Love Lyrics (Odyssey Library #24) [static PDF]
- Type:
- Other > E-books
- Files:
- 2
- Size:
- 13.14 MB
- Texted language(s):
- English
- Tag(s):
- odyssey library untermeyer frasconi english poetry love lyric love woodcut art lithograph
- Uploaded:
- Sep 5, 2013
- By:
- Greencuppa
The Odyssey Library - Love Lyrics Author/Editor: Louis Untermeyer Illustrator: Antonio Frasconi Year: 1965 Series: Odyssey Library (#24) Publisher: Western Publishing / Odyssey Press LOC Cat#: 65-23284  A smallish hardcover booklet of The Odyssey Library series intended as an overview of the English love lyric, by presenting a selection of such works by famous poets, all custom set to graphical artwork.    Poets through centuries have sung about love endlessly and deathlessly, but in form nowhere more memorably than in the lyric. Unlike the sonnet (the subject of Odyssey Library #06), the lyric has no definite shape, no restricted size or measure. As its name suggests, it was once sung to the accompaniment of a lyre, (and later) a lute or harp.    Whatever the medium employed, the lyric was always a spontaneous (and usually brief) outburst of song. The love lyric is a confession, a passionate declaration, a cry from the heart. Yet inspite of its brevity, the power of the love lyric is inexhaustible. For as much as love is indefinable the love lyric is immeasurable.    This book limits itself to a few of the countless such treasures from English-speaking poets. Yet within this limitation there is a remarkably diverse revelation of man's prevalent and sustaining passion, a passion which is both tender and self-torturing, timidly sensitive and outspokenly sensual. Here, in these few pages, the gamut includes* the persuasiveness of Shakespeare, the simple directness of Burns, the magic vision of Blake, and the repressed longing of Dickinson.     *Full list of authors of selected poetry set to Frasconi's art: Beddoes, Blake, Browning, Burns, Byron, Dickinson, Gordon, Henley, Housman, Jonson, Rossetti (Christina & Dante), Shakespeare, Shelley, Stevenson, Tennyson, Untermeyer.   ----- Scan (LXK X4650, color, 300dpi), static conversion (non-OCR), and bookmarking done by Greencuppa.     ========== Please be advised that I have a very slow connection (c.30-60kB up), as well as sporadically connectable state... so things might take awhile to grab from me. ~
Very sorry about the crazily formatted description section; an invisible character, that works as a linebreak on another torrenting site, is quite visible here at TPB.
Here's the description portion without the crazy....
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A smallish hardcover booklet of The Odyssey Library series intended as an overview of the English love lyric, by presenting a selection of such works by famous poets, all custom set to graphical artwork.
Poets through centuries have sung about love endlessly and deathlessly, but in form nowhere more memorably than in the lyric. Unlike the sonnet (the subject of Odyssey Library #06), the lyric has no definite shape, no restricted size or measure. As its name suggests, it was once sung to the accompaniment of a lyre, (and later) a lute or harp.
Whatever the medium employed, the lyric was always a spontaneous (and usually brief) outburst of song. The love lyric is a confession, a passionate declaration, a cry from the heart. Yet inspite of its brevity, the power of the love lyric is inexhaustible. For as much as love is indefinable the love lyric is immeasurable.
This book limits itself to a few of the countless such treasures from English-speaking poets. Yet within this limitation there is a remarkably diverse revelation of man's prevalent and sustaining passion, a passion which is both tender and self-torturing, timidly sensitive and outspokenly sensual.
Here, in these few pages, the gamut includes* the persuasiveness of Shakespeare, the simple directness of Burns, the magic vision of Blake, and the repressed longing of Dickinson.
*Full list of authors of selected poetry set to Frasconi's art: Beddoes, Blake, Browning, Burns, Byron, Dickinson, Gordon, Henley, Housman, Jonson, Rossetti (Christina & Dante), Shakespeare, Shelley, Stevenson, Tennyson, Untermeyer.
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Scan (LXK X4650, color, 300dpi), static conversion (non-OCR), and bookmarking done by Greencuppa.
Here's the description portion without the crazy....
---
A smallish hardcover booklet of The Odyssey Library series intended as an overview of the English love lyric, by presenting a selection of such works by famous poets, all custom set to graphical artwork.
Poets through centuries have sung about love endlessly and deathlessly, but in form nowhere more memorably than in the lyric. Unlike the sonnet (the subject of Odyssey Library #06), the lyric has no definite shape, no restricted size or measure. As its name suggests, it was once sung to the accompaniment of a lyre, (and later) a lute or harp.
Whatever the medium employed, the lyric was always a spontaneous (and usually brief) outburst of song. The love lyric is a confession, a passionate declaration, a cry from the heart. Yet inspite of its brevity, the power of the love lyric is inexhaustible. For as much as love is indefinable the love lyric is immeasurable.
This book limits itself to a few of the countless such treasures from English-speaking poets. Yet within this limitation there is a remarkably diverse revelation of man's prevalent and sustaining passion, a passion which is both tender and self-torturing, timidly sensitive and outspokenly sensual.
Here, in these few pages, the gamut includes* the persuasiveness of Shakespeare, the simple directness of Burns, the magic vision of Blake, and the repressed longing of Dickinson.
*Full list of authors of selected poetry set to Frasconi's art: Beddoes, Blake, Browning, Burns, Byron, Dickinson, Gordon, Henley, Housman, Jonson, Rossetti (Christina & Dante), Shakespeare, Shelley, Stevenson, Tennyson, Untermeyer.
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Scan (LXK X4650, color, 300dpi), static conversion (non-OCR), and bookmarking done by Greencuppa.
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