Natural History Verse: An AnthologyGerry Cotter Helm, 1988 - 345 sider An anthology of nature poetry mainly from the 19th century onwards. The poems are divided into categories, illustrating how styles have changed from the poetry of the Romantics to the realism of the 20th century. |
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Side 6
... poet regularly puts himself into his verse . The poet as passive observer is replaced by the poet as active participant , and the man most responsible for this was William Wordsworth . One tends to think of Wordsworth as the high priest ...
... poet regularly puts himself into his verse . The poet as passive observer is replaced by the poet as active participant , and the man most responsible for this was William Wordsworth . One tends to think of Wordsworth as the high priest ...
Side 7
... poet is alone , while the daffodils are described in human terms - ' a crowd / A host ' , ' dancing ' . The various natural elements are then interlinked , as the flowers are compared to the stars in the sky and the waves dance just as ...
... poet is alone , while the daffodils are described in human terms - ' a crowd / A host ' , ' dancing ' . The various natural elements are then interlinked , as the flowers are compared to the stars in the sky and the waves dance just as ...
Side 12
... poet who wrote only in the twentieth century was Edward Thomas , a writer whose poetic flowering was tragically cut short by his death in the First World War . His landscape was the gentle hills of Wiltshire and Hampshire , a district ...
... poet who wrote only in the twentieth century was Edward Thomas , a writer whose poetic flowering was tragically cut short by his death in the First World War . His landscape was the gentle hills of Wiltshire and Hampshire , a district ...
Indhold
CONTENTS | 1 |
BIRDS | 15 |
On Scaring some Waterfowl Robert Burns | 21 |
Copyright | |
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A. C. BENSON Autumn beauty beneath birds bloom blue boughs breath bright brook clouds D. H. LAWRENCE daisies dark dead deep delight dost doth dream earth Emily Dickinson eyes fear fish flood flowers forest Frost GEORGE AMABILE GEORGE MEREDITH gleam glide gloom golden grass green hath haunts hear heart heaven hills JOHN CLARE leaves light lonely look Marianne Moore marsh marshes of Glynn moon mountains Nature nest never night o'er PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY pine Poems poetry purple quiet rain river roaring ROBERT ROBERT BRIDGES Robert Frost rock round shade shadow shine shore silent sing skies sleep snow soft song soul Spring stream summer sweet thee thine things THOMAS HARDY thou art thro trees voice wandering warm waters waves weeds wild WILLIAM WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind wings winter woods zunny woodlands