and the "tree" the eye is seeing is the being of the All,
momently the I seeing Itself treeing Of course one could also accuse a poet of Wallace Stevens's stature of the same thing in the famous lines: "I was of three minds, / Like a tree / In which there are three blackbirds," but the poem is clear that the blackbird is "a small part of the pantomime," and even those successive ticking "t" sounds tessellate an earned exaggeration not present in Hippolyte's poem.
his mixture pervades The House of the Seven Gables from the first to the last page as the narrator balances opposites, noting, "This contrast, or intermingling of tragedy with mirth, happens daily, hourly,
momently. The gloomy and desolate old house, deserted of life, and with awful Death sitting sternly in its solitude, was the emblem of many a human heart, which, nevertheless, is compelled to hear the trill and echo of the world's gaiety around it" (2:295).
While it is true that her poems often have at their center the apprehension of the "God whose essence is existence" and who "grants / Existence
momently" (Pinkerton, Taken in Faith 14), such a natural theology of the reason is preceded and followed by apprehensions beyond reason.
And from this chasm, with ceaseless turmoil seething, As if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing, A mighty fountain
momently was forced Amid whose swift half-intermitted burst Huge fragments vaulted like rebounding hail.
TO: the throng
momently increased/the innumerable varieties of figure/redoubled their gesticulations/they bowed profusedly/overwhelmed with confusion/two remarkable divisions/their voluminousness of wristband, with an air of excessive frankness/the loathsome and utterly lost leper/drunkards innumerable and indescribable/eyes hideously wild and red / the waver, the jostle, and the hum increased in a tenfold degree/the huge suburban temples / the
momently increasing confusion
"Out of some subway scuttle, cell or loft / A bedlamite speeds to thy parapets, / Tilting there
momently, shrill shirt ballooning, / A jest falls from the speechless caravan" (17-20).
Key statement: A method of computing an energy loss generated in a viscoelastic material, including analyzing a dynamic behavior of a to-be-analyzed object composed of the viscoelastic material by a numerical analysis method; and computing the energy loss of the object
momently when the object makes the dynamic behavior by a viscous component of the object.
The "ceaseless turmoil" in the title is drawn from a passage in Coleridge's "Kubla Khan," in which a mighty fountain is "
momently forced," "as if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing." Nothing so spectacular can be glimpsed in Jim Lees-Milne's new book, which deals almost entirely with a regular, well-appointed, and well-acclaimed existence.
but adorns and
momently describes as motionless a moving current
// And 'mid these dancing rocks at once and ever/It flung up
momently the sacred river." What deserves emphasis here, in Johnson's hard-earned style, is the link between his concentration of allusion into a single word and his thematic exploration of a particular that vision renders resonant.
that willing sense of the insufficingness of the self for itself, which predisposes a generous nature to see, in the total being of another, the supplement and completion of its own;--that quiet perpetual seeking which the presence of the beloved object modulates, not suspends, where the heart
momently finds, and finding, again seeks on: Love recognizes humbly its own self-insufficingness, for the human being instinctively seeks what may fill the emptiness, the gap within.