Throughout the text, Graubard's lapidary prose is lucid and provocative, likely to induce a glow of pleasure in the reader. |
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The society combines the scholarly study of local speech with the publication of prose and poetry in various forms of local dialect. |
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Some readers may fear that Mr. Blythe's prose is overly nostalgic and mannered. |
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The result is a mannered, literary prose rooted firmly in the Gothic and decadent traditions. |
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There are rich poetry and prose traditions in Gaelic, Scots, and Scots-inflected English. |
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His prose can rise to majestic, biblical heights and his cast of mind has a peculiarly North American sadness. |
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The appealing fragments are short and scrappy, the unappealing prose verbose and sometimes impenetrable. |
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The prose style is tight, with an occasional touch of humour lurking beneath the dense text. |
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With careful, economic and compelling prose they follow the virus from its first emergence to its containment. |
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His measured and dignified prose is cool, lucid, and enlivened by ironic wit. |
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There are prose poems in this work but it is the traditional stanzaed work that gives this volume its form. |
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It does this by creating an atmosphere that is closer to poetry than to traditional prose narrative. |
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Although both narrators are prone to purple passages, the texture of Singer's Gothic prose remains one of the novel's strengths. |
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When an article gets visits in the hundreds, I wonder what marvelous prose has excited so many readers. |
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Professionally he had many strings to his bow, being a writer of prose and poetry, editor and lecturer. |
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The prose is taut and beautifully crafted, the story is woven with the intricate expertise of a master craftsman. |
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The sparse, terse prose he employed was like a stiletto knife stabbing at the underbelly of post-war Britain. |
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Woronov's prose occupies bizarre territory, somewhere between twisted lyricism and hard-boiled pulp fiction. |
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In literature apocope is confined to poetry, but in the prose inscriptions of the dialects it is frequent. |
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Under the influence or not, Williams seems somehow unalive, unaware of how to make prose sing, or people breathe. |
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The show melds modern dance techniques and poetic prose narrative to illustrate her desperation. |
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As elucidated in unblushing prose in the room notes, it is taking Frank's art from the merely ambitious to the stratospherically inspired. |
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Internally focalised prose is a story told from the point of view of a particular character. |
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Matters aren't helped either by her desperately turgid prose style, which is likely to turn off all but the most conscientious of readers. |
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They eschew narrative, write in turgid, jargon-ridden prose and concentrate on micro-topics instead of the big picture. |
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I observed that his prose was turgid and his character pompous, which is correct on both counts. |
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While the payoff is barely worth the effort, I was forced to marvel at his storytelling verve and his inventive prose style. |
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Orwell, Evelyn Waugh and Belloc considered him unequalled as a writer of prose fiction. |
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In France Zola was the dominant practitioner of naturalism in prose fiction and the chief exponent of its doctrines. |
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By the early seventeenth century, however, prose fiction had evolved beyond the limits of the novella. |
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One of the reasons I stick to cartooning is because my traditional prose writing is so godforsakenly awful. |
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He plunges into each situation without preamble, then utilizes sinewy, staccato prose to snare our attention. |
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His prose can be scanned like poetry or, better, performed as a song or slam before a microphone. |
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She may write self-consciously from time to time, as do most debut novelists, but more often her prose has an individual, slangily poetic zip. |
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In fact, it's almost easy to not read beyond her almost lyrical prose that makes the most mundane of everyday routines fascinating. |
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I suggested the author's vivid prose was reminiscent of that to be found in this undisputable classic. |
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Smith's prose has lost none of its panache, though it has outgrown its swagger. |
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The author is no great prose stylist but the writing is competent and fluent. |
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He is remembered now as the most energetically inventive prose stylist of the 16th century. |
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While the poetry is cryptic, allusive and ambiguous, the prose is lucid, oracular, loftily self-assured. |
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They make for great advertising copy, and in that category I include the purple prose that we motoring journalists write about them. |
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He proved to be a most effective polemicist, whose prose style could sway opinion towards his favoured causes. |
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Woodward's prose combines those rare qualities of real emotional intelligence and heartfelt warmth with a devastating wit. |
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It is that kind of a statement, very purple prose and very wrong, inaccurate. |
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But throughout his life, Halsted's unbounded opinion of his own worth and his purple prose in expressing that opinion got him into hot water. |
