Sentences with phrase «poems into»

They make their money by selecting «winners» of made - up prestigious poetry contests, putting the poems into a volume, and then charging the poets and their families to buy the anthologies.
In the meantime, I contracted with a cooperative publisher to publish just my religiously inspired poems into a smaller book titled God, My Greatest Love.
Self - Publishing Relief recommends you gather your individual poems into a chapbook or poetry collection and self - publish your own book!
It seemed to me, too, that an introduction was needed to help put the poems into historical perspective for young readers, and that it would be good to have back matter that would help readers sort the fact from the fiction in the story.
«After six weeks of using your Poetry Writing Guide, my students were requesting the next installment and had begun compiling their poems into volumes.
Padel divides Darwin: A Life in Poems into five chapters, one for each discrete stage of his life.
Personally, the «ranking» of poems into first, second, third, finalists, honorable mentions etc. just seems so contrived.
Poetry Slam Lesson Plan Create poems using words cut from newspapers, read the poems in the poetry slam format, and then compile the poems into a book.
Activities can also be used for revising and embedding poets and poems into long term memory
Have students write winter poems and put the poems into QR codes.
So I started mixing in my poems into my personal posts, and I started to grow a fan base before I even released the book.
In addition, Graham collected all of the poems into a numbered and signed art - book entitled Short Poems of Merit, which will accompany each bottle.
In making the word to become flesh the interpreter makes herself or himself into the word, takes the word as poem into her or his body, continues the creation process begun by the poet (Bozarth - Campbell, 52).
In truth, it can be argued that even Parmenides treated change and motion at least as «appearances,» as belonging at least to the illusory realm of phenomena and not as mere non-entities; otherwise the division of his poem into two parts — «The Way of Truth» and «The Way of Opinion» — would lose its meaning.
Chop a short poem up into lines, or dice a really short poem into words, and put them in an envelope.
Last year for National Poetry Month, I wrote a blog post about integrating a poem into the opening routine of my English class at Holicong Middle School, in Pennsylvania.
In pairs the children then had to arrange the poem into rhyming couplets, identifying the rhyming word.
In pairs the children then had to arrange the poem into rh...
It was his longtime friend Evans who eventually encouraged him to turn his poem into a children's book, though it took nearly eight years to actually come to fruition.
«I'm taking this poem into my classroom.
Transforming a well - known poem into a picture book is precarious work — even more so when you're dealing with the words of an American icon.
-- Boris Pasternak «Wanted: a needle swift enough to sew this poem into a blanket.»
Hammons made off - the - cuff pieces in the East Third Street house, like a series of so - called invisible paintings by tracing the frames of artworks that were already hanging on Cannon's walls, then removing those works from the walls altogether, leaving behind only thin outlines, or, more recently, having Cannon read a poem into an empty beer bottle and then sealing it up and placing it in the freezer.
Yuan has carved lines of a poem into different leaves of a live plant, so that you can read the plant as you look at it.

