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The poems were generated by an artificial intelligence model trained on Bernstein's own body of work, creating outputs that the poet edited, omitting select poems and verses without adding new language. [22] Bernstein said, "this project demanded more work – mine and Davide's – than if I had written the poems alone."
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 ...
In a review of The Bushrangers, a Play; and Other Poems by Charles Harpur, a writer in The Maitland Mercury, and Hunter River General Advertiser, 14 May 1853 stated: " "The Creek of the Four Graves" is a very fine piece of narrative and descriptive poetry combined, and would alone entitle the author to be held a true poet."
Freya Stark alludes to the poem in the title of "A Peak in Darien" (London, 1976). Vladimir Nabokov refers to the poem in his novel Pale Fire when the fictional poet John Shade mentions a newspaper headline that attributes a recent Boston Red Sox victory to "Chapman's Homer" (i.e. to a home run by a player named Chapman).
1996: Walking the Black Cat: Poems, [30] (National Book Award in Poetry finalist) 1997: Looking for Trouble: Selected Early and More Recent Poems. Faber and Faber. 1997. ISBN 9780571192335. 1999: Jackstraws: Poems [30] (The New York Times Notable Book of the Year) ISBN 9780156010986; 1999: Simic, Charles (1999). Selected Early Poems. ISBN ...
The World Doesn't End (1989) is a collection of prose poems by Charles Simic. The collection won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1990. [1] Contents
On July 4, 1776, a group of American founders pledged their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to found a new nation.
The poem consists of 4488 rhyming pentameters and is divided into ten different sections: one 'Prelude' and nine 'Cantos'. It is usually preceded, as in Tristram of Lyonesse and Other Poems by a dedicatory sonnet to Swinburne's friend Theodore Watts-Dunton. Below is a brief summary of the content of the poem's different parts: