Publication Details
Abstract
This article explores the phenomenon of lyric composition as a multifaceted poetic problem integrating structural, semantic, and emotional dimensions of artistic expression. The study approaches composition not as a mechanical arrangement of poetic units but as an organic system of relations that unifies rhythm, imagery, and meaning within the lyrical form. Drawing on theoretical perspectives in modern poetics, it examines how compositional structure functions as a mediating framework between form and content, shaping both aesthetic experience and interpretive perception. Special emphasis is placed on the principles of formal and semantic proportionality, the interplay between syntactic and rhythmic organization, and the internal dynamics of lyric progression. Furthermore, the research identifies three essential aspects of lyric composition structural, semantic, and affective that collectively establish the poem’s artistic integrity. The classification of lyric structures according to their developmental modes and spatial-temporal organization provides a methodological foundation for analyzing poetic architecture. Ultimately, the study argues that lyric composition serves as an intellectual and emotional construct through which individual experience is transformed into universal artistic meaning, revealing the dialectic between personal consciousness and poetic form.