Sentences with Poetry, Sentences about Poetry in English

Sentences with Poetry, Sentences about Poetry in English

1. Tommy can write poetry very well.

2. Mary writes essays in addition to novels and poetry.

3. Poetry is the rhythmical creation of beauty in words.

4. Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood.

5. Some people go to priests; others to poetry; I to my friends.

6. It’s just poetry, beauty and love. How hard can that be to act?

7. Poetry might be defined as the clear expression of mixed feelings.

8. There’s no money in poetry, but then there’s no poetry in money, either.

9. Only the very weak-minded refuse to be influenced by literature and poetry.

10. I like the beauty of Faulkner’s poetry. But I don’t like his themes, not at all.

11. Poetry puts starch in your backbone so you can stand, so you can compose your life.

12. I would define, in brief, the poetry of words as the rhythmical creation of Beauty.

13. Yet, it is true, poetry is delicious the best prose is that which is most full of poetry.

14. What other people may find in poetry or art museums, I find in the flight of a good drive.

15. When you meet a swordsman, draw your sword: Do not recite poetry to one who is not a poet.

16. All religion, my friend, is simply evolved out of fraud, fear, greed, imagination, and poetry.

17. Out of the quarrel with others we make rhetoric; out of the quarrel with ourselves we make poetry.

18. As far as I am concerned, poetry is a statement concerning the human condition, composed in verse.

19. Thinking in its lower grades, is comparable to paper money, and in its higher forms it is a kind of poetry.

20. Poetry is emotion put into measure. The emotion must come by nature, but the measure can be acquired by art.

21. Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar.

22. Poetry a criticism of life under the conditions fixed for such a criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty.

23. We especially need imagination in science. It is not all mathematics, nor all logic, but it is somewhat beauty and poetry.

24. The beauty, the poetry of the fear in their eyes. I didn’t mind going to jail for, what, five, six hours? It was absolutely worth it.

25. Every one who has a heart, however ignorant of architecture he may be, feels the transcendent beauty and poetry of the mediaeval churches.

26. Epic poetry exhibits life in some great symbolic attitude. It cannot strictly be said to symbolize life itself, but always some manner of life.

27. Poetry is something to make us wiser and better, by continually revealing those types of beauty and truth, which God has set in all men’s souls.

28. There is little premium in poetry in a world that thinks of Pound and Whitman as a weight and a sampler, not an Ezra, a Walt, a thing of beauty, a joy forever.

29. Many attempts have been made by writers on art and poetry to define beauty in the abstract, to express it in the most general terms, to find some universal formula for it.

30. Solitude gives birth to the original in us, to beauty unfamiliar and perilous – to poetry. But also, it gives birth to the opposite: to the perverse, the illicit, the absurd.

31. Sometimes the beauty is easy. Sometimes you don’t have to try at all. Sometimes you can hear the wind blow in a handshake. Sometimes there’s poetry written right on the bathroom wall.

32. But the gravest difficulty, and perhaps the most important, in poetry meant solely for recitation, is the difficulty of achieving verbal beauty, or rather of making verbal beauty tell.

33. Plot, rules, nor even poetry, are not half so great beauties in tragedy or comedy as a just imitation of nature, of character, of the passions and their operations in diversified situations.

34. I did know Ted Hughes and I partly wrote the book to explain to myself and others the complexities of a marriage that was for six years wonderfully productive of poetry and then ended in tragedy.

35. Such discussions help us very little to enjoy what has been well done in art or poetry, to discriminate between what is more and what is less excellent in them, or to use words like beauty, excellence, art, poetry, with a more precise meaning than they would otherwise have.

36. But every great scripture, whether Hebrew, Indian, Persian, or Chinese, apart from its religious value will be found to have some rare and special beauty of its own and in this respect the original Bible stands very high as a monument of sublime poetry and of artistic prose.

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