Lindah; or, The festival, a metrical romance, with minor poems [by H.E. Burton].
Author: H E. Burton
Publisher:
Published: 1845
Total Pages: 146
ISBN-13:
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Author: H E. Burton
Publisher:
Published: 1845
Total Pages: 146
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jonathan Wordsworth
Publisher: Penguin UK
Published: 2005-05-26
Total Pages: 1048
ISBN-13: 0141905654
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Romanticism that emerged after the American and French revolutions of 1776 and 1789 represented a new flowering of the imagination and the spirit, and a celebration of the soul of humanity with its capacity for love. This extraordinary collection sets the acknowledged genius of poems such as Blake's 'Tyger', Coleridge's 'Khubla Khan' and Shelley's 'Ozymandias' alongside verse from less familiar figures and women poets such as Charlotte Smith and Mary Robinson. We also see familiar poets in an unaccustomed light, as Blake, Wordsworth and Shelley demonstrate their comic skills, while Coleridge, Keats and Clare explore the Gothic and surreal.
Author: Hercules Ellis
Publisher:
Published: 1850
Total Pages: 476
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Edgar Allan Poe
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Published: 2000
Total Pages: 678
ISBN-13: 9780252069215
DOWNLOAD EBOOKContaining more than three hundred poems, including nearly a hundred previously unpublished works, this unique collection showcases the intellectual range of Claude McKay (1889-1948), the Jamaican-born poet and novelist whose life and work were marked by restless travel and steadfast social protest. McKay's first poems were composed in rural Jamaican creole and launched his lifelong commitment to representing everyday black culture from the bottom up. Migrating to New York, he reinvigorated the English sonnet and helped spark the Harlem Renaissance with poems such as "If We Must Die." After coming under scrutiny for his communism, he traveled throughout Europe and North Africa for twelve years and returned to Harlem in 1934, having denounced Stalin's Soviet Union. By then, McKay's pristine "violent sonnets" were giving way to confessional lyrics informed by his newfound Catholicism. McKay's verse eludes easy definition, yet this complete anthology, vividly introduced and carefully annotated by William J. Maxwell, acquaints readers with the full transnational evolution of a major voice in twentieth-century poetry.
Author: Shakespeare
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Published: 2024-01-28
Total Pages: 458
ISBN-13: 3385245540
DOWNLOAD EBOOKReprint of the original, first published in 1875.
Author: Gary Soto
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Published: 2012-01-17
Total Pages: 110
ISBN-13: 0547577370
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPoet Gary Soto captures the voices of young people as they venture toward their first kiss, brood over bruised hearts, and feel the thrill of first love.
Author: Dieter Mehl
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2010-10-18
Total Pages: 222
ISBN-13: 1136832246
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFirst published in English in 1968, this book provides a critical guide to the wide field of the Middle English Romances and gives a helpful survey of the contemporary state of scholarship. Dr Mehl traces the development of Middle English Romances from thee thirteenth to the end of the fourteenth century, and interprets a number of these romances. The emphasis is literary, on their form and dominant themes rather than source-material or language.
Author: John Payne Collier
Publisher:
Published: 1843
Total Pages: 438
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Lee Christine O'Brien
Publisher: University of Delaware
Published: 2012-10-05
Total Pages: 261
ISBN-13: 1611493927
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Romance of the Lyric in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Poetry: Experiments in Form offers a new account of the nature of the lyric as nineteenth-century women poets developed the form. It offers fresh assessments of the imaginative and aesthetic complexity of women’s poetry. The monograph seeks to redefine the range and cultural significance of women’s writing using the work of poets who have not, heretofore, been part of critical accounts of nineteenth-century lyric poetry. These new voices are set beside new readings of the poetry of established figures: for example, Christina Rossetti’s Goblin Market and Augusta Webster’s “Medea in Athens” and “Circe." The monograph draws substantially on the poetry of Rosamund Marriott Watson – who was lost to literary history before the restoration of her oeuvre through the scholarly and critical work of Professor Linda K. Hughes – to make the case that once neglected and lost voices provide new ways of determining the cultural centrality of women and the poetry they produced in one of the richest periods of poetic experimentation in the Western literary tradition. This monograph contends that Watson’s poetry and prose provide new ways of analyzing the complex and frequently transgressive nature of the lyric engagement of women with folklore and myth and with the growing understanding in the nineteenth century of the fragmented, fluid self in general and of the writer in particular.
Author: Thomas (the Rhymer)
Publisher:
Published: 1875
Total Pages: 196
ISBN-13:
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