poetize
English
Verb
poetize (third-person singular simple present poetizes, present participle poetizing, simple past and past participle poetized)
- (transitive) To make (something) poetic.
- 1857, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli, volume I:
- She acknowledged that Wordsworth had done more to make all men poetical, than perhaps any other; that he was the poet of reflection; that where he failed to poetize his subject, his simple faith intimated to the reader a poetry that he did not find in the book.
- 1914, Kuno Francke, editor, The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, volume IV:
- Its aim is not merely to reunite all the dispersed classes of poetry, and to place poetry in touch with philosophy and rhetoric; it aims and ought to aim to mingle and combine poetry and prose, genius and criticism, artistic and natural poetry; to make poetry lively and social, to make life and society poetic; to poetize wit, to saturate all the forms of art with worthy materials of culture and enliven them by the sallies of humor.
- (intransitive) To compose poetry.
- 1601, Ben Jonson, Poetaster or The Arraignment: […], London: […] [R. Bradock] for M[atthew] L[ownes] […], published 1602, →OCLC, Act V, scene iii, signature L4, recto:
- [T]each thy Incubus to Poëtize, / And throvve abroad thy ſpurious Snotteries, / Vpon that puft-vp Lumpe of Barmy froth, […]
- 1914, Kuno Francke, editor, The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, volume III:
- This it is that, particularly in my earlier years, gave me a rather awkward appearance both in the field of speculation and in that of poetry; for the poetic mind generally got the better of me when I ought to have philosophized, and my philosophical mind when I wished to poetize.
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