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Перевод: bunting speek bunting


[прилагательное]
надувшийся (о парусе); пухленький; кругленький;
[существительное]
овсянка [зоол.] ; лапочка ; обратный иммельман; материя для знамен; флаги ; флагдук


Тезаурус:

  1. At length, Bunting recalled, "the largest workman rose frowning and came to our table; but what he said was: "Is it no the great poet, Hugh MacDiarmid?"
  2. In the end the speaker of Homage to Sextus Propertius wins through to articulating that common plight as memorably as Williams's speaker does - with, as Bunting says, "extraordinary directness quite naked".
  3. A royal occasion - such as the Queen Mother's birthday - caused the cottage to be decked with red, white and blue bunting.
  4. Quantity in this sense, duration , is what musicians and musical composers are continually concerned with; and so it is not surprising that poets of this way of thinking, like Pound and Bunting, show themselves avidly interested in poetry which has been, not at a level of theory but as a fact of performance, intimately associated with music: poetry that has been set, or has been written in the hope of being set, to music.
  5. What prompts him to this unexpected adjective is that (as Bunting stressed) the poems these men admired were not "simplified to aim at the poor", but "written for a hard intellectual audience".
  6. It was in the same colours as the bunting, red, white and blue.
  7. It is notable that it was Bunting, in his generation the only British emulator of Pound, who was most confident and insistent that in these matters Pound's immediate master was American, the Walt Whitman of "Out of the Ocean Endlessly Rocking".
  8. Outside this one there is a lone snow bunting pecking mournfully at a muddy patch of shingle that is all that shows through the snow.
  9. The most important figure in the latter group is Bunting himself, so little read these days that many readers will need to be told that the title of Davie's history refers to his masterpiece Briggflatts (1966).
  10. It may seem that when Bunting speaks of "the beautiful step of the verse, he is gesturing into a void not much less than Allen Tate when he wrote of the "rhythm" and the "movement" of Eliot's "Ash-Wednesday".
  11. Snow Bunting
  12. Bunting, who respected Eliot, applied himself first to rebutting the reasons which Eliot gave, in his Introduction to Selected Poems ; for omitting this long and elaborate poem:
  13. And let me assist such reflections by reporting that a gifted and earnest English poet of thirty-two, whom I met this very summer, not only confessed that he had never read through Basil Bunting's Briggflatts , but quite plainly saw no reason why he ever should.

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