The Norton anthology of poetry:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, London
W. W. Norton
[2018]
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Ausgabe: | Sixth edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | LXVIII, 2157, A 155 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9780393679021 9780393283280 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents PREFACE lxi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS lxvii CÆDMON’S HYMN (translated by John Pope) 1 From BEOWULF (translated by Seamus Heaney) 2 RIDDLES (translated by Richard Hamer) 1 (‘‘I am a lonely being, scarred by swords”) 10 2 (“My dress is silent when I tread the ground”) 11 3 (“A moth ate words; a marvellous event”) 11 10 THE WIFE’S LAMENT (translated by Richard Hamer) 11 THE SEAFARER (translated by Maryjo Salter) 13 ANONYMOUS LYRICS OF THE THIRTEENTH AND FOURTEENTH CENTURIES Now Go th Sun under Wood 17 Ubi Sunt Qui ante Nos Fuerunt? 17 Alison 19 Fowls in the Frith 20 I Am of Ireland 20 Lent Is Come with Love to Town 21 Sumer Is leumen In 22 GEOFFREY CHAUCER (ca. 1343-1400) The Canterbury Tales 24 The General Prologue 24 The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale Troilus and Criseide 73 Cantus Troili 73 Lyrics 73 To Rosamond 73 Truth 74 Complaint to His Purse 75 To His Scribe Adam 76 V 17 24 44
vi ļ CONTENTS WILLIAM LANGLAND (ca. ԼՅՅՕ-ca. 1400) From The Vision of Piers Plowman 76 76 From PEARL 80 ANONYMOUS LYRICS OF THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY Adam Lay Bound 83 I Sing of a Maiden 83 Out of Your Sleep Arise and Wake 84 I Have a Young Sister 85 I Have a Gentle Cock 86 Timor Mortis 87 The Corpus Christi Carol 88 Western Wind 88 A Carol of Agincourt 89 The Sacrament of the Altar 90 Sec! Here, My Heart 90 83 WILLIAM DUNBAR (ca. 1460-ca. 1525) Lament for the Makers 90 Sweet Rose of Virtue 93 90 JOHN SKELTON (1460-1529) Mannerly Margery Milk and Ale 94 To Mistress Margaret Hussey 95 From Colin Clout 96 From Philip Sparotv 98 94 EARLY MODERN BALLADS The Douglas Tragedy 101 Lord Randal 104 The Three Ravens 105 The Twa Corbies 106 Sir Patrick Spens 107 The Unquiet Crave 109 The Wife of Usher s Well 1 10 Bonny Barbara Allan I 12 Mary Hamilton 1 13 Get Up and Bar the Door 1 16 The Knight and Shepherd’s Daughter 101 1 17 ANONYMOUS ELIZABETHAN AND JACOBEAN POEMS Love Me Little, Love Me Long 122 Fine Knacks for Ladies 123 To His Love 124 Weep You No More, Sad Fountains 125 There Is a Lady Sweet and Kind 125 The Silver Swan 126 A Song Bewailing the Time of Christmas, So Much Decayed in England 127 Tom o’ Bedlam s Song 128 122
CONTENTS I vii THOMAS WYATT (1503-1542) [The long love, that in my thought doth harbor] 131 [Whoso list to hunt] 131 [My galley charged with forgetfulness] 132 [They flee from me] 132 [Patience, though I have not] 133 [My lute awake!] 134 [Is it possible] 135 [Forget not yet the tried intent] 136 [Blame not my lute] 136 [What should 1 say] 137 [Lucks, my fair falcon] 138 Of His Love, That Pricked Her Finger with a Needle 139 [Stand whoso list upon the slipper top] 139 [Mine own John Poins] 139 131 HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY (ca. 1517-1547) The Soote Season 142 Love, That Doth Reign and Live within My Thought 143 Wyatt Resteth Here 143 So Cruel Prison 144 142 ANNE ASKEW (1521-1546) The Ballad Which Anne Askew Made and Sang When She Was in Newgate 146 146 QUEEN ELIZABETH 1 (1533-1603) [When I was fair and young] 147 [The doubt of future foes exiles my present joy] [Ah silly pug, wert thou so sore afraid] 149 147 148 GEORGE GASCOIGNE (ca. 1534-1577) And If I Did, What Then? 149 For That Fie Looked Not upon Her 150 Gascoigne’s Lullaby 1 50 149 ISABELLA WHITNEY (11. 1567-1573) A Sweet Nosegay 1 52 A Communication Which the Author Had to London, Before She Made Her Will 1 52 From The Manner of Her Will, What She Left to London, and to All Those in It, at Her Departing 153 152 CH1DIOCK T1CFIBORNE (1562?-1586) [My prime of youth is but a frost of cares] 156 SIR WALTER RALEGH (ca. 1552-1618) A Vision upon the Fairy Queen 157 The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd 1 58 The Passionate Man’s Pilgrimage 1 58 156 157
viii I CONTENTS The Lie 160 Nature, That Washed Her Hands in Milk 162 [If Cynthia be a queen, a princess, and supreme] [Fortune hath taken thee away, my love] 163 163 EDMUND SPENSER (1552-1599) The Shcpheardes Calender 164 Aprill 164 The Faerie Queene 171 Book 1, Canto 1 172 Book 1, Canto 2 186 Amoretti 198 1 (“Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands”) 198 8 (“More then most faire, full of the living fire”) 198 15 (“Ye tradefull Merchants that with weary toyle”) 199 23 (“Penelope for her Ulisses sake”) 199 54 (“Of this worlds Theatre in which we stay”) 199 67 (“Lyke as a huntsman after wear) chace”) 200 68 (“Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day”) 200 70 (“Fresh spring the herald of loves mighty king”) 201 71 (“I joy to see how in your drawen work”) 201 75 (“One day 1 wrote her name upon the strand”) 202 79 (“Men call you fayre, and you doe credit it”) 202 81 (“Fayre is my love, when her fayre golden heares”) 202 89 (“Lyke as the Culver on the bared bough”) 203 Epithalamion 203 164 FÜLKE GREVILLE (1554-1628) Caelica 214 4 (“You little stars that live in skies”) 214 39 (“The nurse-life wheat within his green husk growing”) 214 2 14 JOHN LYLY (1554-1606) Cupid and My Campaspe 215 Oh, for a Bowl of Fat Canary 21 5 215 SIR PHILIP SIDNEY (1554-1586) The Old Arcadia 216 [Ye Goatherd Gods] 216 Crown of Dizains 219 (“I joy in grief and do detest all joys”) 219 (“I think from me, not from my woes, to part”) 219 (“Nor of my fortune ought, but mischief crave”) 219 (“Enough to make a fertile mind lie waste”) 219 (“So close unto myself my wracks do lie”) 220 (“On rock, despair,
the burial of my bliss”) 220 (“Vain is their pain who labour in despair”) 220 (“Thus, thus, alas, I had my loss in chase”) 220 221 (“But ah, her flight hath my dead relics spent”) (“In earthly fetters feel a lasting hell”) 221 216
CONTENTS I ix (“I joy in grief and do detest all joys”) 221 What Length of Verse? 221 Certain Sonnets 222 1 (“The nightingale, as soon as April bringeth”) 222 30 (“Ring out your bells, let mourning show s be spread) 223 Astrophil and Stella 224 1 (“Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show”) 224 14 (“Alas, have I not pain enough, my friend”) 224 21 (“Your words my friend [right healthful caustics] blame”) 225 25 (“The wisest scholar of the wight most wise”) 225 31 (“With how sad steps, Oh Moon, thou climb’st the skies”) 226 39 (“Come sleep, Oh sleep, the certain knot of peace”) 226 47 (“What, have 1 thus betrayed my liberty?”) 227 48 (“Soul’s joy, bend not those morning stars from me”) 227 49 (“l on my horse, and Love on me, doth try”) 227 52 (“A strife is grown between Virtue and Love”) 228 63 (“O Grammar rules, о now your virtues show”) 229 71 (“Who will in fairest book of Nature know ”) 229 72 (“Desire, though thou my old companion art”) 229 Fourth Song (“Only joy, now here you are”) 229 Seventh Song (“Whose senses in so evil consort, their stepdame Nature lays”) 231 90 (“Stella, think not that 1 by verse seek fame”) 231 107 (“Stella, since thou so right a princess art”) 232 GEORGE PEELE (1557-1596) His Golden Locks Time Hath to Silver Turned Hot Sun, Cool Fire 233 232 232 THOMAS LODGE (1558-1625) Rosalind’s Madrigal 234 234 ROBERT SOUTHWELL (ca. 1561-1595) The Burning Babe 235 The Nativity of Christ 235 235 MARY SIDNEY (1561-1621) Psalm 58: Si Vere Utiqite 236 Psalm 1 14: In Exitu Israel 237 To the Thrice-Sacred Queen felizabeth 236 238 SAMUEL DANIEL
