Difference between revisions of "PoetryLinks"

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*Lewis Carroll
 
*Lewis Carroll
 
**"Jabberwocky" [http://www.jabberwocky.com/carroll/jabber/jabberwocky.html]
 
**"Jabberwocky" [http://www.jabberwocky.com/carroll/jabber/jabberwocky.html]
 +
*Samuel Coleridge
 +
**"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798 in fact) [http://www.online-literature.com/coleridge/646/]  (compare to Baudelaire's "Albatros" [http://fleursdumal.org/poem/200])
 
*Edward Fitzgerald
 
*Edward Fitzgerald
 
**"The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" [http://www.arabiannights.org/rubaiyat/index2.html] (click go)
 
**"The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" [http://www.arabiannights.org/rubaiyat/index2.html] (click go)

Revision as of 10:48, 2 February 2013


19th C.

US

  • Emily Dickinson
    • A word is dead / When it is said / Some say.
      I say it just / Begins to live / That day.
    • "I'm Nobody, Who are You?" [1]
    • "If you were coming in the fall" [2]
  • Edgar Allen Poe,
  • Walt Whitman
    • "O Captain! My Captain!" [5] from Leaves of Grass

UK

  • Lewis Carroll
    • "Jabberwocky" [6]
  • Samuel Coleridge
    • "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798 in fact) [7] (compare to Baudelaire's "Albatros" [8])
  • Edward Fitzgerald
  • Edward Lear
    • "The Akond of Swot" [10]
    • "Owl and the Pussycat" [11]
  • Lord Alfred Tennyson
    • "The Lady of Shalott" [12]

20th C.

US

  • e.e. cummings
    • "In just-spring" [13]
    • "Anyone Lived in a Pretty How Town" [14]
    • "Tictoc" [15]
  • T.S. Eliot
    • Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats[16]
  • Robert Frost
    • "The Mending Wall" [17]
    • "The Road Not Taken" [18]
  • Ishmael Reed
    • A Cowboy in the Boat of Ra [19]
    • "Dualism in Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man":
      I am outside of history. / i wish i had some peanuts, / it looks hungry there in its cage.
      i am inside of history. / its hungrier than i thot."
  • Adrienne Rich
    • "Diving into the Wreck" [20]
  • Shel Silverstein
  • Wallace Stevens

UK

  • Rudyard Kipling, "If" [22]
    • A Daily Mail article ([23]) on its Transvaal inspiration.
  • Ted Hughes, "Bride and Groom Lie Hidden for Three Days" ([24]