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Metzger elicits good performances from his cast, considering the silly story and purple prose that passes for dialog. |
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From writer of purple prose to a firm believer in marriage, she has come a long way. |
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So instead of looking for him to spout forth with purple prose extolling his love for you, take a look at him from a different angle. |
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Unfortunately for him, people liked his very very purple prose more than they paid attention to his substance. |
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The mystery critic offers constructive suggestions for making Elena's purple prose even more enticing. |
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Yes, Will's prose is more orotund and the moral is more delicately unfurled. |
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Many teachers objected to its deadly dull emphasis on correctness and wanted students to write lively prose they cared about. |
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While the battle prose is excellent, the language describing noncombat scenes is sometimes tortured and overdrawn. |
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Although the prose is clear and readable it is also assertive, didactic and sometimes patronising. |
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In her first letter written in Huntsville, on Christmas Eve 1817, she described in florid prose her arrival that day. |
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There is a hole at the core of his personality, and his florid prose and arid intellectualism has, for too long, prevented us from admitting it. |
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By combining the arch floridness of Victorian prose with a present-tense, subtly ironic style, Gray has created a distinctive voice. |
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He has produced a comfortable read with flowing prose and bite-sized chapters. |
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His prose is fluid and witty, a cheerful tale that has the reader laughing out loud from beginning to end. |
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The prose is sometimes overwrought, and often obscure for those without some knowledge of opera. |
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For one thing, Barry's prose style, while occasionally overwrought, is brilliant. |
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There is no shortage of sophisticated thinking, but the prose that delivers it is vigorous, endlessly supple and engaging everyday English. |
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Most of us can't afford sub-editors or proof-readers to polish our prose and buff up our banter. |
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It was not the last time the high-flown menu prose promised one thing while the actual dish delivered another. |
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This is an object lesson in the perils of trying to improve prose style by legislative fiat. |
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The sensory overload of such prose inspires perplexity and gives little assurance on rereading. |
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Although the news did not force its way on to the Evening Press front page, the imperious prose inside captured the significance of the moment. |
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Cohen's prose is impressionistic, a layering of details rather than a structured argument. |
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Her prose is pared down to the bone, scarce on imagery and mostly journalistic. |
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The prose is of a rare stateliness and intelligence, studded with clever, sometimes almost epigrammatic mots. |
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What he describes in this tight, staccato prose is a story which bears more than a passing resemblance to The Dirty Dozen. |
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I do think that mental pathologies can be written, and I think that prose fiction is a particularly good way of doing it. |
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The only quibble I have with the grammar of that prose is the use of a hyphen followed by a semi-colon in the final sentence. |
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The author seems unsure whether he is writing a thriller or a satire and, with his clunky prose and rudimentary plot, ends up doing neither. |
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I was going to write about a couple of more films tonight, but I'm fading fast and my prose is getting a little sloppy and sentimental. |
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Sure, there's plenty to be said about Picasso and Ingres but a featherweight intellect like him can barely lift his prose above the absurd. |
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Her pedestrian, low-brow, unperceptive prose has struck a chord with the so-bad-it's-good brigade. |
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The prose in this book is well-written and easy to read, a blessing given how indigestibly ponderous most textbooks are. |
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Only connect the prose and the passion, and both will be exalted, and human love will be seen at its height. |
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In vibrant, unpunctuated prose purporting to be Ned's own words, Carey explores Australia's most enduring myth. |
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This paper will contain two seen and two unseen passages of classical Persian prose for translation into English. |
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Time and again, in prose unsparing and unsentimental, Liz has allowed readers a peek into her own mental health struggles. |
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Instead of passion for writing, a weariness that weighed down each word and distorted the prose into something unshapely. |
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Concealed inside its villanelles, ghazals, canzones, sonnets, and prose poems are that country's unheard voices. |
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Usually, as I walk, I get ideas for subjects, be they prose poems or poems with some pattern for enjambment. |
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His lifelong concern with the South also pervades most of his non-fiction prose works. |
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It could be fiction or non-fiction, horror or fantasy or prose or epic poetry. |
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There is plenty of prose to explain the ideas, as well as many exercises to test what the student has learned. |
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He helped Stein structure her richly cryptic prose into a stageable scenario. |
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Samaras commemorated the exhibition with a slim dove-gray box containing a prose poem, printed one word to the line on 27 unbound pages. |