(1563-1619) Delia 242 1 (“Unto the boundless Ocean of thy beauty”) 242 2 (“Go wailing verse, the infants of my love”) 242 6 (“Fair is my love, and cruel as she’s fair”) 243 36 (“But love whilst that thou mayst be loved again”) 37 (“When men shall find thy llow er, thy glory, pass”) 242 243 243
x I CONTENTS 49 (“Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night”) 53 (“Unhappy pen and ill accepted papers”) 244 Ulysses and the Siren 245 Are They Shadows 246 244 MICHAEL DRAYTON (1563-1631) A Roundelay between Two Shepherds 247 Idea 248 To the Reader of These Sonnets 248 6 (“How many paltry, foolish, painted things”) 248 14 (“If he from heaven that filched that living fire”) 249 61 (“Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part”) 249 CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564-1593) Hero and Leander 250 The Passionate Shepherd to His Love 268 WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564-1616) Sonnets 269 Dedication 269 1 (“From fairest creatures we desire increase”) 269 2 (“When forty winters shall besiege thy brow”) 270 3 (“Look in thy glass and tell the face thou viewest”) 270 5 (“Those hours that with gentle work did frame”) 270 12 (“When I do count the clock that tells the time”) 271 15 (“When I consider everything that grows”) 271 18 (“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”) 272 20 (“A woman’s face, with nature’s own hand painted”) 272 29 (“When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes”) 273 30 (“When to the sessions of sweet silent thought”) 273 33 (“Full many a glorious morning have I seen”) 273 35 (“No more be grieved at that which thou hast done”) 274 55 (“Not marble, nor the gilded monuments”) 274 60 (“Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore”) 275 65 (“Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea”) 275 71 (“No longer mourn for me when I am dead”) 275 73 (“That time of year thou mayst in me behold”) 276 76 (“Why is my verse so barren of new pride”) 276 87 (“Farewell, thou art too
dear for my possessing”) 277 94 (“They that have power to hurt and will do none”) 277 97 (“How like a winter hath my absence been”) 277 106 (“When in the chronicle of wasted time”) 278 107 (“Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul”) 278 116 (“Let me not to the marriage of true minds”) 279 126 (“O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy pow’r”) 279 129 (“Th’expense of spirit in a waste of shame”) 279 130 (“My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun”) 280 135 (“Whoever hath her wish, thou hast thy Will”) 280 136 (“If thy soul check thee that I come so near”) 281 138 (“When my love swears that she is made of truth”) 281
CONTENTS 144 (“Two loves 1 have of comfort and despair ) 146 ( Poor soul, the center of my sinful earth”) The Phoenix and the Turtle 283 Songs from the Plays 285 When Daisies Pied 285 Under the Greenwood Tree 286 Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind 286 It Was a Lover and His Lass 287 Sigh No More 287 Oh Mistress Mine 288 Come Away, Come Away, Death 288 When That I Was and a Little Tiny Boy 289 Fear No More the Heat o’ the Sun 289 Full Fathom Five 290 Where the Bee Sucks, There Suck I 290 Orpheus with His Lute Made Trees 291 I xi 282 282 THOMAS CAMPION (1567-1620) My Sweetest Lesbia 291 I Care Not for These Ladies 292 Follow Thy Fair Sun 293 When to Her Lute Corinna Sings 293 When Thou Must Home 294 Rose-cheeked Laura 294 Now Winter Nights Enlarge 295 There Is a Garden in Her Face 295 THOMAS NASHE (1567-1601) Summer’s Last Will and Testament 296 [Spring, the sweet spring] 296 [Adieu, farewell, earth’s bliss] 296 296 AĽMIL1A LANYER (1569-1645) From Salve Deus Rexjudaeorum The Description of Cooke-ham 298 298 301 JOHN DONNE (1572-1631) The Good-Morrow 306 Song (“Go and catch a falling star”) 307 Woman’s Constancy 308 I he Sun Rising 308 The Canonization 309 Song (“Sweetest love, I do not go”) 311 I he Anniversary 312 Love’s Growth 313 A Valediction of Weeping 314 Love s Alchemy 3 14 A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day, Being the Shortest Day A Valediction Forbidding Mourning 317 The Ecstasy 318 306 315
x іі I CONTENTS The Funeral 320 The Flea 321 The Relic 322 Elegy VII 323 Elegy XIX. To His Mistress Going to Bed 324 Satire III 325 Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward 328 La Corona 329 1. {“Deign at my hands this crown of prayer and praise ) 329 2. Annunciation 330 3. Nativity 330 4. Temple 331 5. Crucifying 331 6. Resurrection 331 7. Ascension 332 Holy Sonnets 332 1 (“Thou hast made me, and shall thy work decay?”) 332 5 (“I am a little world made cunningly”) 333 7 (“At the round earth’s imagined corners”) 333 9 (“If poisonous minerals, and if that tree”) 334 10 (“Death, be not proud, though some have called thee”) 334 14 (“Batter my heart, three-personed God”) 335 18 (“Show me, dear Christ, thy spouse so bright and clear”) 335 Elegy on Mistress Bulstrode 336 A Hymn to God the Father 338 Hymn to God My God, in My Sickness 339 BEN JONSON (1572-1637) To the Reader 340 On My First Daughter 340 On My First Son 340 On Spies 341 To Fool or Knave 341 To Sir Henry Cary 341 On Playwright 342 To Elizabeth, Countess of Rutland 342 On English Monsieur 342 To John Donne 343 Inviting a Friend to Supper 343 On Gut 344 To Penshurst 345 Song: To Celia (I) 347 Song: To Celia (II) 348 On Lucy, Countess of Bedford 348 Still to Be Neat 349 A Fit of Rhyme against Rhyme 349 To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author Mr. William Shakespeare 351 A Flymn to God the Father 353 Her Triumph 354 An Elegy 355 340
CONTENTS I xiii An Ode to Himself 356 To the Immortal Memory and Friendship of That Noble Pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry Morison 357 Though I Am Young and Cannot Tell 361 A Sonnet to the Noble Lady, the Lady Mary Wroth 361 Slow, Slow, Fresh Fount 362 Queen and Huntress 362 JOHN FLETCHER (1579-1625) Take, Oh, Take Those Lips Away [Come, Sleep] 363 363 363 LUCY RUSSELL (1580-1627) [Death be not proud, thy hand gave not this blow] 364 364 EDWARD HERBERT (1582-1648) Sonnet of Black Beauty 365 Another Sonnet to Black Itself 366 365 MARYWROTH (1587-1651?) Pamphilia to Amphilanthus 366 I (“When night’s black mantle could most darkness prove”) 366 3 (“Yet is there hope: then Love but play thy part”) 367 II (“You endless torment that my rest oppress”) 368 22 (“Like to the Indians, scorched with the sun”) 368 25 (“Poor eyes be blind, the light behold no more”) 369 37 (“Night, welcome art thou to my mind distressed”) 369 74 Song (“Love a child is ever crying”) 369 A Crown of Sonnets Dedicated to Love 370 77 (“In this strange labyrinth how shall I turn”) 370 78 (“Is to leave all and take the thread of Love”) 371 79 (His flames are joyes, his bands true lovers’might) 371 82 (“He may our prophet, and our tutor prove”) 372 85 (“But where they may return with honor’s grace”) 372 89 (“Free from all fogs but shining fair, and clear”) 373 90 (“Except my heart which you bestow’d before”) 373 Urania 374 Song ( Love what art thou? A vain thought”) 374 366 ROBERT HERRICK (1591-1674) The Argument of His Book 375 The Vine 375 To the Sour Reader 376 Delight in Disorder 376 Corinnas Going
A-Maying 377 To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time Upon Julia’s Breasts 379 Upon a Child That Died 379 His Prayer to Ben Jonson 379 The Night Piece, to Julia 380 375 378