Not exact matches

The poem ends with him addressing them all: «Thus we go down into the earth, my fellow parishioners.»
Before the invention of the novel, verse provided the vehicle for throwing philosophical and theological truths into their enacted, experienced forms, which is why I've profited so much from medieval and Renaissance poems, especially those I've recommended, all of which are allied with the chanson de geste, tales of heroism and adventure that delight as much as they inform.
In this way, Herbert writes, this simple poem might see both Herbert's own name and his readers» names entered together into «heavn's courts of rolls.»
Criticism can't come to grips with good poetry by talking only about the craft of the poetry; the poems themselves draw the critic into discussions of life and the world.
Their words, carelessly spoken, spent the last 40 days in my home — getting creased and folded, worked over, brushed aside to make room for dinner, stepped on by a toddler, read by my sister, stained with coffee, shoved into a closet when guests arrive, blacked out, thrown away, turned into poems, and folded into sailboats and cranes and pigeons that now sit smiling at me from my office window.
Just as the same letters of an alphabet can be turned either into nonsense or into the most beautiful of poems, so the same calories seem as indifferent as they are necessary to the spiritual values they nourish.
As G. E. Bentley Jr.'s critical study of Vala demonstrates, Blake's frequent and disorderly revisions of this manuscript epic reveal his own movement into a Christian and redemptive understanding of history, an understanding that could not be reconciled with the initial direction of the poem.
With this the creators and audiences of bhakti poetry seek to project themselves into Radha's love for Krishna through poems that recount all its passionate phases.
Though Ariosto's poem introduces undeniably tragic themes into the story, and though Pulci retells the story of Roncesvalles, none of these poems is tragic in the classical sense; and they certainly display little of the grave grandeur of classical epic.
His poem took me further into openness to engage with whatever life and God bring into mind and experience.
I'll never forget feeling the tension in the classroom as he went into detail about the real meaning of the poem.
At last, the gorgeous surface of things comes to appear as a true mystery, a sacrament destined to transform our imaginations, leading us to reread the world as a poem produced by the one idea, the one who imagines things into being, the sun who is also and always the Son of God.
Jeanne Murray Walker, professor of English at the University of Delaware, offers in her most recent book of poetry, Coming Into History, some of the finest poems I have read in recent years.
These are poems that take as their beginning point headlines from the National Enquirer: «Beauty Queen Has Monster Child,» «Woman Picked up by UFO, Flown into Black Hole,» «Sweethearts Vanish in Tunnel of Love,» «Human Boy Found in Indian Jungle Among Wolf Pack.»
G. R. Driver comments, «As thus interpreted, the poem depicts the introduction of the youthful Baal as a god of fertility into the Ugaritic pantheon and the establishment of his supremacy, under El's suzerainty, over all the other gods, exercising power over earth as god of rain; for rain is the ultimate source of the life - giving water which is essential to the whole of nature, however it may be distributed.»
The Book of Lamentations plunges one at once into the tragedy which had overtaken the Jewish people, and without momentary release moves forward through poem after poem descriptive of the blackness of days when
In the final poem the man walks out into the October landscape one Sunday at noon (here the familiar bells faintly chime in the distance) with the memory of the previous evening's psalm reading in his head: «Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones / which thou has broken may rejoice.»
Here is a poem that surely upsets the ordinary way of seeing and hearing and that drags the reader into its visceral experience of judgment and the possible absence of grace.
This is an attempt to recover the power possessed by words before they were smothered by a scientific and technological culture, words that once rendered immeasurable services to the human spirit, words that danced, sang, teased, lured, probed, wept, judged, and transformed, words that joined hands artfully into analogies, metaphors, riddles, paradoxes, parables, poems, legends, and myths.
A hardback illustrated version of «The Night Before Christmas» somehow made its way into my parents» home, and Clement C. Moore's poem was thus the first exercise in epic I encountered.
If he, wonder of wonders, still remains obstinate, then finally resort to: THE FIGURATIVE SYMBOLISM DODGE and confide that sophisticated people like himself recognize that Eris is a Figurative Symbol for an Ineffable Metaphysical Reality and that The Erisian Movement is really more like a poem than like a science and that he is liable to be turned into a Precious Mao Button and Distributed to The Poor in The Region of Thud if he does not get hip.
The Iliad and Beowulf were writing in the genre of fantasy... «Once upon a time inky, pinky and bod got into a boat» The bible contains poems, historical narrative, precise directions that is why you do not compare it to the Iliad.
The tone is so different in the last poem, that one can not help wondering if it may not have been the thought of one who lived later, interpolated into the total poem, very much as seems to have been true in the case of the Biblical story of Job and Ecclesiastes.
Writing about «Harbor Seals,» also from The Theology of Doubt, Holden said the poem «charms the reader, even as it tempts the reader into a corner... that will require the reader to make a moral choice as well as to reconsider many other kinds of choices about what to «believe.»
It is imperative to recall that the Christ of the Grand Inquisitor is the creation of Ivan Karamazov, who wrote the prose poem in order to counter Alyosha's insistence that, before we give up on God in His apparent indifference to human suffering, especially the suffering of children, we must take Christ's own suffering into account.
No one speaks of this enigmatic celebration with more insight into the mystery than T. S. Eliot in his poem «Journey of the Magi»:
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