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She organizes the first part of her mother's narrative into four prose passages, each shaped like a stanza in a poem. |
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Most of all, the book felt extremely overwritten and her abstract prose style was downright tiresome. |
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This willingness to see formally accomplished prose as a means to camouflage empty thought is disconcerting. |
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In his prose he becomes a powerful presence, a personality with obstinate opinions and sardonic asides. |
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The Messiah had been conceived as a prose epic, on the model of Fenelon's Telemaque, and the earliest cantos were drafted in lyrical prose. |
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These three canzoni were then embedded in a second prose work of Dante's, Il Convivio, which also frames and explicates his lyric verse. |
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The prose romances are tentative, immature, with the gawkishness and lack of ease of immaturity. |
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These include native law texts as well as heroic prose narratives and intricately crafted rhymed verse in hundreds of different meters. |
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They used to offer their supplications before these deities in rhymed prose and sought revelation. |
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The prose is strewn with biblical and poetic tags and pang full of rhetorical devices. |
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These phrases are linked in the continuous prose of a reasoned argument that moves through the phases of a formal Ciceronian oration. |
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Yet these pieces' mixture of lyricism, imagism, meditation and narrative are all hallmarks of the prose poem tradition. |
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Toulouse Lautrec was usually pie-eyed on absinthe, while Ernest Hemingway wrote much of his best prose plastered. |
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His journalistic skill is evident through his clear prose and comprehensible style. |
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And these were many, written in his much admired and inimitable prose style. |
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Readers will find here the same elegant, deceptively simple prose that garnered so much praise for her short stories. |
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In the prosody of the postmodern lyric sentence, the prose aspect is heightened as a continuer, the verse aspect lessened as a retarder. |
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Filipinos generally speak the way they write, in a formal style based on Victorian prose models. |
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Others have suggested that Anglo-American writers generally did not distinguish between free verse and prose poems. |
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Nothing exceptional here, or in the calm declarative prose in which the other stories are told. |
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He possesses that deft and delicate touch that can transform interesting prose into mesmerising poetry. |
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What good prose needs, and all too often lacks, is the syntactic dislocation, the rhythmical shifts that only these digressive devices can offer. |
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He tells his story in a beautifully crisp prose which is joyfully free of academic encumbrances. |
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Similarly to the text he attacks, his prose is full of classical allusions and occasionally attempts the euphuistic manner. |
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Their author has evolved into a prose sophisticate, and clearly learnt some important lessons along the way. |
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Having begun as a poet he turned to prose and resolved to follow Zola's naturalistic experiments. |
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The examination will consist of both seen and unseen passages of both prose and poetry. |
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Esch decided to return to his prior vocation as an adjunct professor of prose composition at Harvard. |
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The transgressive character of the prose poem emerges here as a natural expression of the Language poets' anti-establishment impulse. |
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The shape of the great tales, so often bastardised and bowdlerised, is lost without the fine-weave and fibre of the prose itself. |
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The latter comprises five unpunctuated prose poems, showing the same sharpness of observation that Stevenson himself was noted for. |
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There isn't much to be said for the prose style, but it is concise and doesn't piddle around. |
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I find Woodward's breathless you-are-there insider accounts written in his trademark leaden prose to be virtually unreadable. |
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It is through an unexpected blending of rhythm and syntax that his prose yields the remarkable or compelling image. |
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His attempt to define effective prose rhythm technically is one of the most curious and interesting parts of his preface. |
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Her father approved of his daughter's efforts and occasionally versified her prose translations. |
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Henry James is not a name that springs to mind when we think of adventure stories, prose epics or historical fiction. |
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It's hard enough to read that theatrical prose when my brain is functioning. |
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For the most part though, Gilman covers all her bases, writing in snappy, clever prose that keeps the pages turning. |
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Please compose a poem, limerick or any other rhyming prose of your choice. It must be at least 3 verses long and start with the words. |
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His plotting is unsurpassed, her characters entirely believable, and her prose the most readable in crime fiction. |
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However, his cold prose is an effective counterbalance to the unabashed mysticism usually associated with any current writing about Tibet. |
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Maybe I'll throw my literary pretensions out of the window for a while and try hurling a few oddly-shaped shards of prose in your direction. |