X Iv I CONTENTS Upon Julia’s Clothes 380 Upon Prue, His Maid 381 Upon Ben Jonson 381 An Ode for Him 381 The Pillar of Fame 382 Neutrality Loathsome 382 To His Conscience 382 To Find God 383 The White Island, or Place of the Blest 383 HENRY KING (1592-1669) An Exequy to His Matchless, Never-to-Be-Forgotten Friend The Boy’s Answer to the Blackmoor 387 GEORGE HERBERT (1593-1633) The Temple: Sacred Poems and Private Ejaculations The Altar 388 Redemption 388 Easter Wings 389 Sin (I) 390 Affliction (I) 390 Prayer (I) 392 The Temper (I) 393 Jordan (I) 394 The Windows 394 Denial 395 Vanity (I) 395 Virtue 396 Man 397 Life 398 Artillery 399 The Collar 399 The Pulley 400 The Flower 401 The Forerunners 402 Discipline 403 The Elixir 404 Death 405 Love (III) 405 388 388 THOMAS CAREW (ca. 1595-1640) A Song (“Ask me no more where Jove bestows”) 406 The Spring 407 Mediocrity in Love Rejected 407 Song. To My Inconstant Mistress 408 An Elegy upon the Death of the Dean of Paul’s, Dr. John Donne JAMES SHIRLEY (1596-1666) Ajax 411 Dirge 411 384 384 406 408 411
CONTENTS THE MASSACHUSETTS BAY PSALM BOOK (1640) Psalm 58 Psalm 114 I xv 412 412 413 EDMUND WALLEK (1606-1687) Song (“Go, lovely rose! ) 414 Of the Last Verses in the Book 414 414 JOHN MILTON (1608-1674) On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity 415 On Shakespeare. 1630. 423 L Allegro 424 Il Penseroso 427 How Soon Hath Time 432 Lycidas 432 Cornus 437 Song (“Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph, that liv’st unseen”) Song (“Sabrina fair”) 438 Song (“By the rushy-fringed bank”) 438 To Mr. H. Lawes, On His Airs 439 I Did but Prompt the Age 439 To the Lord General Cromwell 440 When I Consider How My Light Is Spent 440 On the Late Massacre in Piedmont 441 Methought I Saw 442 Paradise Lost 442 The Verse 442 Book 1 [The Invocation] 443 Book 3 [The Invocation] 444 From Book 4 446 From Book 7 448 Book 9 452 From Book 12 478 From Samson Agonistes 479 415 SIB JOHN SUCKLING (1609-1642) Song (“Why so pale and wan, fond lover?”) 480 Sonnet II (“Of thee, kind hoy, I ask no red and white”) 481 Upon My Lady Carlisle’s Walking in Hampton Court Garden A Ballad upon a Wedding 483 Out upon It! 486 437 480 482 ANNE BRADSTREET (ca. 1612-1672) In Honor of that High and Mighty Princess, Queen Elizabeth, of most happy memory 487 The Prologue 491 Before the Birth of One of Her Children 492 To My Dear and Loving Husband 493 The Author to Her Book 493 A Letter to Her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment 494 Here Follows Some Verses upon the Burning of Our House July 10th, 1666 495 487
xvi I CONTENTS RICHARD CRASHAW (1613-1649) On the Baptized Ethiopian 496 To the Infant Martyrs 497 Upon the Infant Martyrs 497 The Tear 497 496 ABRAHAM COWLEY (1618-1667) The Wish 498 Anacreontics 500 II. Drinking 500 498 RICHARD LOVELACE (1618-1658) To Althea, from Prison 500 To Lucasta, Going to the Wars 501 To Amarantha, That She Would Dishevel Her Hair The Grasshopper 502 500 502 LUCY HUTCHINSON (1620-1681) Order and Disorder 504 From Canto I 504 Elegy 3: Another on the Sunshine 505 504 ANDREW MARVELL (1621-1678) The Coronet 507 Bermudas 508 A Dialogue between the Soul and Body 509 To His Coy Mistress 510 The Fair Singer 511 The Definition of Love 512 The Picture of Little T.C. in a Prospect of Flowers The Mower against Gardens 514 The Mower to the Glowworms 515 The Garden 515 An Horadan Ode 517 507 HENRYVAUGHAN (1621-1695) Regeneration 521 The Retreat 524 The World 524 They Are All Gone into the World of Light! The Waterfall 527 The Night 529 513 521 526 MARGARET CAVENDISH (1623-1673) An Apology for Writing So Much upon This Book Of Many Worlds in This World 531 The Hunting of the Hare 532 Of a Spider’s Web 534 531 531
CONTENTS JOHN DRYDEN (1631-1700) Song from The Indian Emperor 535 Song from Troilus and Cressida 535 From Absalom and Achitophel: A Poem Mac Flecknoe 552 To the Memory of Mr. Oldham 558 A Song for St. Cecilia’s Day 559 I xvii 535 536 KATHERINE PHILIPS (1632-1664) Epitaph 562 To Mr. Henry Lawes 562 To My Excellent Lucasia, on Our Friendship To Mrs. M. A. upon Absence 564 562 564 THOMAS TRAHERNE (1637-1674) The Salutation 566 Wonder 567 To the Same Purpose 568 Shadows in the Water 569 566 APHRABEHN (1640?-1689) Song (“Love Armed”) 571 The Disappointment 572 On a Juniper Tree, Cut Down to Make Busks 576 Song (“On Her Loving Two Equally”) 578 On the Death of the Late Earl of Rochester 579 To the Fair Clarinda, Who Made Love to Me, Imagined More Than Woman 581 A Thousand Martyrs 582 571 EDWARD TAYLOR (ca. 1642-1729) Meditation 8 (“I kenning through astronomy divine”) Upon Wedlock, and Death of Children 584 Upon a Spider Catching a Fly 585 Housewifery 586 583 583 JOHN WILMOT, EARL OF ROCHESTER (1647-1680) The Disabled Debauchee 587 The Imperfect Enjoyment 589 The Mock Song 590 A Song of a Young Lady to Her Ancient Lover 591 587 ANNE KILLIGREW (1660-1685) Alexandreis 592 592 ANNE FINCH (1661-1720) The Introduction 594 The Spleen 596 Adam Posed 600 594
xviii I CONTENTS To Death 600 Friendship between Ephelia and Ardelia 601 A Nocturnal Reverie 601 The Answer (To Pope’s Impromptu) 603 On Myself 604 MATTHEW PRIOR (1664-1721) A Fable 604 To a Lady: She Refusing to Continue a Dispute with Me, and Leaving Me in the Argument 605 An Ode 606 604 JONATHAN SWIFT (1667-1745) A Description of the Morning 607 A Description of a City Shower 607 Stella’s Rirthday 609 The Lady’s Dressing Room 611 A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D. 607 ISAAC WATTS (1674-1748) The Day of Judgment 628 A Prospect of Heaven Makes Death Easy Our God, Our Help 630 Psalm 58 631 Psalm 114 632 614 616 628 629 JOHN GAY (1685-1732) Songs from The Beggar’s Opera 633 Act I, Air X—“Thomas, I Cannot” 633 Act I, Air XI—“A Soldier and a Sailor” 634 Act I, Air XVI—“Over the Hills, and Far Away” 634 Act II, Air IV—“Cotillion” 634 Act II, Air XXII—“The Lass of Paties Mill” 635 Act III, Air XXVII—“Green Sleeves” 635 633 ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744) An Essay on Criticism 635 Part II 635 The Rape of the Lock 644 Epistle to Miss Blount 662 An Essay on Man, in Four Epistles From Epistle 1 663 Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot 666 Impromptu 676 The Dunciad 677 From Book 4 677 635 663 LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU (1689-1762) Saturday (The Small-Pox) 678 A Receipt to Cure the Vapors 680 678
CONTENTS I xix Epistle from Mrs. Yonge to Her Husband 681 The Reasons That Induced Dr. Swift to Write a Poem Called the Lady’s Dressing Room 683 JAMES THOMSON (1700-1748) The Seasons 686 From Winter 686 686 CHARLES WESLEY (1707-1788) Hymns 689 [My God! I Know, I Feel Thee Mine] [Come on, My Partners in Distress] 689 689 691 SAMUEL JOHNSON (1709-1784) Prologue Spoken by Mr. Garrick 692 The Vanity of Human Wishes 694 On the Death of Dr. Robert Levet 702 692 THOMAS GRAY (1716-1771) Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College 703 Ode (On the Death of a Favorite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Goldfishes) 706 Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard 707 Sonnet (On the Death of Mr. Richard West) 710 703 WILLIAM COLLINS (1721-1759) Ode Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 Ode on the Poetical Character 711 Ode to Evening 713 711 711 JEAN ELLIOT (1727-1805) The Flowers of the Forest 71 5 715 CHRISTOPHER SMART (1722-1771 ) From Jubilate Agno 716 From A Song to David 718 Psalm 58 722 Psalm 114 723 716 OLIVER GOLDSMITH (ca. 1730-1774) When Lovely Woman Stoops to Folly 724 The Deserted Village 725 724 WILLIAM COWPER (1731-1800) Olney Hymns 734 Light Shining out of Darkness 734 Epitaph on a Hare 734 The Task 736 From Book IV: The Winter Evening 736 From Book VL The Winter Walk at Noon 734 737
