Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[The city had fallen] [I Played in the Smallest Theatres] [The stone is] [They wheeled out] [Lover of endless] [The flies] [History lesson] Part II [The hundred-year-old] [In a forest of] [Everything's foreseeable] [He calls one dog] [A dog with a soul] [Time—the lizard] [Margaret was copying] [A poem about sitting] [Dear Friedrich] [Tropical ...
The Old Vicarage, Grantchester" is a light poem by the English Georgian poet Rupert Brooke (1887–1915), written in Berlin in 1912. Initially titled "The Sentimental Exile", Brooke, with help from his friend Edward Marsh , renamed it to the title the poem is now commonly known as.
Vachel Lindsay in 1912. While in New York in 1905 Lindsay turned to poetry in earnest. He tried to sell his poems on the streets. Self-printing his poems, he began to barter a pamphlet titled Rhymes To Be Traded For Bread, which he traded for food as a self-perceived modern version of a medieval troubadour.
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 ...
Poems of the Imagination (1815–1843); Miscellaneous Poems (1845–) 1798 Her eyes are Wild 1798 Former title: Bore the title of "The Mad Mother" from 1798–1805 "Her eyes are wild, her head is bare," Poems founded on the Affections (1815–20); Poems of the Imagination (1827–32); Poems founded on the Affections (1836–) 1798 Simon Lee 1798
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
Isolation, loneliness, a feeling of alienation—all characterize the Harolds, Manfreds, Lucys, Michaels, and Mariners of a later-day Romanticism." [ 17 ] Rosemary Ashton believes that "The chief, perhaps only, interest of the poem, or rather set of fragments strung together, is that it display Coleridge's reading at this time of books which ...