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We use art, poetry and prose so that visitors can feel and experience the beauty of nature. |
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His own prose expressed his criticism of the artificialities of 18th-century society. |
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His prose is artless and nowhere near as polished as Osborne's, but his book still tells a fascinating story. |
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There is in Machado's prose a playfulness that teases the reader, humor that mocks solemnity and seriousness. |
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Fort's colourful and amusing prose meanders through picturesque towns and sleepy villages where soporific suppers are served. |
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She is a substantial, auburn-haired woman of middle years whose vaticinal gifts extend from prose to painting. |
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Poetry and prose began to be written in the vernacular instead of Latin, and the invention of printing contributed to the spread of ideas. |
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I've been thinking of doing a play, mostly in prose with verse choruses, and have got bits of the story mapped out. |
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While the emphasis this year is on non-fiction, prose fans are not being neglected. |
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It is largely due to her polished prose that the books rise above the level of confessionals. |
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And the cool prose doesn't even hint at the warmth, at the feeling of flushed well-being the drink provides. |
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Coercive, manipulative attempts to recur to the symbolic end in dead formalism, like bad adolescent prose and most modern poetry. |
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As our readers will see, they expressed their opinions in a forthright manner, using a colorful prose not typically found in scientific papers. |
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As a writer of poetry I have more freedom to do this than as a writer of academic prose or criticism. |
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Just as free verse did away with meter and rhyme, the prose poem does away with the line as the unit of composition. |
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He credits this awesome landscape with inspiring many of the crystalline passages of prose that have illuminated his other books. |
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The prose style is fruitily whimsical in the extreme, but not without some intriguing sociological arguments. |
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It enlightens without preachment, and lets the dramatic or ironic prose merge seamlessly with the musical numbers. |
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But the niceties of narrative structure, pacing and simple declarative English prose aren't her strong point. |
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She combines confessional prose with cultural commentary, narrative with argument, plain declarative sentences with lovely lyrical passages. |
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The expectations raised by the prefatory dedications to this book are fully realised in both its felicitous prose and subtle readings. |
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It was aimed at the lowest common denominator, with almost slap-stick, stereotyped prose. |
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He is learned, astute, admirably sensible, and possesses an elegant and clear prose style. |
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They also gained wider audiences through public readings in both poetry and prose. |
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Though the prose is nicely formed and sometimes beautiful, the world created often veers more closely to romantic fantasy than literary realism. |
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However, there are a number of passages that shine with lucid, electrifying prose. |
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Being a gifted writer, with eight books already to his credit, he does so with lucidity and in eminently readable prose. |
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A master both of English prose and of the dialogue form, he is remarkable for his lucidity, grace, and dignity of expression. |
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But the worst offense is a tone of cheerful, sanitized neutrality so overwhelming that it actually renders the prose ahistorical. |
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Admittedly, the marshaling of characters and strands of plot over vast tracts of prose has never been the author's primary concern. |
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This is a beautifully laid out book, with the prose interspersed with short poems, quotations, poignant photographs, and practical checklists. |
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Her poetry and prose quickly earned for her recognition as one of India's most lyrical and intellectually prolific writers. |
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Despite these small details the beautiful prose blending modernist lyricism with fable, music and motion is highly evocative. |
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And if you've ever congratulated yourself on a well-turned phrase, a few pages of Riotta's prose will restore a pronounced sense of humility. |
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Politically, the idea is a potential disaster, which will take a lot of salesmanship and flowery prose to avert. |
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But all this striving for the mot juste only made it harder for me to write continuous prose. |
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I don't think I've seen prose this, well, prosaic since I was a teaching assistant grading papers at Columbia. |
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Now, I am certain that priestly charism transubstantiates my lame lay prose into inspired revelation, but do not my efforts smack of presumption! |
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Imagine someone writing a Dickensian novel, in nineteenth-century prose, about a latchkey kid on Ritalin. |
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Highly emotive, Kahlo was passionate in her prose, sealing the letter illustrated with lipstick kisses. |
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So either the usage has recrudesced or the verb vanished only from formal written prose, not from the spoken language. |
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Many poets seem threatened by the apparently easily appropriated and fungible modes of prose and prosaic rationality. |
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No more than we want our poems to be poetic do we want our prose to be prosaic. |
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As it is, the prose passages are prosaic and the rap doggerel is merely tedious. |