XX I CONTENTS The Castaway 741 Lines Written during a Period of Insanity 743 ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD (1743-1825) The Rights of Woman 744 To the Poor 745 Life 745 744 HANNAH MORE (1745-1833) Inscription in a Beautiful Retreat Called Fair) Bower From Slavery: A Poem 748 CHARLOTTE SMITH (1749-1806) Written in the Church Yard at Middleton in Sussex To the Shade of Burns 750 Written near a Port on a Dark Evening 751 Written in October 751 Nepenthe 752 Stanzas 752 Ode to Death 753 From Beachy Head 754 746 746 750 750 PHILIP FRENEAU (1752-1832) The Indian Burying Ground 755 To Sir Toby 756 755 PHILLIS WHEATLEY (ca. 1753-1784) A Farewell to America. To Mrs. S. W. 758 On Being Brought from Africa to America 760 To S. M., a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Works On Imagination 761 758 760 GEORGE CRABBE (1754-1832) From The Parish Register 762 The Borough 769 From Letter XXII, The Poor of The Borough: Peter Grimes WILLIAM BLAKE (1757-1827) To the Evening Star 771 Song (“How sweet I roam’d from field to field”) To the Muses 772 Songs of Innocence 772 Introduction (“Piping down the valleys wild”) The Lamb 773 The Little Black Boy 773 The Little Boy Lost 774 The Little Boy Found 775 The Divine Image 775 Holy Thursday 776 762 769 771 771 772
CONTENTS Songs of Experience 776 Introduction (“Hear the voice of the Bard!’’) The Clod the Pebble 777 Holy Thursday 777 The Sick Rose 778 The Tyger 778 Ah! Sun-flower 779 The Garden of Love 779 London 780 A Poison Tree 780 A Divine Image 780 [I asked a thief] 781 [Mock on Mock on Voltaire Rousseau] 781 Eternity 782 The Question Answerd 782 Auguries of Innocence 782 Milton 785 [And did those feet in ancient time] 785 For the Sexes: The Gates of Paradise 786 To The Accuser who is The God of This World ROBERT BURNS (1759-1796) Coming through the Rye 786 Green Grow the Rashes 787 To a Mouse 788 Holy Willie’s Prayer 789 To a Louse 792 Auld Lang Syne 793 John Anderson My Jo 794 Tam o’ Shanter 794 The Banks o’ Doon 799 A Red Red Rose 800 Oh Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast JOANNA BAILLIE (1762-1851) A Mother to Her Waking Infant Song: Woo’d and Married and A’ xx ¡ 776 786 786 800 801 801 802 WILLIAM WORDSWORTH ( 1770-1850) Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey 804 The Ruined Cottage 807 The Prelude 819 From Book I (“Fair seedtime had my soul, and I grew up”) [There was a Boy] 826 [Strange fits of passion I have known] 827 Song (“She dwelt among th’ untrodden ways”) 828 [A slumber did my spirit seal] 828 [Three years she grew in sun and shower] 829 Resolution and Independence 830 It Is a Beauteous Evening 834 804 819
xxii I CONTENTS London, 1802 834 Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 The Banished Negroes 833 Nuns Fret Not at Their Convent s Narrow Boom 836 My Heart Leaps Up 836 Ode: Intimations of Immortality 837 I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud 841 She Was a Phantom of Delight 842 The World Is Too Much with Us 843 Surprised by Joy 843 Scorn Not the Sonnet 844 835 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE (1772-1834) The Aeolian Harp 844 This Lime-Tree Bovver My Prison 846 Kuhia Khan 848 Frost at Midnight 849 France: An Ode 851 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner 854 Dejection: An Ode 870 844 WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR ( 1 775-1864) Past Ruined Ilion Helen Lives 874 To Robert Browning 874 Dying Speech of an Old Philosopher 875 Memory 875 874 GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON ( 1788-1824) She Walks in Beauty 876 Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte 876 The Destruction ol Sennacherib 882 When We Two Parted 883 So We ll Go No More A-Roving 884 Donjuan 884 Fragment on the Back ol the Ms. of Canto I 884 From Canto the First. Stanzas 1 — 1 19 885 Stanzas (When a Man Hath No Freedom to Fight for at Home) On This Day I Complete My Thirty-sixth Year 91 1 876 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY ( 1 792-1822) To Wordsworth 912 Mutability 91 3 Hymn to Intellectual Beauty 913 Mont Blanc 916 Ozymandias 919 The Mask of Anarchy 920 Ode to the West Wind 932 To a Skylark 934 Adonais 937 911 912
CONTENTS JOHN CLARE (1793-1864) [I found a ball of grass among the hay] The Skylark 951 [The Badger] 952 The Gipsy Camp 953 Song (“Love lives beyond”) 954 First Love 954 I Am 955 I xxiii 951 95 1 FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS (1793-1835) England’s Dead 956 The Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers in New England Casabianca 959 Indian Woman’s Death-Song 960 956 957 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT (1794-1878) To a Waterfowl 961 Thanatopsis 962 961 JOHN KEATS (1795-1821) On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer 964 [Happy is England! I could be content] 965 On Sitting Down to Read King Lear Once Again When I Have Fears 966 To Homer 966 The Eve of St. Agnes 967 On the Sonnet 977 La Belle Dame sans Merci 977 Ode to Psyche 979 Ode to a Nightingale 980 Ode on Melancholy 983 Ode on a Grecian Urn 984 To Autumn 985 Bright Star 986 This Living Hand 986 964 965 WILLIAM BARNES (1801-1886) The Blackbird 987 Lwonesomeness 988 Sister Gone 989 987 L.E.L. [LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON] ( 1802-1838) Songs 990 The Marriage Vow 992 990 RALPH WALDO EMERSON (1803-1882) Concord Hymn 992 The Rhodora 993 The Snow-Storm 993 992
xxiv CONTENTS Ode (Inscribed to W. H. Channing) Intellect 996 Brahma 997 Days 997 Fate 997 994 THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES (1803-1849) A Crocodile 998 The Phantom-Wooer 998 Ballad of Human Life 999 998 ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING (1806-1861) Sonnets from the Portuguese 1000 1 (“I thought once how Theocritus had sung”) 1000 33 (“Yes, call me by my pet-name! let me hear ) 1000 43 (“How do I love thee? Let me count the ways”) 1001 Aurora Leigh 1001 From Book 5 [Poets and the Present Age] 1001 A Musical Instrument 1003 1000 HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW (1807-1882) From Evangeline 1005 The Jewish Cemetery at Newport 1005 The Song of Hiawatha 1007 From III: Hiawatha’s Childhood 1007 Snow-Flakes 1009 The Cross of Snow 1010 1005 JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER (1807-1892) Telling the Bees 1010 From Snowbound: A Winter Idyl 1012 1010 EDGAR ALLAN POE (1809-1849) Sonnet—To Science 1014 To Helen 1014 The City in the Sea 1015 The Raven 1016 Eldorado 1019 Annabel Lee 1020 1014 EDWARD FITZGERALD (1809-1883) Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam of Naishápúr ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON (1809-1892) Mariana 1032 The Kraken 1034 The Lady of Shalott 1034 The Lotos-Eaters 1038 Ulysses 1043 1021 1021 1032
CONTENTS I XXV Break, Break, Break 1044 Songs from ¡ he Princess 1045 Tears, Idle Tears 1045 Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal 1045 In Memoriam A. H. H. 1046 1 (“I held it truth, with him who sings ) 1046 2 (“Old Yew, which graspest at the stones ) 1047 7 (“Dark house, by which once more I stand”) 1047 1 I (“Calm is the morn without a sound ) 1047 19 (“The Danube to the Severn gave ) 1048 50 ( Be near me when my light is low ) 1048 54 (“Oh yet we trust that somehow good ) 1049 55 ( The wish, that of the living whole ) 1049 56 ( So careful of the type? but no”) 1050 67 ( When on my bed the moonlight falls ) 105 I 88 (“Wild bird, whose warble, liquid sweet ) 1051 1 19 ( Doors, w here my heart was used to heat ) 1051 121 ( Sad Hesper o er the buried sun ) 1052 1 80 ( Thy voice is on the rolling air ) 1052 The Eagle 1053 The Charge of the Light Brigade 1053 Tithonus 1055 Crossing the Bar 1056 BOBÉRT BROWNING (1812-1889) Porphyrias Lover 1057 Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister 1058 My Last Duchess 1061 The Lost Leader 1062 “flow They Brought the Good News írom Ghent to Aix The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed’s Church Home-Thoughts, from Abroad 1068 Memorabilia 1069 Ghilde Boland to the Dark Tower Came 1069 Fra Lippo Lippi 1075 One Word More 1084 1057 1063 1065 EDWARD LEAR (1812-1888) There Was an Old Man Who Supposed 1090 The Owl and the Pussy-Cat 1090 The Dong with a Luminous Nose 1091 How Pleasant to Know Mr. Lear 1093 1090 HENRY DAVID THOREAU (1817-1862) I Am a Parcel of Vain Strivings Tied 1094 Smoke 1095 1094 EMILY BRONTË (1818-1848) I Long neglect has worn away] Hope
