enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Night of the Scorpion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_of_the_Scorpion

    Nissim Ezekiel's poem "Night of the Scorpion" presents a rural Indian village and its people. It came from a religious background and Ezekiel wrote this poem trying to give the impression of anger, but also an underlying message of motherly love, along with a hint of culture and superstition: After twenty hours it lost its sting. My mother only ...

  3. The Tyger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tyger

    "The Tyger" is a poem by the English poet William Blake, published in 1794 as part of his Songs of Experience collection and rising to prominence in the romantic period. The poem is one of the most anthologised in the English literary canon , [ 1 ] and has been the subject of both literary criticism and many adaptations, including various ...

  4. Ode to a Nightingale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ode_to_a_Nightingale

    As the poem ends, the trance caused by the nightingale is broken and the narrator is left wondering if it was a real vision or just a dream. [24] The poem's reliance on the process of sleeping is common to Keats's poems, and "Ode to a Nightingale" shares many of the same themes as Keats' Sleep and Poetry and Eve of St. Agnes. This further ...

  5. Paradise Lost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradise_Lost

    Key to the ambitions of Paradise Lost as a poem is the creation of a new kind of epic, one suitable for English, Christian morality rather than polytheistic Greek or Roman antiquity. This intention is indicated from the very beginning of the poem, when Milton uses the classical epic poetic device of an invocation for poetic

  6. The Song of Hiawatha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Song_of_Hiawatha

    The poem also influenced two composers of European origin who spent a few years in the US but did not choose to settle there. The first of these was Frederick Delius, who completed his tone poem Hiawatha in 1888 and inscribed on the title page the passage beginning "Ye who love the haunts of Nature" from near the start of the poem. [39]

  7. Tamerlane (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamerlane_(poem)

    "Tamerlane" is the Latinized name of a 14th-century historical figure.. The main themes of "Tamerlane" are independence and pride [3] as well as loss and exile. [4] Poe may have written the poem based on his own loss of his early love, Sarah Elmira Royster, [5] his birth mother Eliza Poe, or his foster-mother Frances Allan. [4]

  8. The Solitary Reaper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Solitary_Reaper

    "The Solitary Reaper" is a lyric poem by English Romantic poet William Wordsworth, and one of his best-known works. [1] The poem was inspired by his and his sister Dorothy's stay at the village of Strathyre in the parish of Balquhidder in Scotland in September 1803. [2] "The Solitary Reaper" is one of Wordsworth's most famous post-Lyrical ...

  9. Pierrot lunaire (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierrot_lunaire_(book)

    Each of Giraud's poems is a rondel, a form he admired in the work of the Parnassians, especially of Théodore de Banville. [6] ( It is a "bergamask" rondel, not only because the jagged progress of the poems recalls the eponymous rustic dance, but also because 19th-century admirers of the Commedia dell'Arte characters [or "masks"] often associated them with the Italian town of Bergamo, [7] from ...