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It is believed that Tatar prose dates back to the twelfth century, but scholars disagree about its origin. |
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The subject matter of the novel, which is written in a taut, controlled, colloquial yet poetic prose, is highly autobiographical. |
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In all his writings the fruits of observation and reflection were exhibited in lucid prose. |
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It is this process of automatization that explains the laws of our prose speech with its fragmentary phrases and half-articulated words. |
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I chose prose narrative fiction as the crucial focus of comparison and confrontation among cultures of the world. |
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But Nabokov's beauty is to be found in his stunningly original poetic prose. |
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To say that a man cannot write clear prose is not necessarily to blame him. |
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Beautifully written in lyrical prose, it includes some wonderful turns of phrase. |
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The book is plagued by turgid prose, facile observations, and far-fetched inferences from limited evidence. |
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In order to obtain formal grace, prose writers had to lessen their ambitions. |
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So I think people who are trying to help students genuinely write better English prose are doing a noble service. |
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Chapter 8 is developed in prose that is remarkable for its oracular cadence, one that temporarily arrests the flow of the narrative. |
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A writing teacher of mine used the term furniture moving to refer to wasted prose. |
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I remember being particularly influenced by e. e. cummings, by Kenneth Patchen, and by a Baudelaire prose poem I translated. |
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Here, with this problem, the relatively new genre of the prose poem resurrects authorial intention as a key to reading. |
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From the point of view of adequacy, it makes no difference whether we have before us a prose poem or rhymed verse. |
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In so reading, I was able also to challenge and reinvent the possibilities of the prose poem for myself and for my students. |
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It's this rupture of the irrational, captured in the very term prose poem, that is the source of energy in the prose poem. |
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But if the letter began as an apology, it soon turns into a prose poem of personal and vocational despair. |
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It argues that the prose poem is a medium for the transgression of genre rules, for experiment and literary change. |
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Mansfield, born in turn-of-the-century New Zealand, was one of the first modern short story writers to fuse prose and poetry. |
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He believed that jazz was the essential American art form, and that no-one before him had seen the true potential of jazz prose or bop prosody. |
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Yet all told, its simplicities are gloriously redeemed by the novel's intricate take on sexuality, and its ecstatic and gilded prose. |
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The lines are laid out as prose, although there are a few attempts at verse format on the early pages, and sentences run on without a break. |
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Another, less-remarked problem, is that the extraordinary allusiveness of his prose is the product of a kind of education which no longer exists. |
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The magic ingredient, whether for poetry or prose, is that it should have something to say. |
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He tangles these loose story lines just tight enough to sustain tension through 500 pages of his trademark Scottish beat prose. |
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The author's use of lots of prose to explain key ideas, concepts and theories is laudable. |
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A word may be added concerning Lhamon's prose style, perhaps derived from his long immersion in minstrelsy. |
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The new performance space will resound with their poetry, prose and plays, as they share their writings with the audience. |
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The report deluged him with criticism, albeit worded in the silky prose of a veteran mandarin. |
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That's a method you normally associate with novelists and prose writers rather than comics. |
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Cavell's writing displays the rhetorical features that we've seen in novelists and prose writers alike as they perform their thoughts. |
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On the one hand it publishes original fiction and prose by authors in Tamil. |
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From the opening pages it is clear that Faber writes some of the most ravishingly beautiful prose of any young writer. |
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It is basically a long prose poem meant to be read aloud, and I could only take so much of that at one time. |
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Bunett's prose is often loaded with arty jargon and heavyweight expressions that are virtually incomprehensible. |
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In an absurdist prose poem he wrote at the time, renewal is associated with class-based oppression. |
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Both Fleming and Gall avoid the verb qualifiers that attach themselves to standard prose like barnacles to the hull of a ship. |
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The author's prose is clear and his image of Zimbabwe is accessible and understandable, if perhaps oversimplified. |
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Although Merlis' prose remains as fluid as quicksilver, the narrative thrust progressively dwindles as Joel's quixotic journey nears its end. |
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I like the form, enjoy its quirkiness and whimsy, and continue to read critically about it and write my own prose poems. |
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This mannered floridity of diction, accompanied by the persistent capitalization of abstract nouns, was to become a distinguishing and disfiguring feature of Bulwer's prose. |
