PROSE
Definition of prose according expert
1.
"For me, a page of good prose
is where one hears the rain and the noise of battle. It has the power to give
grief or universality that lends it a youthful beauty." (John Cheever, on accepting the National
Medal for Literature, 1982)
2.
"Prose is when all the lines accept
the last go on to the end. Poetry is when some of them fall short of it." (Jeremy Bentham)
3.
prose = words in their best
order;--poetry = the best words in the best order." (Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Table Talk, July 12, 1827)
4.
"Prose is the ordinary form of
spoken or written language: it fulfills innumerable functions, and it can
attain many different kinds of excellence.
(John Gross, Introduction to The New Oxford Book of English Prose. Oxford Univ.
Press, 1998)
5.
According
to Woodward, Prose is ordinary language that people
use in writing such as poetry, stories, editorials, books, etc. The word prose
is derived from the Latin word 'prosa' meaning straightforward.
6.
"Our ideal prose, like our ideal
typography, is transparent: if a reader doesn't notice it, if it provides a
transparent window to the meaning, then the prose stylist has succeeded. But if
your ideal prose is purely transparent, such transparency will be, by
definition, hard to describe. You can't hit what you can't see. And what is
transparent to you is often opaque to someone else. Such an ideal makes for a
difficult pedagogy."
(Richard Lanham,
Analyzing Prose, 2nd ed. Continuum, 2003).
7.
"You campaign in poetry. You
govern in prose."
(Governor Mario Cuomo, New Republic, April 8, 1985)
(Governor Mario Cuomo, New Republic, April 8, 1985)
8.
"Here is a method of prose
study which I myself found the best critical practice I have ever had. A
brilliant and courageous teacher whose lessons I enjoyed when I was a
sixth-former trained me to study prose and verse critically not by setting down
my comments but almost entirely by writing imitations of
the style. Mere feeble imitation of the exact arrangement of
words was not accepted; I had to produce passages that could be mistaken for
the work of the author, that copied all the characteristics of the style but
treated of some different subject. In order to do this at all it is necessary
to make a very minute study of the style; I still think it was the best
teaching I ever had. It has the added merit of giving an improved command of
the English language and a greater variation in our own
style."
(Marjorie Boulton, The Anatomy of Prose. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1954)
(Marjorie Boulton, The Anatomy of Prose. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1954)
9.
"[O]ne can write nothing
readable unless one constantly struggles to efface one's own personality. Good prose
is like a window pane."
(George Orwell, "Why I Write," 1946)
(George Orwell, "Why I Write," 1946)
10.
Philosophy Teacher: All that is not prose
is verse; and all that is not verse is prose.
M. Jourdain: What? When I say: "Nicole, bring me my slippers, and give me my night-cap," is that prose?
Philosophy Teacher: Yes, sir.M. Jourdain: Good heavens! For more than 40 years I have been speaking prose without knowing it.
M. Jourdain: What? When I say: "Nicole, bring me my slippers, and give me my night-cap," is that prose?
Philosophy Teacher: Yes, sir.M. Jourdain: Good heavens! For more than 40 years I have been speaking prose without knowing it.
(Molière, Le
Bourgeois Gentilhomme, 1671)
Conclusion
Prose is the series
of word that consist of some paragraph that have meaning
References:
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