Poetry for Poetry's Sake / An Inaugural Lecture Delivered on June 5, 1901
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The lecture argues that poetic experience—the sequence of sounds, images, thoughts, and emotions that a poem produces—has intrinsic value apart from moral, instructive, or practical ends. It maintains that metrical form is integral to that experience and warns that insisting on ulterior purposes can diminish poetic worth. Poetry and everyday life are related but distinct: poetry creates an autonomous imaginative world that must be entered on its own terms. The speaker cautions against both formalist and utilitarian misreadings and urges criticism that attends to particular poems while keeping aesthetic principles in view.
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