Nineteenth-Century American PoetryPenguin, 1996 M10 1 - 496 páginas Whitman, Dickinson, and Melville occupy the center of this anthology of nearly three hundred poems, spanning the course of the century, from Joel Barlow to Edwin Arlington Robinson, by way of Bryant, Emerson, Longfellow, Whittier, Poe, Holmes, Jones Very, Thoreau, Lowell, and Lanier. For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators. |
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... verse. The word, however, is also commonly used to designate writing of especial eloquence, suggestiveness, emotional effect, and the like. In that sense, poetry and verse may be very different things. To William Cullen Bryant, poetry ...
... verse. The word, however, is also commonly used to designate writing of especial eloquence, suggestiveness, emotional effect, and the like. In that sense, poetry and verse may be very different things. To William Cullen Bryant, poetry ...
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... verses preserved in the letters and journals written by soldiers in the field. By the same token, we could know ... verse alone supplies the documentation. Prose, it appears, will reflect or reveal a history of something else—of ...
... verses preserved in the letters and journals written by soldiers in the field. By the same token, we could know ... verse alone supplies the documentation. Prose, it appears, will reflect or reveal a history of something else—of ...
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... verse of these poets, never mind that of their less able contemporaries, will wonder at the feelings of suffocation that would send the Modernists screaming for the exits in search of unbreathed air— only to find Whitman, Dickinson, and ...
... verse of these poets, never mind that of their less able contemporaries, will wonder at the feelings of suffocation that would send the Modernists screaming for the exits in search of unbreathed air— only to find Whitman, Dickinson, and ...
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... verse generally lacks what has always been considered the essence of poetry, that aura of mystery that surrounds poems like Emerson's “Days,” Poe's “Eldorado,” Whitman's “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking,” and Melville's “Pebbles ...
... verse generally lacks what has always been considered the essence of poetry, that aura of mystery that surrounds poems like Emerson's “Days,” Poe's “Eldorado,” Whitman's “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking,” and Melville's “Pebbles ...
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... verse, Sarah Piatt had something of a following in her day, largely, it seems, among women who found in her poems agreeable renditions of familiar domestic themes. This reputation has allowed twentieth-century literary historians either ...
... verse, Sarah Piatt had something of a following in her day, largely, it seems, among women who found in her poems agreeable renditions of familiar domestic themes. This reputation has allowed twentieth-century literary historians either ...
Contenido
Sección 1 | 42 |
Sección 2 | 106 |
Sección 3 | 107 |
Sección 4 | 108 |
Sección 5 | 123 |
Sección 6 | 128 |
Sección 7 | 129 |
Sección 8 | 131 |
Sección 17 | 297 |
Sección 18 | 327 |
Sección 19 | 328 |
Sección 20 | 332 |
Sección 21 | 334 |
Sección 22 | 349 |
Sección 23 | 361 |
Sección 24 | 364 |
Sección 9 | 132 |
Sección 10 | 149 |
Sección 11 | 168 |
Sección 12 | 172 |
Sección 13 | 173 |
Sección 14 | 175 |
Sección 15 | 177 |
Sección 16 | 251 |
Sección 25 | 368 |
Sección 26 | 409 |
Sección 27 | 410 |
Sección 28 | 415 |
Sección 29 | 426 |
Sección 30 | 430 |
Sección 31 | 431 |
Sección 32 | 435 |
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Términos y frases comunes
afar allusion is obscure behold beneath Betwixt bird blue breath brine chamber door Charlemagne child clansmen clouds Cricket crowd dark dead death Dickinson dreams drifted dropt earth Eginardus Emerson Emily Dickinson Evil propels eyes Fade faint fall fire Fireside Poets forever form'd Frederick Goddard Tuckerman Glittering going to Tilbury grass graves grow guess hair Hamish hand hear heart Hendricks House Herman Melville John Evereldown king kissed land laugh Lenore light lips live Longfellow look lover Luke Havergal Modernist mother mountains musing never Nirvâna o'er offspring taken soon once overhand Past-the poems poetic poetry praise readers rejoice RICHARD CORY roll round shine side a balance silent sing sleep smile song sonnets soul speak spirit stand star summer tapping tears thee thine things Thou thought Tilbury Town to-night Twas verse Very's wait walks wave wherever they call Whitman Whittier wild windy word