and suggests that the source of this | poem is the opening paragraph of Charles Haddon Spur |
elling, though its relationship to the medieval | poem is uncertain. |
His best-known | poem is entitled simply Ragazzo ("Boy"). |
The | poem is concerned with the loves and woes of Celia, |
The | poem is also a comment on Owen's rejection of his re |
The | poem is preserved in manuscripts of Egils saga. |
The Double: A Petersburg | Poem is a novella written by Fyodor Dostoevsky. |
Orplid in the | poem is a faraway fantasy land. |
Cultural critics have argued that the | poem is best read as an expression of tensions betwe |
The | poem is preserved in two manuscripts along with a va |
The | poem is preserved in its entirety and is widely cons |
ving fragment is dated to 1519-1525, though the | poem is probably older. |
The | poem is evidently intended to display the writer's k |
The | poem is characterized by the National Romanticism of |
The | poem is deeply allegorical and allusive: many promin |
w from Geoffrey Hartman, who wrote, "That every | poem is like to every other is not a fault, at least |
nsisting of about 7000 lines of Old French, the | poem is the earliest known Arthurian romance in any |
That is not to say that the | poem is in any way or form white or black; Solzhenit |
wever, is contradicted by other sources and the | poem is usually given to Marcabru. |
The theme of the | poem is consistent with Ginsberg's revelation in his |
It has also been suggested that the | poem is dependent on Liber historiae Francorum (727) |
The | poem is a meditation on the Catholic belief in Jesus |
The | poem is of quiet grief and thanksgiving in remembran |
However the key message of the | poem is revealed in the final two stanzas criticizin |
The speaker of the | poem is in agitation and speaks to the reader direct |
The | poem is well preserved and thought to be a relativel |
and Mancroff's The Arthurian Handbook says the | poem is "overshadowed" by Gottfried's masterful vers |
The | poem is found on folios 94r-95v, in the third bookle |
The | poem is similar to the earlier Ynglingatal. |
The | poem is written from the point of view of a soldier |
-5) - Often seen as Machaut's masterpiece, this | poem is an early example of meta-fiction and tells o |
l in Edinburgh recovering from shell shock, the | poem is a lament for young soldiers whose lives were |
His favorite | poem is “The Hollow Men” (by T. S. Eliot). |
Her best known | poem is Booba Memukenet (English: Clockwork Doll). |
This | poem is an example of the carpe diem genre; the popu |
The | poem is memorized and recited in congregations. |
The | poem is reproduced in full on the liner of the DVD r |
The | poem is typified by its fluctuating observations, an |
The | poem is a ruthless self-examination of a middle clas |
The | poem is written in symmetric octosyllables combined |
gations (mainly Eastern European ones) that the | poem is read after the kohen has been called to the |
The baby mentioned in the | poem is still living today in Hiroshima, named Kazuk |
An alternate English name for the | poem is We Shall Bring Forth New Life. |
The | poem is narrative. |
Pons second | poem is Si ai perdut mon saber. |
The | poem is still under copyright in some countries. |
The Last Laugh ( | poem) is a poem by Wilfred Owen. |
The | poem is a masterpiece of onomatopoeia, employing som |
The | poem is about a Queensland drover and a sheep sheare |
Spring Offensive ( | poem) is a poem by Wilfred Owen. |
Another anthologised | poem is Chard Whitlow, a clever satire of T. S. Elio |
The | poem is preserved in four different manuscripts, one |
His narrator in this | poem is a witness to historical change who seeks to |
Asleep ( | poem) is a poem by Wilfred Owen. |
of the manuscript terminates and the end of the | poem is lost. |
1914 ( | poem) is a poem by Wilfred Owen. |
Training ( | poem) is a poem by Wilfred Owen. |
Jenkins' setting of the 20-verse | poem is actually one of the longest of hundreds of e |
The | poem is noted for its rhyme scheme: "several unrhyme |
The | poem is believed to have been written by Rav Yehudah |
The | poem is a commentary on the impossibility of a poem |
This | poem is called the "House Song," and is well made. |
The entire | poem is 4,923 lines long, each book being about 500 |
The | poem is archetypal of Lenau's style and culminates w |
This | poem is entitled "The Beggar" (sometimes called "The |
of the prevalence of Christian morality in the | poem is that even Mordred cries and seems to be repe |
The | poem is entitled "Deep Second" and can be found in t |
e parents are dwelt on at great length, and the | poem is enormously popular especially among Swahili |
Arnold to consider whether the acceptance this | poem is sure to win, does not prove to him that it i |
tna's language in the narrative portions of the | poem is fast moving and direct, but it is far more o |
Reed's most famous | poem is Lessons of the War, a witty parody of Britis |
The | poem is read by Potter himself at the end of the BBC |
Her famous | poem is “Ninne Njan Snehikkunnu.” |
The | poem is in trochaic tetrameter, "in imitation of, an |
tical treatise Tolkappiyam, if the subject of a | poem is an identifiable person, then the poem ceases |
s of those lines, it can be determined that the | poem is told in first person, that the speaker refer |
The messenger in the | poem is, therefore, a carrier pigeon. |
Written by the teacher Abel Meeropol as a | poem, it condemned American racism, particularly the |
of the divided community as is captured in his | poem It was Sammy Mc Nally what done it about an Ora |
"Composed as a | poem, it's a hybrid of several film stocks and video |
INCLUDE THE WHOLE | POEM!!! It's on GenealogyBank.com, copied exactly fr |
h valuable appendices on the composition of the | poem, its relation to the Iliad and the cyclic poets |
This dramatic | poem, its author's masterpiece, turns upon the volun |
The | poem itself is 1,728 stanzas long). |
The | poem itself was of a modest literary achievement, bu |
The | poem itself is in three parts with a short introduct |
The tone | poem itself provides a profound, yet cryptic, glimps |
his period (such as Phantom, for instance), the | poem itself is clearly a pro-war one. |
By claiming the opposite of the | poem's subject is the poem itself, he argues the poe |
The Modern Hebrew | Poem Itself, 2003, ISBN 0-8143-2485-1 |
about to hear," followed by an excerpt from the | poem Jabberwocky. |
tures known as 'borogoves' in the Lewis Carroll | poem, Jabberwocky. |
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