We have no meanings for "more poetical" in our records yet.
1 Pelham is represented as almost wholly unsusceptible to the more poetical influences.
2 Again he was silenced; the idea was infinitely more poetical than his own.
3 The best descriptions of it have always been more poetical than anything else.
4 Now and then a prosaic phrase gives place to a more poetical expression.
5 We may assume without much temerity that poetry is more poetical than painting.
6 There never was a creature about whom more poetical nonsense has been written.
7 Falling in love is more poetical than dropping into poetry.
8 Dryden's fable of the flower and the leaf was not a more poetical reverie.
9 Gray thought his language more poetical as it was more remote from common use.
10 Twelve more poetical sheep were never fed on grass before.
11 But this name has been dropped, and the more poetical designation of the Spaniard retained.
12 His Bucolics were looked upon as dramas more poetical than those of Terence and Seneca.
13 If you want a more poetical illustration, it was what Mr. Wordsworth calls a mass
14 Verse like hers, which expresses mere denial, is not essentially more poetical than blank paper.
15 A street is really more poetical than a meadow, because a street has a secret.
16 Another says that a swan, perpetually wrestling with its dying song, would be more poetical .
Other examples for "more poetical"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: More poetical through the time
More poetical across language varieties