They are so accustomed to "scholarly essays" which "are poetically sentimental and floridly vague" that they have little respect for anything else.
As Mr. Grigg poetically puts it, at the bottom of the deep blue sea.
A section of pie poetically wrapt in a broad leaf of the squash-vine, or pop-corn in its native tissue-paper, and advertising the new Dollar Store in Portland?
Then, nearly every house was a tannery in a modest way, and poetically published the fact by the display of a sheep's tail over the front door, like a bush at a wine-shop.
What chiefly or alone makes the episode poetically acceptable is the strain of lyric poetry which Keats has put into the mouth of the supposed Indian maiden when she tells her story.
In Keats's volume every one could see the faults, while the beauties appealed only to the poetically minded.
The super-sacred tree at Dodona, as in Persia and elsewhere, was the oak, and the rustling of the wind in the leaves of the oak was poetically regarded as the voice of the All-Father.
It did not do to be poetically inclined when travelling on the Arinos.
Thus the peasant in the folk-song knows how to reveal poetically many a tender charm of the beauty of nature; but, on the other hand, he very seldom has an eye for the picturesque beauty of natural scenery.
It was about the second or third day when, travelling probably by the northern road, poetically called "the Slope of the Chariots," the Christian adventurers came in sight of the roofs of Tara.
An attractive, poetically rendered account of "the world's greatest story.
God's strength is poetically regarded as distinct from Himself and almost personified, as "loving-kindness" is in Psalm xlii.
It literally means a wheel, and is apparently best rendered as above, the thunder being poetically conceived of as the sound of the rolling wheels of God's chariot.
All God's workings among men, which are poetically conceived as His way, have stamped on them Righteousness.
If I were poetically minded I should say that you looked like the Tragic Muse.
He was a lover of Louise Labe, and was worthy of her, poetically speaking.
Gorki speaks poetically in his article of the "fantastic city all of fire" that one sees at night.
Garshin wrote other tales, among them a poetically beautiful story of a tree, "Attalea Princeps," that reminds one somewhat of Bjornson.
Has Hovey's way of telling the story of Guenevere and Launcelot an advantage realistically over Tennyson's, but none eitherpoetically or ethically?
Among these I think I ought to class that peculiar form of friendly farewell or greeting which the Doctor poetically calls a "blown blessing" and the natives Ibata.
Here we have the desperate reaction from the idea that l'anecdote is everything to the idea that it is sufficient to represent nothing (poetically conceived!
But perhaps it is by the perfection of soundness of his lighter and archer masterpieces that he is poetically most wholesome for us.
There is something in it of bravado, something which makes us feel that we have not the man speaking to us with his real voice: something, therefore, poetically unsound.
To this class of situations, poetically faulty as it appears to me, that of Empedocles, as I have endeavored to represent him, belongs; and I have therefore excluded the poem from the present collection.
In the example above, they may, I think, be ranked with the instances in which quality is poetically substituted for manner, and be parsed as relating to the pronouns which follow them.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "poetically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.