1096 1096 1096
xxvi I CONTENTS Remembrance 1097 The Prisoner 1098 The Visionary 1099 [No coward soul is mine] 1 100 Stanzas (“Often rebuked, yet always back returning”) 1101 ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH (1819-1861) Amours de Voyage 1102 From Canto I 1102 The Latest Decalogue 1104 Say Not the Struggle Nought Availeth 1104 Dipsychus 1 105 [“There is no God,” the wicked saith] 1105 [As I sat at the café, 1 said to myself] 1106 1102 JULIA WARD HOWE (1819-1910) Rattle-Hymn of the Republie 1107 1 107 WALT WHITMAN (1819-1892) 1 108 Song of Myself 1108 I (“I celebrate myself, and sing myselP ) 1 108 5 (“I believe in you my soul, the other I am must not abase itself to you”) 1109 6 (“A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands”) 1109 II (“Twenty-eight young men bathe by the shore”) 1110 13 (“The negro holds firmly the reins of his four horses . . .”) Ill 1 24 (“Walt Whitman, a kosmos, of Manhattan the son”) 1112 52 (“The spotted hawk swoops by and accuses me . . .”) 1113 Crossing Brooklyn Ferry 1114 Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking 1118 When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer 1123 The Dalliance of the Eagles 1123 Beat! Beat! Drums! 1124 Cavalry Crossing a Ford 1124 Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night 1 125 Reconciliation 1 126 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d 1126 A Noiseless Patient Spider 1132 To a Locomotive in Winter 1 132 HERMAN MELVILLE (1819-1891) The Portent 1133 Shiloh 1134 The Maldive Shark 1134 The Berg 1135 Monody 1136 1133
CONTENTS FREDERICK GODDARD TUCKERMAN (1821-1873) Sonnets, Third Series 1136 IV (“Thin little leaves of wood fern, ribbed and toothed”) V (“How well do I recall that walk in state”) 1137 VI (“I looked across the rollers of the deep”) 1137 I xxvii 1136 1136 MATTHEW ARNOLD (1822-1888) Shakespeare 1138 To Marguerite 1138 The Scholar-Gypsy 1139 Philomela 1145 Dover Beach 1146 1138 GEORGE MEREDITH (1828-1909) Modern Love 1147 1 (“By this he knew she wept with waking eyes”) 1147 6 (“It chanced his lips did meet her forehead cool”) 1147 17 (“At dinner, she is hostess, I am host”) 1148 30 (“What are we first? First, animals; and next”) 1148 34 (“Madam would speak with me. So, now it comes”) 1148 48 (“Their sense is with their senses all mixed in”) 1149 49 (“He found her by the ocean’s moaning verge”) 1149 50 (“Thus piteously Love closed what he begat”) 1150 When I Would Image 1150 Lucifer in Starlight 1151 1147 DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI (1828-1882) The Blessed Damozel 1151 Sudden Light 1155 The Woodspurge 1155 The House of Life 1156 A Sonnet 1156 19. Silent Noon 1156 70. The Flill Summit 1156 Nuptial Sleep 1157 1151 CHRISTINA ROSSETTI (1830-1894) Song (“When I am dead, my dearest”) 1157 Remember 1158 In an Artist’s Studio 1158 Goblin Market 1159 Passing Away, Saith the World, Passing Away 1170 Amor Mundi 1171 A Christmas Carol 1172 1157 EMILY DICKINSON (1830-1886) 39 (“I never lost as much but twice -”) 1173 68 (“Some things that fly there be -”) 1173 112 (“Success is counted sweetest”) 1173 124 (“Safe in their Alabaster Chambers -”) (1859) 1173 1174
xxviii I CONTENTS 124 (“Safe in their Alabaster Chambers -”) (1862) 1 174 145 (“A little East of Jordan”) 1175 202 (“ ‘Faith’ is a fine invention ) 1175 259 (“A Clock stopped -”) 1175 260 (‘Tm Nobody! Who are you?”) 1176 269 (“Wild nights - Wild nights!”) 117-6 314 (“‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers -”) 1176 320 (“There’s a certain Slant of light”) 1177 339 (“Hike a look of Agony”) 1177 340 (“I felt a Funeral, in my Brain”) 1178 348 (“I would not paint - a picture ֊”) 1178 359 (“A Bird, came down the Walk -”) 1179 372 (“After great pain, a formal feeling comes -”) 1179 383 (“I like to see it lap the Miles -”) 1180 409 (“The Soul selects her own Society -”) 1180 411 (“Mine - by the Right of the White Election!”) 1181 445 (“They shut me up in Prose -”) 1181 479 (“Because I could not stop for Death -”) 1181 533 (“I reckon - When I count at all -”) 1182 588 (“The Heart asks Pleasure - first -”) 1182 591 (“1 heard a Fly buzz - when I died -”) 1183 620 (“Much Madness is divinest Sense -”) 1183 740 (“On a Columnar Self-”) 1184 764 (“My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun -”) 1184 781 (“Remorse ֊ is Memory - awake -”) 1185 782 (“Renunciation - is a piercing Virtue -”) 1185 788 (“Publication - is the Auction”) 1185 895 (“Further in Summer than the Birds -”) 1186 905 (“Split th? Lark ֊ and you’ll find the Music -”) 1186 935 (“As imperceptibly as Grief”) 1187 1096 (“A narrow Fellow in the Grass”) 1187 1108 (“The Bustle in a House”) 1188 1263 (“Tell all the Truth but tell it slant -”) 1188 1489 (“A Route of Evanescence”) 1188 1577 (“The Bible is an antique Volume -”) 1189 1773 (“My life
closed twice before it’s close”) 1189 1788 (“Fame is a bee”) 1189 LEWIS CARROLL [CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON] (1832-1898) Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland 1190 You Are Old, Father William 1190 Through the Looking-Glass 1191 Jabberwocky 1191 The Walrus and the Carpenter 1 192 [I’ll tell thee everything 1 can] 1194 The Hunting of the Snark 1196 Fit the First 1196 WILLIAM MORRIS (1834-1896) The Earthly Paradise 1199 An Apology 1199 1190 1199
CONTENTS A Garden by the Sea Pomona 1201 I xxix 1200 W. S. GILBERT (1836-1911) I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General Titwillow 1203 1201 1201 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE (1837-1909) Atalanta in Calydon 1204 [When the hounds of spring are on winter’s traces] The Garden of Proserpine 1205 A Forsaken Garden 1208 1204 1204 THOMAS HARDY (1840-1928) Neutral Tones 1210 1 look into my glass” 1210 The Self-Unseeing 1211 Drummer Hodge 1211 A Broken Appointment 1212 The Darkling Thrush 1212 The Ruined Maid 1213 The Convergence of the Twain 1214 Channel Firing 1215 Under the Waterfall 1216 The Going 1218 The Voice 1219 During Wind and Rain 1219 In Time of “The Breaking of Nations” 1220 Afterwards 1220 1210 GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS (1844-1889) God s Grandeur 1221 The Windhover 1222 Pied Beauty 1222 [As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw llame] 1223 Felix Randal 1223 Spring and Fall 1224 [Carrion Comfort] 1225 [No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief] 1225 [I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day] 1226 [My own heart let me more have pity on] 1226 That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort of the Resurrection 1227 [Thou art indeed just, Lord] 1227 1221 MICHAEL FIELD [KATHARINE HARRIS BRADLEY (1846-1914) and EDITH EMMA COOPER (1862-1913)] La Gioconda 1228 [Sometimes I do despatch my heart] 1228 Cyclamens 1229 The Mummy Invokes His Soul 1229 1228
