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  2. Ozymandias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozymandias

    The poem was created as part of a friendly competition in which Shelley and fellow poet Horace Smith each created a poem on the subject of Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II under the title of Ozymandias, the Greek name for the pharaoh. Shelley's poem explores the ravages of time and the oblivion to which the legacies of even the greatest are subject.

  3. Cædmon's Hymn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cædmon's_Hymn

    Folio 129r of the early eleventh-century Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 43, showing a page of Bede's Latin text, with Cædmon's Hymn added in the lower margin. Cædmon's Hymn is a short Old English poem attributed to Cædmon, a supposedly illiterate and unmusical cow-herder who was, according to the Northumbrian monk Bede (d. 735), miraculously empowered to sing in honour of God the Creator.

  4. Nasadiya Sukta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasadiya_Sukta

    The Nāsadīya Sūkta (after the incipit ná ásat, or "not the non-existent"), also known as the Hymn of Creation, is the 129th hymn of the 10th mandala of the Rigveda (10:129). It is concerned with cosmology and the origin of the universe . [ 1 ]

  5. God's Trombones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God's_Trombones

    God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse is a 1927 book of poems by James Weldon Johnson patterned after traditional African-American religious oratory. African-American scholars Henry Louis Gates and Cornel West have identified the collection as one of Johnson's two most notable works, the other being Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man .

  6. If I were God - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/If_I_were_God

    The poem is foreshadowing the 21st century. [8] Birgit Dankert writes that the poem proves that both Astrid Lindgren's childhood and her melancholy can be seen as the part where her creativity comes from. The poem represents that God's creation developed into the negative or even failed.

  7. Theogony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theogony

    The Theogony (Ancient Greek: Θεογονία, Theogonía, [2] i.e. "the genealogy or birth of the gods" [3]) is a poem by Hesiod (8th–7th century BC) describing the origins and genealogies of the Greek gods, composed c. 730–700 BC. [4]

  8. Völuspá - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Völuspá

    Völuspá (also Vǫluspá, Vǫlospá, or Vǫluspǫ́; Old Norse: 'Prophecy of the völva, a seeress') is the best known poem of the Poetic Edda.It dates back to the tenth century and tells the story from Norse Mythology of the creation of the world, its coming end, and its subsequent rebirth that is related to the audience by a völva addressing Odin.

  9. Great Hymn to the Aten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Hymn_to_the_Aten

    Miriam Lichtheim describes the hymn as "a beautiful statement of the doctrine of the One God." [18] In 1913, Henry Hall contended that the pharaoh was the "first example of the scientific mind." [19] Egyptologist Dominic Montserrat discusses the terminology used to describe these texts, describing them as formal poems or royal eulogies. He ...