enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. From the Corner of His Eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/From_the_Corner_of_His_Eye

    Dean Koontz writes a tale of good and evil, and how the concepts influence people's lives. The book begins with three separate stories that eventually intertwine: a loving relationship between a mother and her genius son, a ruthless killer, and a young woman who takes it upon herself to raise her late sister's baby.

  3. Falling Up (poetry collection) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falling_Up_(poetry_collection)

    Children's literature portal; Falling Up is a 1996 poetry collection primarily for children written and illustrated by Shel Silverstein [1] and published by HarperCollins.It is the third poetry collection published by Silverstein, following Where the Sidewalk Ends (1974) and A Light in the Attic (1981), and the final one to be published during his lifetime, as he died just three years after ...

  4. Crossing Brooklyn Ferry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossing_Brooklyn_Ferry

    Whitman first published the poem with the title "Sun-Down Poem" in the second edition of Leaves of Grass in 1856, [2] following the poem "Poem of You, Whoever You Are". [4] The idea for the original title appeared as early as 1839 in "Sun-Down Papers, From the Desk of a Schoolmaster". [ 4 ]

  5. The Second Coming (poem) - Wikipedia

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

    The poem is also connected to the 1918–1919 flu pandemic. In the weeks preceding Yeats′s writing of the poem, his pregnant wife, Georgie Hyde-Lees, caught the virus and was very close to death, but she survived. The highest death rates of the pandemic were among pregnant women, who in some areas had a death rate of up to 70%.

  6. On First Looking into Chapman's Homer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_First_Looking_into...

    The title of Patrick Kavanagh's poem "On Looking into E. V. Rieu's Homer", about E. V. Rieu's Homer translations, is an allusion on the title of Keats's poem. In Saki 's story "The Talking-out of Tarrington", a character is greeted with a " 'silent-upon-a-peak-in-Darien' stare which denoted an absence of all previous acquaintance with the ...

  7. Sonnet 46 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_46

    Mine eye and heart are at a mortal war, How to divide the conquest of thy sight; Mine eye my heart thy picture’s sight would bar, My heart mine eye the freedom of that right. My heart doth plead that thou in him dost lie, A closet never pierc’d with crystal eyes, But the defendant doth that plea deny, And says in him thy fair appearance lies.

  8. Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary,_Mary,_Quite_Contrary

    No proof has been found that the rhyme was known before the 18th century, while Mary I of England (Mary Tudor) and Mary, Queen of Scots (Mary Stuart), were contemporaries in the 16th century.

  9. The Sleepers (poem) - Wikipedia

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

    The poem is a dream vision; the first line reads "I wander all night in my vision". [6] At the beginning of the poem, the narrator is described as "Wandering and confused, lost to myself, ill-assorted, contradictory". In the dream, they travel to various places, visiting people as they are asleep.

  1. Related searches the corner of my eye won't stop watering my grass poem summary page

    the corner of my eye won't stop watering my grass poem summary page by line