xxx I CONTENTS EMMA LAZARUS (1849-1887) The New Colossus 1230 1230 A. E. HOUSMAN (1859-1936) A Shropshire Lad 1230 II (“Loveliest of trees, the cherry now”) 1230 XII (“When I watch the living meet”) 123 1 XIX To an Athlete Dying Young 1231 XXVII (‘“Is my team ploughing’”) 1232 XXXI (“On Wenlock Edge the wood s in trouble”) 1233 XL (“Into my heart an air that kills”) 1233 LXII [“Terence, this is stupid stuff ] 1234 Last Poems 1236 XII (“The laws of God, the laws of man”) 1236 XVII Astronomy 1236 XXXVII Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries 1237 [Ho, everyone that thirsteth] I 237 [Crossing alone the nighted ferry] 1238 [Here dead lie we because we did not choose] 1238 [Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists?] 1230 ARTHUR SYMONS (1865-1945) Prologue (“My life is like a music-hall”) Stella Maris 1240 White Heliotrope 1241 1238 1239 1239 WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS (1865-1939) The Lake Isle of Innisfrec 1242 When You Are Old 1242 He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven 1243 Adam’s Curse 1243 No Second Troy 1244 The Cold Heaven 1244 The Wild Swans at Coole 1245 An Irish Airman Foresees His Death 1246 Easter 1916 1246 The Second Coming 1248 A Prayer for My Daughter 1249 Leda and the Swan 1251 Among School Children 1252 Sailing to Byzantium 1254 Byzantium 1255 Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop 1256 Lapis Lazuli 1257 The Circus Animals’Desertion 1259 Under Ben Bulben 1260 Cuchulain Comforted 1263 1242 RUDYARD KIPLING (1865-1936) Tommy 1264 Danny Deever 1265 1264
CONTENTS Recessional 1266 Sestina of the Tramp-Royal If— 1268 The Way through the Woods From Epitaphs of the War Gethsemane 1271 We and They 1271 I xxxi 1267 1269 1269 ERNEST DOWSON (1867-1900) Vitae stimma brevis spent nos vetat incohare longam 1272 Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynarae 1273 1272 CHARLOTTE MEW (1869-1928) The Farmer s Bride 1274 Fame 1275 Madeleine in Church 1275 The Cenotaph 1281 1274 EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON (1869-1935) Richard Cory 1282 Reuben Bright 1282 Miniver Cheevy 1283 The Mill 1284 Mr. Flood’s Party 1284 1282 STEPHEN CRANE (1871-1900) The Black Riders and Other Lines 1286 I (“BLACK RIDERS CAME FROM THE SEA”) 1286 111 (“IN THE DESERT ) 1286 XXV (“BEHOLD, THE GRAVE OF A WICKED MAN”) LVI (“A MAN FEARED THAT HE MIGHT FIND AN ASSASSIN”) 1287 1286 1287 PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR (1872-1906) A Summer’s Night 1287 We Wear the Mask 1288 Little Brown Baby 1288 Sympathy 1289 1287 JOHN McCRAE (1872-1918) In Flanders Fields 1290 1290 WALTER DE LA MARE (1873-1956) The Listeners 1290 Fare Well 1291 1290 GERTRUDE STEIN (1874-1946) Susie Asado 1292 1292
xxxii CONTENTS Stanzas in Meditation 1293 1293 Part I, Stanza XIII (“She may count three little daisies very well ) Part V, Stanza XXXVIII (“Which 1 wish to say is this ) 1293 1293 Part V, Stanza LXIII ( I wish that I had spoken only of it all. ) AMY LOWELL (1874-1925) Patterns 1294 The Weather-Cock Points South 1294 1296 ROBERT FROST (1874-1963) Mending Wall 1297 The Death of the Hired Man 1298 Home Burial 1302 After Apple-Picking 1304 The Wood-Pile 1305 The Road Not Taken 1 306 The Oven Bird 1307 Birches 1307 Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening 1308 The Need of Being Versed in Country Things 1 309 Acquainted with the Night 1310 Neither Out Far Nor In Deep 1310 Design 1311 Provide, Provide 1311 Come In 1312 Never Again Would Birds Song Be the Same 1312 The Gift Outright 1313 Directive 1313 1297 CARL SANDBURG (1878-1967) Chicago 1315 Grass 1315 1315 EDWARD THOMAS (1878-1917) Old Man 1316 Adlestrop 1317 The Owl 1318 In Memoriam [Easter 1915] 1318 Rain 1318 [As the team’s head-brass ļ 1319 1316 WALLACE STEVENS (1879-1955) The Snow Alan 1320 The Emperor of Ice-Cream 1320 Sunday Morning 1321 Anecdote of the Jar 1324 Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird Peter Quince at the Clavier 1326 The Idea of Order at Key West 1 328 Waving Adieu, Adieu, Adieu 1 330 1320 1 325
CONTENTS The Poems of Our Climate 1330 The House Was Quiet and the World Was Calm From An Ordinary Evening in New Haven: XXX Table Talk 1322 A Room on a Garden !322 Of Mere Being 1333 MINA LOY (1882-1966) Human Cylinders 1333 Moreover, the Moon------ I 1331 1331 1333 1335 E. J. PRATT (1883-1964) Come Not the Seasons Here From Stone to Steel 1336 1335 1335 WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS (1883-1963) Danse Russe 1337 Portrait of a Lady 1337 Queen Anne’s-Lace 1338 The Red Wheelbarrow 1338 This Is Just to Say 1339 Poem 1339 The Yachts 1339 A Sort of a Song 1340 Asphodel, That Greeny Flower 1341 Book I 1341 Pictures from Brueghel 1347 Landscape with the Fall of Icarus 1 347 1337 ELINOR WYLIE (1885-1928) Full Moon 1348 Doomsday 1349 1348 D. H. LAWRENCE (1885-1930) Love on the Farm 1349 Piano 1351 Snake 1351 Bavarian Gentians 1354 The Ship of Death 1354 1349 EZRA POUND (1885-1972) Portrait ďune Femme 1358 The Garden 1359 A Pact 1359 Ts ai Chi’h 1359 In a Station of the Metro 1360 The River-Merchant’s Wife: A Letter 1360 Hugh Selwvn Mauberley: Life and Contacts Medallion 1368 1358 1361
xxxiv I CONTENTS The Cantos 1369 1 (“And then went down to the ship”) XLV (“With Usura”) 1371 1369 SIEGFRIED SASSOON (1886-1967) Christ and the Soldier 1373 “They” 1374 Base Details 1374 The General 1375 Glory of Women 1375 Everyone Sang 1376 On Passing the New Menin Gate 1 376 1373 H.D. [HILDA DOOLITTLE] (1886-1961) Sea Rose 1377 Sea Violet 1377 Helen 1378 Wine Bowl 1378 The Walls Do Not Fall 1 380 [11 (“An incident here and there”) 1380 1377 ROBINSON JEFFERS (1887-1962) Shine, Perishing Republic 1382 Hurt Hawks 1383 The Purse-Seine 1383 Birds and Fishes 1385 1382 RUPERT BROOKE (1887-1915) Sonnet 1385 From The Old Vicarage, Grantchester The Soldier 1388 1385 MARIANNE MOORE (1887-1972) To a Steam Roller 1389 To a Chameleon 1389 The Fish 1390 Poetry 1391 A Grave 1392 The Steeple-Jack 1392 No Swan So Fine 1394 What Are Years? 1395 Nevertheless 1395 The Mind Is an Enchanting Thing 1386 1389 1396 JOHN CROWE RANSOM (1888-1974) Bells for John Whiteside’s Daughter 1397 Piazza Piece 1398 Blue Girls 1398 Parting, without a Sequel 1399 Lady Lost 1400 1397
CONTENTS T. S. ELIOT (1888-1965) The Love Song of J. Alfred PrufrocU The Waste Land 1404 The Hollow Men 1417 Journey of the Magi 1420 Four Quartets 142 1 Little Gidding 1421 I xxxv 1400 1400 IVOR GURNEY ( 1 890-1937) Pain 1427 To His Love 1428 The Silent One 1428 Sea-Marge 1429 1427 ISAAC ROSENRĽRG (1890-1918) Break of Day in the Trenches 1429 Dead Man’s Dump 1430 [Through these pale cold days] 1432 1429 EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY ( 1 892-1950) First Fig 1432 Second Fig 1432 Euclid Alone Has Looked on Reauty Bare 1433 Spring 1433 [I, Being Born a Woman and Distressed] 1433 The Buck in the Snow 1434 I Dreamed I Moved among the Elysian Fields 1434 Ragged Island 1435 Armenonville 1436 1432 ARCHIBALD MacLEISH (1892-1982) Ars Poetica 1436 You, Andrew Marvell 1437 The Snowflake Which Is Now and Hence Forever 1436 1438 HUGH MacDIARMID [CHRISTOPHER MURRAY GRIEVE] (1892-1978) The Watergaw 1439 The Innumerable Christ 1439 Another Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries 1440 From In Memoriam James Joyce 1440 WILFRED OWEN (1893-1918) Anthem for Doomed Youth 1441 Dulce et Decorum Est 1442 Insensibility 1442 Strange Meeting 1444 Miners 1445 Futility 1446 1439 1441
