Sentences with phrase «poets do»

He said you should write about art, that's what poets do.
Poets don't retire.»
«Poets don't fade away.
I always feel I am terrible with words, but they can create the most incredible sculptures in your mind, and I think poets do that.
Poets do not go mad; but chess - players do.
«It's a win for the humble people, for pragmatic football, for those who exploit their opponent's weaknesses... Poets don't win titles in football.»
Poets do nt win trophies...
It is precisely because the poets do not tell the truth about the gods that Socrates finds fault with them.
(2) How is what they do similar to and different from what poets do?
But the Christian poet doesn't have it easy these days — poets, says Grindal, write in images, and a church whose language has become sociological and managerial («The Lord is my corporate manager») is asking the poet to write hymns from abstractions.
As Lewis sardonically notes, «The poet did not foresee that his work would one day meet the disarming simplicity of critics who take for gospel things said by the father of falsehood in public speeches to his troops.»
And yet, the near - unanimous goodwill towards the group and its immortalized poet didn't translate to box office glory.
It's that time of night, lying in bed, thinking what you really think, making the private world public, that's what the poet does
The poet didn't write about pet adoption back in the 13th Century, but this line certainly fits how adopters feel: «The beauty of the heart is the lasting beauty.»
They spark an interest in me the same way reading Kerouac or the other Beat poets does from me.
Finlay is Neoclassicist and neo-Romantic, didactic and liberal, an insider and an outsider, the master of the politico - poetic sound bite incised in stone (by hired craftsmen; the patrician poet doesn't lift a chisel).
Hannah Wilke, who's dead now, who was a poet did a show, an art show, and me and Robert Newman, who also ran the gallery.
In more ways than one Voulkos might be said to have done for ceramics what the beat poets did for verse.
The architect, the musician and the poet did not feel that their arts had undergone so profound a change, requiring as great a shift in the attitude of the beholder, as painting and sculpture in the beginning of our century.
But, despite these unique properties, another perspective is that PoET doesn't make sense for either private or public blockchains.

Not exact matches

Instead, don't have the mind of a mercenary; adopt the way of the poet.
Or if it's after hours (or you just don't feel like chatting), you can fill out a form with your name, email address, and a few tidbits about you and your loved one, to give the poet a frame of reference.
When you're done, you can tip your poet, using a credit card or, of course, your PayPal account.
A new analysis done exclusively for Poets & Quants by PayScale, which collects salary data from individuals through online pay comparison tools, shows that the MBA — even from schools that lack global or national caché, delivers hefty seven - figure income over a 20 - year period.
Large biofuel firms like Abengoa Bioenergy U.S., Iberdrola U.S.A., Pacific Ethanol, and POET joined the pledge, while some of the biggest agriculture firms — like Cargill and Monsanto (MON)-- did as well.
Additionally, why does my basket of people — skeptics — score better in math, science, literature and history and contain a majority of the world «a artists, poets and musicians?
Milosz does not answer this question in the poem, but his work as poet has always been to give voice to precisely this: all the sad, neglected stories of so many men and women.
But I think we have risen above this distinction and can recognize in the activity of the painter and the sculptor, no less than in that of the poet and the dancer, the emancipation from the «deadliness of doing» that distinguishes art from «work.»
The poet is seen as confused, scared, overcomplicated, hidden behind his «wit,» and, finally, a nihilist altogether — a man who knows his religious faith «doesn't stand up to scrutiny,» and so writes «these screwed - up sonnets.»
While I don't subscribe to even a majority of Barfield's views on other subjects, as a poet I have to say that his views on the nature, development, and purpose of language ring true.Don't know if any of this makes sense, but there it is.
I wouldn't call Spenser a greater poet, but he saw the human condition and our often - anguished journey toward God in a richer, more humane way than Milton did, who at the end of the day was more interested in ideas than people.
It is no accident that Percy summons Flannery O'Connor to such questions as well; but unlike her, he does not anchor his response in St. Augustine and St. Paul (we have here no abiding place) nor in St. Thomas, whose argument is insistent that the poet's, the artist's, responsibility is to the good of the thing being made, not with the correction of appetites in his audience.
'' «Finally comes the poet»... It's a rare gift that can render both life's everyday intimacies and the heart's broken rhythms in language at once lucid and lyrical, but Ann does it without seeming to try... Finally comes the poet
«Anyone who does just a little digging on Bethke's YouTube channel or on Google will quickly learn that this young poet is a conservative Christian and member of the Mars Hill Church led by controversial pastor Mark Driscoll,» writes Patheos blogger Brian Kirk, a Missouri - based pastor.
Acts 17:24 - 28 «24 The God who made the world and all things in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands; 25 nor is He served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Himself gives to all people life and breath and all things; 26 and He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their habitation, 27 that they would seek God, if perhaps they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; 28 for in Him we live and move and exist, as even some of your own poets have said, «For we also are His children.»»
And though very often it is literal light, it is also the wisdom of the poet who helps us to understand more deeply what it is to be human, just as our Lord himself took flesh to do.
His extraordinary gifts as poet — and these are the most salient aspects of what he has left behind — enable him to reach everyone who loves to watch or hear language do everything it can do.
Have you noticed how people who live from the heart — a few great poets, inventors, liberators, etc — do n`t normally have a long and happy life?
We can see only hints of divine beauty, and if some poets or artists seem to have a talent for seeing a particular kind of natural beauty it does not follow that they will also see or appreciate supernatural beauty (for example, in people, liturgy, or scripture).
Virginia Woolf observed that the poets give us language for all sorts and conditions of love but don't offer ready language for a common headache.
We can, and should, look at the world in the way biologists and chemists do, but we should also look at it in the way poets and children do.
If we get values from poets, where do they get them?
«Only rarely,» she said, «do you find a poem in which the poet wins.»
About this Mingana writes, «It is the constant tradition in the Eastern church that the Apostle Thomas evangelized India, and there is no historian, no poet, no breviary, no liturgy, and no writer of any kind who, having the opportunity of speaking of Thomas, does not associate his name with India.
Jeremy, a scientist asks what a thing is in itself; a metaphysician asks what does a thing mean; a poet asks what is a thing like.
Lazar Gulkowitsch writes of Buber's early poetic recreations of Hasidism: «Since Martin Buber is a poet who himself inclines to mysticism, Hasidism in his representation takes on an all too mysterious colouring while its natural childlike quality and its sheer naïveté do not receive adequate emphasis.»
I did some research into how the word theopneustos was used in other Greek literature of the time, and without fail, it is used of poets and philosophers who seem to speak with a certain passion and urgency that makes people listen and obey what they are saying.
The point is that human beings are «poets», although usually they do not grasp this truth about themselves.
Before the new yet old view comes clear an incalculable amount of work must be done by poets and theologians, by historical scholars and Biblical students, by ministers dealing at close range with men in this encounter, and especially by these men themselves.
He was a poet and literary critic, but I think it does no disservice to his memory to say that his poetry was not quite first rate and that his criticism was eclectic, occasional and of varying quality.
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