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  2. 'Tis Money makes a Man: Or, The Good-Fellows Folly

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/'Tis_Money_makes_a_Man:_Or...

    Tis Money makes a Man: Or, The Good-Fellows Folly is an English broadside ballad believed to have been published between 1674 and 1679 by John Wade, [1] and is located in the National Library of Scotland.

  3. The Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Niblungs

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Story_of_Sigurd_the...

    The poem opens with the marriage of king Volsung's daughter Signy to Siggeir, king of the Goths. The bridal feast is interrupted by the arrival of a stranger, the god Odin in disguise, who drives a sword into a tree-trunk. Though everyone tries to draw the sword, Volsung's son Sigmund is the only man who can do it. The disappointed Siggeir ...

  4. Cultural depictions of John, King of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of...

    The novel Uncanonized (1900) by Margaret Horton Potter features King John. [6] King John is the subject of A. A. Milne's poem for children, King John's Christmas (1927), which begins "King John was not a good man", but slowly builds sympathy for him as he fears not getting anything for Christmas, when all he really wants is a rubber ball. [8]

  5. Cold Iron (poem) - Wikipedia

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

    "Cold Iron" begins with Baron realizing that war (cold iron) is the gift or metal of man. The second stanza implies that the Baron believes force is how one gets what they want. The third stanza implies the foolishness of the Baron. The Baron rebels against the King, but is captured. However, the King shows him mercy.

  6. Richard Cory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Cory

    "Good-morning," and he glittered when he walked. And he was rich – yes, richer than a king – And admirably schooled in every grace: In fine, we thought that he was everything To make us wish that we were in his place. So on we worked, and waited for the light, And went without the meat, and cursed the bread; And Richard Cory, one calm ...

  7. Man Was Made to Mourn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_was_made_to_Mourn

    "Man Was Made to Mourn" is an eleven stanza dirge by Robert Burns, first published in 1784. [4] [2] The poem was originally intended to be sung to the tune of the song "Peggy Bawn". It is written as if it were being delivered by a wiser old man to a "young stranger" standing in the winter on "the banks of Aire". [2] It includes the stanza:

  8. The Gods of the Copybook Headings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gods_of_the_Copybook...

    Kipling's narrative voice contrasts the purported eternal wisdom of these commonplace texts with the fashionable and (in Kipling's view) naïve modern ideas of "the Market-Place", making oblique reference, by way of puns or poetic references to older geological time periods, to Welsh-born Lloyd George and Liberal efforts at disarmament ("the Cambrian measures"), feminism ("the ...

  9. The Kingis Quair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Kingis_Quair

    The Kingis Quair ("The King's Book") [1] [2] is a fifteenth-century Early Scots poem attributed to James I of Scotland. It is semi-autobiographical in nature, describing the King's capture by the English in 1406 on his way to France and his subsequent imprisonment by Henry IV of England and his successors, Henry V and Henry VI .