xxxvi I CONTENTS DORO THY PARKER (1893-1967) Unfortunate Coincidence 1447 Resume 1447 One Perfect Rose 1447 1447 E. E. CUMMINGS (1894-1962) [All in green went my love ridingļ 1448 [the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished soli Is | [Spring is like a perhaps hand] 1449 [ next to of course god america i| 1450 [since feeling is first] 1450 [somewhere і have never travelled,gladly beyond [ [may I feel said he] 1451 [anyone lived in a pretty how town] 1452 [who are you,little 1] 1453 1448 1449 145 1 JOHN ALLAN WYĽTII ( 1 894-198 I ) Interior 1454 General Order 1454 Home Mail 1455 New Diggings in the Orchard 1455 The Road to Corbie 1456 1454 JEAN TOOM ER (1894-1967) Cane 1457 Reapers 1457 Face 1457 Georgia Dusk 1457 Portrait in Georgia 1458 Harvest Song 1458 1457 ROBERT GRAVES (1895-1985) Love Without Hope 1459 Welsh Incident 1459 In Broken Images 1461 Recalling War 146 I To Juan at the Winter Solstice The While Goddess 1464 1459 1462 LOUISE BOGAN (1897-1970) Medusa 1464 Juan’s Song 1465 Man Alone 1465 Roman Fountain 1466 Night 1466 HART CRANE (1899-1932) My Grandmother s Love Letters At Melville s Tomb 1468 Voyages 1468 1464 1467 1467
CONTENTS The Bridge 1472 Proem: To Brooklyn Bridge To Emily Dickinson 1474 1472 ALLEN TATE (1899-1979) Ode to the Confederate Dead The Swimmers 1477 1474 I xxxv іі 1474 BASIL BUNTING (1900-1985) From Briggilatts 1479 1479 STERLINGA. BROWN ( 1901-1989) Slim in Atlanta 1483 Chillen Get Shoes 1484 Bitter Fruit of the Tree 1485 Conjured 1486 1483 LANGSTON HUGHES (1902-1967) The Weary Blues 1486 The Negro Speaks of Rivers 1487 Dream Variations 1488 Cross 1488 Song for a Dark Girl 1488 Harlem Sweeties 1489 Harlem 1490 Theme for English В 1490 Dinner Guest: Me 1491 1486 AMERICAN SONG 1492 Go Down, Moses 1492 Swing Low, Sweet Chariot 1493 Andy Ra/af (1895-1973), (What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue 1493 Cole Porter (1891—1964), Night and Day 1494 Thomas A. Dorsey (1899—1993), Take My Hand, Precious Lord 1495 Ira Gershwin (1896-1983), It Ain’t Necessarily So 1496 Abel Meeropol (1903—1986), Strange Fruit 1497 Billie Holiday (191 5—1959), Fine and Mellow 1498 Bob Dylan (b. 1941) Boots of Spanish Leather 1499 The Times They Are a Changin’ 1500 Dudley Randall (19 14—2000), Ballad of Birmingham 1501 Lin-Manuel Miranda (b. 1980), from Alexander Hamilton 1502 OGDEN NASH (1902-1971) The Cow 1503 Reflections on Ice-breaking 1 503 Requiem 1503 Columbus 1503 Τίτο Turrit 1 ՀՈ4 1503
xxxviii I CONTENTS STEVIE SMITH (1902-1971) Correspondence between Mr Harrison in Newcastle and Mr Sholto Peach Harrison in Hull 1505 Infelice 1505 The River God 1506 No Categories! 1507 The Death Sentence 1507 Not Waving but Drowning 1 508 Thoughts about the Person from Porlock 1 508 The Galloping Cat 1510 1505 COUNTEE CULLEN (1903-1946) Heritage 1511 Incident 1514 Yet Do I Marvel 1514 1511 C. DAY LEWIS (1904-1972) Two Songs 1515 (“I’ve heard them lilting at loom and belting”) (“Come, live with me and be my love”) 1516 Where Are the War Poets? 1516 1515 1515 PATRICK KAVANAGH (1904-1967) Sanctity 1517 From The Great Hunger 1517 Epic 1519 Canal Bank Walk 1520 1517 ROBERT PENN WARREN (1905-1989) Bearded Oaks 1520 Masts at Dawn 1 521 Evening Hawk 1 522 1520 STANLEY KUNITZ (1905-2006) He 1523 Robin Redbreast 1524 Touch Me 1 524 1523 JOHN BETJEMAN (1906-1984) Death in Leamington 1525 The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel In Westminster Abbey 1 527 1525 WILLIAM EMPSON (1906-1984) Legal Fiction 1529 Missing Dates 1529 Chinese Ballad 1530 1526 1529
CONTENTS ļ xxx i x W. H. AUDEN (1907-1973) O What Is That Sound 1 53 I Lullaby 1532 As I Walked Out One Evening 1 533 Funeral Blues 1534 Tell Me the Truth About Love 1535 Musée des Beaux Arts 1536 In Memory of W. B. Yeats 1537 Befugee Blues 1539 Epitaph on a Tyrant 1 540 September 1, 1939 1540 In Praise of Limestone 1543 Their Lonely Betters 1 545 Ehe Shield of Achilles 1545 1531 A. D. HOPE ( 1907-2000) Australia 1547 Imperial Adam 1548 The Return of Persephone 1 549 Advice to Young Ladies 1 550 Inscription for a War 1552 1547 LOUIS MacNEICE (1907-1963) Snow 1552 The Sunlight on the Garden 1553 Bagpipe Music 1554 Meeting Point 1555 London Rain 1556 SoapSuds 1557 The Taxis 1558 Star-gazer 1558 1552 GEORGE OPPEN (1908-1984) 1559 From Disaster 1559 Myself 1 Sing 1560 О Western Wind 1561 A Theological Definition 1561 THEODORE ROETHKE (1908-1963) Root Cellar 1561 Child on Top of a Greenhouse 1562 My Papa’s Waltz 1562 The Lost Son 1563 Elegy for Jane 1567 The Waking 1568 I Knew a Woman 1568 Wish for a Young Wife 1569 1561
xl I CONTENTS JOSEPHINE JACOBSEN ( I 908-2003) The Primer 1 569 Bush 1570 Hourglass 1571 1569 RICHARD WRIGHT (1908-1960) Haiku: This Other World I 572 21 (“On winter mornings”) 1572 31 (“In the tailing snow”) 1572 120 (“Crying and crying ) I 572 490 ( Waking from a nap”) 1 572 762 (“Droning autumn rain ) 1573 783 (“I cannot find it ) I 573 1572 STEPHEN SPENDER (1909-1995) I Think Continually of Those W ho W ere Früh՛ Great Ultima Ratio Regum 1 574 Seascape 1574 1 573 1 573 NORMAN MacCAIG (1910-1996) Summer Farm 1 575 The Unlikely as Usual 1576 Kingfisher 1576 1575 CHARLES OLSON (1910-1970) Merce of Egypt 1 577 Variations Done for Gerald Van De Wiele I 577 I 578 ELIZABETH BISHOP (191 1-1979) Casabianca 1581 The Fish 1 582 Filling Station 1 583 Sandpiper 1584 The Armadillo 1585 Questions of Travel 1 586 Sestina 1588 In the Whiting Room 1 589 The Moose 1591 One Art 1595 1581 ALLEN CU RNOW (1911 -200 1 ) House and Land 1 596 Landfall in Unknown Seas 1 597 Continuum 1599 I 596 IRVING LAYTON (1912-2006) The Cold Green Element 1600 Berry Picking 1601 1 600
CONTENTS H. S. THOMAS (1913-2000) Welsh Landscape 1602 The View from the Window On the Farm 1603 Lore 1603 A Marriage 1604 ļ xli 1602 1602 MAY SWENSON (1913-1 989) Motherhood 1605 Cardinal Ideograms 1606 Waterbird 1607 Goodbye, Goldeneye 1608 1605 ROBERT HAYDEN (1913-1980) Those Winter Sundays 1 609 Mourning Poem for the Queen of Sunday Night, Death, Mississippi 1610 Mystery Boy’ Looks for Kin in Nashville” Paul Laurence Dunbar 1612 1609 1609 1611 MURIEL RUKEYSER (1913-1980) Roy with His Hair Cut Short 1612 Night Feeding 1613 Rondel 1614 Ballad of Orange and Grape 1614 1612 HENRY REED (1914-1986) Lessons ol the War 1615 1. Naming of Parts 1615 2. Judging Distances 1616 1615 WELDON KEES (1914-1955) What the Spider Heard 1618 For H. V. (1901-1927) 1618 When the Lease Is Up 1619 Robinson 1619 1618 RAN DALL JARRELL (1914-1965) 90 North 1620 The Death of the Rail Turret Gunner Eighth Air Force 1621 A Front 1622 In Those Days 1622 Next Day 1 623 A Man Meets a Woman in the Street 1620 JOHN BERRYMAN (1914-1972) Homage to Mistress Bradstreet 17-21 1626 1621 1624 1626 1626
xiii I CONTENTS A Sympathy, A Welcome ] 628 The Dream Songs 1628 1 (“Huffy Henry hid the day”) 1628 4 (“Filling her compact delicious body”) 1629 14 (“Life, friends, is boring. We must not say so”) 1629 29 (“There sat down, once, a thing on Henry s heart”) 1630 40 (“I’m scared a lonely. Never sec my son”) 1630 145 (“Also I love him: me he’s done no wrong”) 1631 324 An Elegy for W.C.W., The Lovely Man 1631 382 (“At Henry’s bier let some thing fall out well ) 1632 DYLAN THOMAS (1914-1953) The Force That Through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower And Death Shall Have No Dominion 1633 The Hand That Signed the Paper 1633 A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London Fern Hill 1635 In My Craft or Sullen Art 1636 Poem in October 1636 Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night 1638 1632 1632 1634 JUDITH WRIGHT (1915-2000) Woman to Man 1639 Eli, Eli 1639 Train Journey 1640 Egrets 1640 Eve to Her Daughters 1641 Naked Girl and Mirror 1642 1639 ALUN LEWIS (1915-1944) Raiders’Dawn 1643 All Day It Fias Rained 1644 Song (On seeing dead bodies floating off the Cape) Goodbye 1646 1643 MARGARET WALKER (1915-1998) Since 1619 1647 Childhood 1647 ERN MALLEY [FIAROLD STEWART (1916-1995) and JAMES McAULEY (1917-1976)] Dürer, Innsbruck, 1495 1648 Night Piece 1 648 Petit Testament 1649 P. K. PAGE (19 !6—2010) Stories of Snow 1650 Deaf-Mute in the Pear Tree 1645 1647 1648 1650 1651