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But there's another interesting quality of the prose poem apart from that surreal experience presented with the openness of a passive dream state. |
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Malraux's own prose could be oracular, gnomic and mannered, but it never, ever, sounded like a series of captions to a photo spread in Paris Match. |
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Their mantra was echoed in the glowing reports of the critics and guidebooks, all of which unanimously extolled the place's virtues in worryingly breathless prose. |
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The verse form with its metrical demands, while it aided memorization, led to greater obscurity of expression than prose composition would have entailed. |
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In the prose poem the poet can appropriate such unlikely models as the newspaper article, the memo, the list, the parable, the speech, the dialogue. |
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I have often thought that your best bet, if you need intelligent, lapidary prose in a hurry, is to ask a poet to do it, even, or rather particularly, if it's about politics. |
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At one time or another I also participated in extemporaneous speaking, poetry and prose reading, and in a particular lapse of sanity, number sense. |
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His largest work, De virginitate, dedicated to the nuns at Barking, is a twofold treatise in prose and verse, which became a stylistic model for subsequent Anglo-Latin works. |
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The novel's lyrical prose and descriptions are its strong points. |
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For want of a better adjective, the prose is very expository. |
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Faber's minor prose works were Elnovia, a light-hearted and eventually rather dated fantasy, and an account of the history of the All Souls bursarships, printed privately. |
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The prose is clear enough that a math dunce like me can grasp it, and the superhero examples are enough, I think, to interest even someone who already knows physics. |
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The seemingly endless onslaught of the narrator's prose stops mid-sentence and drops us unpunctuated into a cold stream of double-quoted closing dialogue. |
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These too were part of the literary air he naturally breathed, and into his prose he would frequently work some turn of phrase taken from classical Latin literature. |
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He tabulated the total number of lines of blank verse, rhymed verse, and prose in each play, along with short and long lines, and lines with redundant syllables. |
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Indeed, Olivier had a peculiar prose style, both camp and grandiose. |
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Sledge gives the common soldier his just due in eloquent prose that explores the emotions and trauma associated with a brutal war and its consequences. |
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Each piece of software is described in an abbreviated prose paragraph. |
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We judge our seriousness not only by the quality of our prose and lucidness of our arguments but by the caliber and seriousness of the enemies we choose to take on. |
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In fact, it's almost as if the situation of a love letter juices them up and gives them some of their best prose that they can then put into their fiction. |
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The reader with an eye for colourful detail and elegant prose, not to mention for racy scandal and rumour, will no doubt forgive the book's shortcomings. |
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Except for chapter 3, the prose is exceptionally lucid with little jargon. |
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The sly, literate prose filtered through wavering vocals still dwells in corners of life either too big or too small to express with such uncanny eloquence. |
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Thus the campy prose style and the author photo in trench coat and fedora. |
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Some modern editors have occasionally been known to spoil the nicely turned prose of an accomplished writer by adding clumsy or redundant phrases! |
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Furthermore, Crane's prose denies the consolations of sentimentalism, in which the less fortunate are cast as inferior objects of pity and condescension. |
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Phillips has cultivated a certain effeteness of prose style. |
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There is always a danger of such prose seeming like sermonizing. |
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Just such a window opens in Sense and Sensibility, when, taking her leave of Norland, Marianne recites a chorographic prose poem in honor of the place. |
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That's why in rehearsals he often decodes classical mime to prosaic prose. |
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Defoe wrote stories such as Moll Flanders, Colonel Jack and Roxana when prose fiction was regarded as a low form not worthy to be classed as literature. |
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Of course, calling Descartes the first nerd grossly ignores his personal refinement, elegant prose style, sly wit, even his surprising career as a soldier of fortune. |
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I was reading WIRED for the first time in ages the other day, and found myself getting annoyed all over again at the breathless prose they use in their articles. |
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Older prose fictions often have titles which straggle, unthriftily, by mentioning so many unknowns that we forget all of them as we plod down their title-pages. |
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In each of these enterprises, she brought to bear her characteristic rigor and discernment, as well as the pellucid prose style for which she was justly celebrated. |
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The author's prose throughout the work is little short of flawless. |
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The necessity for clarity of meaning for his listening public imposed a new discipline on both his poetry and prose pieces and this improved his work, exposing obscurities. |
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It will be noted approvingly that the prose poem blurs boundaries. |
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Some of the prose seems, dare I say it, listless, almost bored. |
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As twenty measures of gin to one measure of dry vermouth make an acceptable Martini, so one unit of poetry converts twenty of prose into a prose poem. |
