Poetry of the American Renaissance: A Diverse Anthology from the Romantic PeriodPaul Kane G. Braziller, 1995 - 383 من الصفحات This anthology, the most comprehensive available in a single volume, brings together all of the major poets of the American Renaissance along with many lesser-known poets now being rediscovered. A critical introduction situated the poetry in its historical context, informative headnotes introduce each poet, and notes to the poems provide helpful explanations to unusual words and references. This anthology, for the first time, presents the brilliant poetic legacy of the American Renaissance in a convenient and accessible format. |
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النتائج 1-3 من 57
الصفحة 17
... poets wrote , and we might trace the rhetorical and didactic element so prominent in the poetry of the period to filiations between poetry and oratory , to the recog- nition that the poet spoke to a public that expected edification ...
... poets wrote , and we might trace the rhetorical and didactic element so prominent in the poetry of the period to filiations between poetry and oratory , to the recog- nition that the poet spoke to a public that expected edification ...
الصفحة 284
... poet in his own time , though his admirers included Emerson , Hawthorne , Longfellow , and probably his friend Alfred , Lord Tennyson . He published only one volume of poetry , Poems ( 1860 ) ; though that book was reprinted three times ...
... poet in his own time , though his admirers included Emerson , Hawthorne , Longfellow , and probably his friend Alfred , Lord Tennyson . He published only one volume of poetry , Poems ( 1860 ) ; though that book was reprinted three times ...
الصفحة 335
... Poet - It is That " This was a Poet - It is That Distills amazing sense From ordinary Meanings — And Attar so immense From the familiar species That perished by the Door- We wonder it was not Ourselves Arrested it - before- Of Pictures ...
... Poet - It is That " This was a Poet - It is That Distills amazing sense From ordinary Meanings — And Attar so immense From the familiar species That perished by the Door- We wonder it was not Ourselves Arrested it - before- Of Pictures ...
المحتوى
INTRODUCTION BY PAUL KANE | 23 |
WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT 17941878 | 30 |
MARIA GOWEN BROOKS 1794?1845 | 39 |
حقوق النشر | |
27 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
American American Renaissance angels beautiful beneath bird blood bloom born breath Brooks child clouds dark dead death Dickinson door doth dreams earth Edgar Allan Poe Emerson Emily Dickinson eyes father feet Fireside Poets flowers Frederick Goddard Tuckerman gaze GEORGE MOSES HORTON grass grave gray Greek mythology hand Harvard hath Hawthorne hear heard heart Heaven Henry David Thoreau HENRY HOWARD BROWNELL hills hour land leaves light living Longfellow look MARIA GOWEN BROOKS Melville Menken moon mother never night o'er ocean once pass Phoebe Cary poems poet poetry published river shadows shore sing sleep song soul sound spirit stars stood sweet tears thee thine Thoreau thou thought Timrod transcendentalist verse voice waves Whitman Whittier wild William Ellery Channing wind woman women wood word writing Zóphiël