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Against the Evidence: Selected Poems, 1934-1994 (1994) Despite the Plainness of the Day: Love Poems (1991) Shadowing the Ground (1991) If We Knew (Polymorph Editions, 1991) New and Collected Poems, 1970-1985 (1986) Leaving the Door Open (1984) Whisper to the Earth (1981) Conversations (1980) Sunlight (1979) Tread the Dark (1978) Selected Poems ...
[2] [3] In 2010, along with Binyavanga Wainaina, Owuor participated in the Chinua Achebe Center's "Pilgrimages" project and travelled to Kinshasa, and intends to produce a book about her experiences. [4] She is a contributor to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby. [5]
Her book Magnum Mysterium (2020) was reviewed by Tristram Fane Saunders, in The Telegraph. [ 5 ] O'Callaghan received the Michael Hartnett Poetry Award in 2001, which stated she writes poems which 'seem effortless and are immediately accessible and achieve great emotional weight by the lightest of means'.
Leaves of Grass (Book XXX. Whispers of Heavenly Death) 1871 A Paumanok Picture " Two boats with nets lying off the sea-beach, quite still," Leaves of Grass (Book XXXI.) A Persian Lesson " For his o’erarching and last lesson the greybeard sufi," Leaves of Grass (Book XXXV. Good-bye my Fancy) A Prairie Sunset
Arvind Krishna Mehrotra was born in Lahore in 1947. He has published six collections of poetry in English and two of translation — a volume of Prakrit love poems, The Absent Traveller, recently reissued in Penguin Classics, and Songs of Kabir (NYRB Classics).
The poem was developed in two sections; each contains four stanzas and each stanza contains four lines. The first section where Eliot paid homage to his great Jacobean masters in whom he found the unified sensibility is a kind of "versified critique" [2] of Jacobean writers, Webster and Donne in particular. Both Webster and Donne are praised by ...
The Eye of the Earth is a collection of poems by Niyi Osundare, published in 1986 by Heinemann Educational Books. The work was awarded the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for the African poetry book category, and the Association of Nigerian Authors' Poetry Prize in its year of publication. The collection comprises nineteen poems that explore nature ...
"After Apple-Picking" is a poem by American poet Robert Frost. It was published in 1914 in North of Boston, Frost's second poetry collection. [1] The poem, 42 lines in length, does not strictly follow a particular form (instead consisting of mixed iambs), nor does it follow a standard rhyme scheme.