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His prose crackles with life, with mischief and also with indignation. |
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Godfrey's ascetic prose will hold little interest for logophiles, but the slapdash feel of the writing is a compelling evocation of the teenage mind. |
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O'Brien's stodgy, arrhythmic prose never brings its subject to life. |
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His larger thematic preoccupations are balanced by seductively beautiful prose and, particularly, a way with drawing nuanced and poignantly flawed characters. |
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All these things cohere because of the surrealism and typical Spanish violence of the juxtapositions, the balance between flat prose and highly florid colouration. |
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For the fiction writer, the prose poem may be exhilarating because it allows an escape from the exigencies of the novel, novella, and short story. |
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As for the new and currently practising writers of Edwardian times, those of the first decade of the century were distinguished for their prose rather than their prosody. |
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A punctilious listing of every detail produces prose that is prolix. |
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So the poem is as particular as the prose in a different way, so that what the prose supplies in these joint structures is always additional and not substitutive. |
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His prose was crisp and waspish, but balanced and well informed, and he was able to deliver an authoritative opinion on a wide range of musical events. |
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This 95-year cycle is described in the earliest Vedic prose books. |
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Americans may sometimes find the prose a bit daunting, the occasional Anglicism, misplaced modifier, and passive voice requiring a thorough rereading. |
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His prose narratives, too, were bestsellers till the 18th century. |
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All of this work furthered my composition of new prose poems. |
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The satirist may use different forms of literature in prose or verse. |
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His prose has spawned many imitators, but few, if any, equals. |
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For each Sunday, principal feasts, and some holy days, Pryce chose a short poem or prose selection that shares a theme with readings assigned to that day. |
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He points to the clear, simple prose of Ernest Hemingway and Samuel Beckett as examples of brilliant writing that is not bewildering for its complexity. |
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English pastoral was inaugurated by Spenser's verse eclogues in The Shepheardes Calendar and further developed in The Arcadia, a prose romance by Sidney. |
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How much more fun law school would be if the prose were crystalline! |
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He cared deeply about Greek and Latin history and mythology and possessed a comprehensive knowledge of the prose, poetry and prosody of the eighteenth century. |
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But, like Mozart's music, Ozick's prose flirts with frippery. |
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In the period before political independence, Francophone prose was typically elevated, extravagant, mythopoeic, and laced with surreal fantasy or utopian symbolism. |
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Another selection we need is, I think, a volume of her work which includes generous extracts from both her three books of prose and her voluminous correspondence. |
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Moraes is not only indisputably the greatest living Indian poet working in English, he is also probably the finest prose stylist writing anywhere in the subcontinent. |
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It is as a prose stylist that Makine is frequently praised in France. |
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The prose poem is a hybrid form, an anomaly if not a paradox or oxymoron. |
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There's really no other way to account sympathetically for the publication of this outrageous, absurd literary wreck by one of our time's most remarkable prose stylists. |
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Although Stein's arguments are nuanced and complex, the liveliness of his transparent and often evocative prose makes the book accessible to the non-specialist reader as well. |
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The prose is lean and unembellished, and the story flows easily out of it. |
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Kepesh's harried confessional provides the narrative drive for the novel and draws attention to Roth's ability to seamlessly and unforcedly conjoin prose and plotline. |
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Not only does the work fall prey to purple prose and bad prose poetry on more than a few occasions, there are other moments when the work is just too mannered. |
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We'll never know but we shouldn't knock the modern day heroes just because they don't have countless pages of purple prose devoted to them just yet. |
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Dawson's prose is as sharp as always, and the interaction between the main character and his pupils is expressed precisely through dynamic dialogue. |
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Strive for lively prose, leaning on strong verbs and sharp nouns. |
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This morning I read it, and it is a lump of leaden prose, ungainly and unattractive, like a plain fat spotty teenager at her prom, dressed like a Christmas cake. |
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The continuum of this work runs between prose, prose poetry and poetry. |
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We haven't employed a literary style expert to analyse the prose in both these crits but there does seem to be similarities beyond a dislike of the book. |
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He was much attracted by the Hellenism of the Renaissance, and both his prose and poetry are coloured by his concept of platonic love and his admiration for male beauty. |
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So true was he to his own little light that many dismissed him as a crank and made little effort to penetrate his prose or make sense of his ideas. |
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