Review of Related Studies
                                                                                their special character, their accent, is given by their diction, and, even yet more, by  their  movement.  In  the  best  poetry,  these  two  aspects,  form  and  matter,  are
vitally interrelated. One cannot exist without the other. p.60
b Poetic Diction, A Study in Meaning Owen Barfield
Barfield  conceives  the  history  of  thought  and  language  in  the  race  and  in the  individual  as  the  progressive  alienation  of  consciousness  from  the  unity  of
life and mind – the displacement of the concrete, the synthetic, the poetical by the
analytic, the abstract, the prosaic. Poets are individuals who possess in a high degree the power of imaginative
synthesis,  and  the  ability  to  express  and  communicate  their  imaginative experience  in  words.  The  device  used  to  achieve  this  end  are  known  as  poetic
diction. The principal device is metaphor. For  the  reader  of  hearer  poetry  has  two  values:  1  the  pleasure  of
appreciation;  2  knowledge  of  wisdom.  Appreciation  and  its  pleasure  involve  a “felt  change  of  consciousness”;  that  is,  the  change  from  prosaic  to  poetical
awareness.  Appreciation  takes  place  at  the  exact  moment  of  change.  It  lives during that
prosaic consciousness is indispensable. Without it there can be no “felt change.
” Barfield maintains the paradox that the modern imagination appreciates Homer more than Homer’s contemporaries, just because the modern age is more
prosaic than the age of Hom er, and the “felt change” is greater.
The  wisdom  or  knowledge  communicated  by  poetry,  the  expansion  of  our intimate,  immediate  awareness  of  concrete  reality,  is  poetry’s  permanent  value.
p.60
c Poetry’s Sake, in Oxford Lectures on Poetry A.C. Bradley
“Poetry  for  poetry’s  sake”  means:  1  that  the  poetic  experience  has  an intrinsic value; 2 that its poetic value is this intrinsic worth alone. Bradley adds
3 that poetic value is lowered by the consideration of ulterior non-poetic ends in the  creation  or  appreciation  of  poetry  this  is  not  necessarily  implied  in  the
formula. Such ends tend to make of poetry a part or copy of the real world. But it is  the  nature  of  the  poetry
to  be  “a  world  by  itself,  independent,  complete, autonomo
us.” The  real
connection  between  poetry  and  practical  life  is  “underground.” Poetry  and  life  are  parallel,  analogous  manifestations
of  man’s  striving  for perfection. The values of real life enter the realm of poetry above ground only as
aspects of the real world which poetic imagination, they are indeed mighty powers in the world of poetry.
The poem is “a resonant meaning, or a meaning resonance.” Poetic value lies  in  the  total  experience.  Bradley  explains  the  creative  impulse  through  the
necessity of form to the realization of poetic meaning. p.61