To Read a Poem

Přední strana obálky
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1992 - Počet stran: 411
To Read a Poem begins the study of poetry by examining whole poems, emphasizing the goal of reading is not the analysis of parts but the understanding of wholes. For a fuller definition of petry's elements, later chapters concentrate on parts. Selections are frequently modern or contemporary, supplementing them with biographical notes on all poets. To Read a Poem will help students read poetry with intelligence, gusto, and discrimination.

Obsah

Good Poems
1
William Carlos Williams so much depends
9
Robert Francis Hogwash
17
Robert Herrick Upon Julias Clothes
23
James Wright A Blessing
30
William Shakespeare Shall I compare thee to a summers day?
36
Tone with a Note on Intentions
42
Richard Wilbur Museum Piece
48
John Donne The Canonization
219
Louise Erdrich Owls
232
Hilda Doolittle Sea Rose
240
Seamus Heaney A Drink of Water
248
Gerard Manley Hopkins Spring and Fall
254
Ben Jonson To Heaven
260
Walter Savage Landor I Strove with None
267
Christopher Marlowe The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
281

Louise Bogan To an Artist to Take Heart
55
Ezra Pound The Return
61
William Shakespeare from Antony and Cleopatra
67
John Keats To Autumn
73
William Shakespeare from Richard II
83
Thomas Hardy The Oxen
87
John Milton On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
93
David Dooley How I Wrote It
102
Russell Edson Bringing a Dead Man Back into Life
109
Pablo Neruda Entierro en el Este and four American translations
118
Five Poets
124
Emily Dickinson
135
The Province of the Saved 141
142
Adrienne Rich
156
Aunt Jennifers Tigers 168A Marriage in the Sixties 169
169
Women 170 After Twenty Years 170 From an Old House
176
Matthew Arnold Dover Beach
182
Elizabeth Bishop The Fish
193
Samuel Taylor Coleridge Kubla Khan
206
Louis MacNeice The Sunlight on the Garden
287
David Mura Grandfather and Grandmother in Love
293
Gregory Orr The Sweater
300
A Letter
306
Charles Reznikoff A Deserter
312
William Shakespeare They that have power to hurt
318
Louis Simpson Walt Whitman at Bear Mountain
324
Gary Snyder Above Pate Valley
329
Mark Strand Always
336
Charles Tomlinson Paring the Apple
342
Walt Whitman A Farm Picture
350
William Wordsworth The World Is Too Much with Us
358
William Butler Yeats Sailing to Byzantium
364
John Ashbery Rivers and Mountains
386
Acknowledgments
387
Robert Graves In Broken Images 238
389
LiYoung Lee Between Seasons 272
390
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O autorovi (1992)

Donald Andrew Hall Jr. was born in New Haven, Connecticut on September 20, 1928. He received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University in 1951. His first collection of poetry, Exiles and Marriages, was published in 1955. His other collections included Without, The Museum of Clear Ideas, and The Painted Bed. He received several awards including the National Book Critics Circle Award for The One Day, the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize for The Happy Man, the Poetry Society of America's Robert Frost Silver medal, and the Ruth Lilly Prize for poetry. He served as poetry editor of The Paris Review from 1953 to 1962 and was the United States poet laureate for 2006-2007. He was also a memoirist, an essayist, and the author of textbooks and children's books. His memoirs were entitled Life Work and Unpacking the Boxes. His children's book, Ox-Cart Man illustrated by Barbara Cooney, won the Caldecott Medal. He received a National Medal of Arts in 2011. He died on June 23, 2018 at the age of 89.

Bibliografické údaje