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Myfanwy Haycock (1913–1963) was a Welsh poet, illustrator, BBC broadcaster, and journalist. She was born Blodwen Myfanwy Haycock in Pontnewynydd , Wales , near Pontypool , in the traditional county of Monmouthshire , .
Little Boy Blue by Eugene Field " Little Boy Blue " is a poem by Eugene Field about the death of a child, a sentimental but beloved theme in 19th-century poetry. Contrary to popular belief, the poem is not about the death of Field's son, who died several years after its publication.
"The Blue Doll" "Eve Of All Saints" "She Lay In The Stream Dreaming Of August Sander" "Fourteen" "Birds Of Iraq" "Marigold" "Tara" "To His Daughter" "The Pride Moves Slowly" "The Leaves Are Late Falling" "Wilderness" "The Geometry Blinked Ruin Unimaginable" "Fenomenico" "Three Windows" "Our Jargon Muffies The Drum "Death Of A Tramp" "Mummer Love"
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Brian Jones (10 December 1938 – 25 June 2009) was a British poet. He was educated at Ealing County Grammar School for Boys and Selwyn College, Cambridge . Jones' first major collection, Poems (consisting of his first book, The Madman in the Reading Room and thirty-seven other poems), was published in 1966, and proved to be successful.
The work hybridizes several prose and poetry styles as it documents Nelson's multifaceted experience with the color blue, and is often referred to as lyric essay or prose poetry. [1] [2] It was written between 2003 and 2006. [3] [4] The book is a philosophical and personal meditation on the color blue, lost love, grief and existential solitude.
The Mersey Sound is number 10 in a series of slim paperbacks originally published in the 1960s by Penguin in a series called Penguin Modern Poets. Each book assembled work by three compatible poets. Number 6, for example, contained poems by George MacBeth, Edward Lucie-Smith and Jack Clemo. The other books in the series were not given a ...
A Several World was the 2014 recipient of the James Laughlin Award [2] and was a longlist finalist for the National Book Award. [3] The book takes its title from a 17th-century poem by Robert Herrick, and deals with questions about subjectivity and individuality versus the collective. [4]