CONTENTS ROBERT LOWELL (191 7-1977) The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket 1653 Mr. Edwards and the Spider 1657 My Last Afternoon with Uncle Devereux Winslow Skunk Hour 1662 Water 1663 For the Union Dead 1664 Harriet 1666 Epilogue 1667 GWENDOLYN BROOKS (1917-2000) kitchenette building 1667 my dreams, my works, must wait till after hell the birth in a narrow room 1668 the rites for Cousin Vit 1669 The Bean Eaters 1669 We Real Cool 1669 Medgår Evers 1670 Boy Breaking Glass 1670 W. S. GRAHAM (1918-1 986) A Note to the Difficult One The Stepping Stones 1672 Dear Bryan Wynter 1 672 I xliii 1653 1658 1667 1668 1671 1671 WILLIAM MEREDITH (1919-2007) The Illiterate 1674 Rhode Island 1675 1674 LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI (b. 1919) Sometime During Eternity . . . 1676 1676 KEITH DOUGLAS (1920-1944) Simplify Me When I m Dead 1677 The Sea Bird 1678 Cairo Jag 1679 Words 1680 Vergissmeinnicht 1680 1677 HOWARD NEMEROV (1920-1991) The Goose Fish 1681 A Primer of the Daily Round 1682 The Blue Swallows 1682 Boy with Book of Knowledge 1683 Strange Metamorphosis of Poets 1684 Because You Asked about the Line between Prose and Poetry ւ 681 EDWIN MORGAN (1920-2010) Strawberries 1685 Opening the Cage 1686 1685 1685
xIiv I CONTENTS I he Computer’s First Christmas Card 1686 From the Video Box 1 687 25 ( If you ask what my favourite programme is ) GWEN HARWOOD ( 1920-1995) Alter Ego 1689 Thought Is Surrounded by a lialo Mother Who Gave Me Life I 690 1687 I 689 1690 AMY CLAMPITT ( 1920-1994) Beach Glass 1 691 Beethoven, Opus I I I 1698 The Sun Underfoot Among the Sundews The Cormorant in Its Element 1697 The Horned Rampion 1697 1 69 I 1696 BARBARA GUEST ( 1920-2006) Roses 1698 Twilight Polka Dots 1699 1 698 RICHARD WILBUR (1921-2017) First Snow in Alsace I 700 Love Calls Us to the Things of This World Pia/za di Spagna, Early Morning 1702 A Plain Song for Comadre I 702 A Baroque Wall-Fountain in the Villa Sciarra Advice to a Prophet 1 705 Junk 1706 Cottage Street, 1953 1708 Zea 1708 The House 1709 1700 I 701 1703 MONA VAN DUYN (1921-2004) Letters from a Father 1710 Falling in Love at Sixty-Five 1712 1710 DONALD DAVIE ( 1922-1995) Remembering the ’Thirties 1714 The Fountain 1715 Time Passing, Beloved 1716 1714 HOWARD MOSS ( 1922-1987) The Persistence of Song 1717 Tourists 1718 1717 PHILIP LARKIN (1922-1985) Toads 1719 Church Going 1720 1719
CONTENTS ļ xlv An Arundel Tomb 1 721 The Whitsun Weddings 1722 MCMXTV 1724 Talking in Bed 1725 High Windows 1 726 The Trees 1726 Sad Steps 1 727 The Explosion 1727 This Be The Verse 1 728 Aubade 1728 ANTHONY HECHT ( 1923-2004) A Hill 1 730 The Dover Bitch 1731 The Ghost in the Martini 1731 Still Life 1734 The Book of Yolck 1735 Death the Painter 1736 1 730 JAMES DICKEY (1923-1997) The Lifeguard 1737 Buckdancer’s Choice 1738 Sled Burial, Dream Ceremony 1737 1739 PETER KANE DU FAULT (1923-2013) A Letter for All-Hallows ( 1949) 1740 A First Night 1741 Burden 1742 DENISE LEVERTOV (1923-1997) Scenes from the Life of the Peppertrees Tenebrae 1744 Caedmon 1745 1740 1743 1743 JAMES SCHUYLER (1923-1991) Freely Espousing 1746 Shimmer 1747 1746 RICHARD HUGO (1923-1982) The Way a Ghost Dissolves 1 748 The Lady in Kicking Horse Reservoir 1748 1 749 KENNETH KOCH (1925-2002) Permanently 1750 You Were Wearing 1751 Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams Energy in Sweden 1752 To My Twenties 1753 1750 1751
xlvi I CONTENTS DONALD JUSTICE (1925-2004) Counting the Mad 1754 Men at Forty 1754 Nostalgia of the Lakefronts I 755 Pantoum of the Great Depression I 756 1754 CAROLYN KIZER (1925-2014) The Erotic Philosophers 1757 Part Five of “Pro Femina” 1757 1757 W. D. SNODGRASS (1926-2009) Heart’s Needle 1761 2 (“Late April and you are three; today ) 1761 3 ( The child between them on the street ) 1 762 7 ( Here in the scuffled dust ) 1 762 10 ( The vicious winter fina Ily yields ) 1763 Mementos, 1 1764 176 1 A. R. AMMONS ( 1926-2001 ) Corsons Inlet 1764 The City Limits 1767 The Arc Inside and Out 1 768 Pet Panther 1769 Strip 1770 43 (“sometimes I get the feeling I ve never ) 1764 1770 JAMES MERRILL (1926-1995) The Rroken Home 1 77 1 The Mad Scene 1774 The Victor Dog 1 775 Lost in Translation 1776 The Rook of Ephraim 1782 C. (“Correct but cautious, that first night, we asked”) Arabian Night 1784 body 1785 1771 1782 RORERT CREELEY ( 1926-2005) Heroes 1785 1 Know a Man 1786 The World 1786 Rresson’s Movies 1787 1 785 ALLEN GINSBERG (1926-1997) Howl 1788 I (“I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness ) 1788 A Supermarket in California 1794 To Aunt Rose 1795 1788
CONTENTS I xlvii FRANK O HARA (1926-1966) The Day Lady Died 1796 How to Get There 1797 Ave Maria 1798 Why I Am Not a Painter 1799 1796 JAMES K. RAXTER (1926-1972) Wild Rees 1 800 Rocket Show 1800 East Coast Journey 1801 New Zealand 1802 The Fear of Change 1803 The Ikons 1803 1800 ROBERT BLY(b. 1926) Waking from Sleep 1 804 Johnson’s Cabinet Watched by Ants 1804 1804 CHARLES TOMLINSON (1927-2015) Farewell to Van Gogh 1805 The Door 1806 Ararat 1806 1805 GALWAY KINNELL (1927-2014) First Song 1807 The Correspondence School Instructor Says Goodbye to His Poetry Students 1807 After Malting Love We Hear Footsteps 1808 1807 JOHN ASI IBERY (1927-2017) The Painter 1809 Soonest Mended 1810 Ode to Bill 1812 Paradoxes and Oxymorons 1812 Brute Image 1813 The Dong with the Luminous Nose 1809 W. S. MERWIN (b. 1927) The Drunk in the Furnace Odysseus 1816 Separation 1816 Whoever You Are 1816 1813 1815 1815 JAMES WRIGHT (1927-1980) A Note Left in Jimmy Leonard’s Shack 1817 Lying in a Hammock at William Dulfy’s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota 1818 A Blessing 1818 Speak 1819 1817
xlviii CONTENTS L. E. SISSMAN (1928-1976) Dying: An Introduction 1820 IV. Path. Report 1820 V. Outbound 1821 A Deathpiace 1 822 1820 PHILIP LEVINE (1928-2015) They Peed They Lion 1823 You Can I lave It 1823 1823 THOMAS «INSELLA (b. 1928) Another September 1825 Ancestor 1825 Tear 1826 1825 DONALD HALL (b. 1928) Exile 1828 The One Day 1829 Prophecy 1829 Independence Day Letter 1828 1832 ROSEMARY LONKS (1928-2014) The Solas, Fogs, and Cinemas 1832 The Sash Window 1834 Farewell to Kurdistan 1835 1832 ANNE SEXTON (1928-1974) The Truth the Dead Know 1836 And One for My Dame 1837 1836 PETER PORTER (1929-2010) An Exequv 1838 1838 JOHN MONTAGUE (1929-2016) Like Dolmens Round My Childhood, the Old People The Trout 1843 All Legendary Obstacles 1843 1841 1841 A. K. RAMANUJAN (1929-1993) Breaded Fish 1 844 Self-Portrait 1845 Snakes and Ladders 1845 Foundlings in the Yukon 1845 1844 ADRIENNE RICH (1929-2012) Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers 1847 Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law 1847 Orion 1851 A Valediction Forbidding Mourning 1852 1847
CONTENTS Diving into the Wreck 1853 Eastern War Time 1 855 1 ( Memory lilts her smoky mirror: 8 (“A woman wired in memories ) Modotti 1856 THOM GUNN (1929-2004) On the Move 1857 A Map of the City 1858 My Sad Captains 1859 From the Wave 1860 All Do Not All Things Well The Missing 1862 The Gas-Poker 1863 1943”) 1856 I xlix 1855 1857 1 861 RICHARD HOWARD (b. 1929) Nikolaus Mardruz to his Master Ferdinand, Count of Tyrol, 1565 1864 1864 JOHN HOLLANDER (1929-2013) Swan and Shadow 1869 Adam’s Task 1870 An Old-Fashioned Song 1870 1869 DEREK WALCOTT (1930-2017) 1871 A Far Cry from Africa 1871 Nights in the Gardens oí Port of Spain 1872 The Gulf 1873 From The Schooner Flight 1875 Midsummer 1877 Omeros 1878 Chapter XXXVIII, III ( Who decrees a great epoch?”) I 878 The Bounty 1879 22 (“I am considering a syntax the color of slate ) 1879 The Prodigal 1880 From 9 (“I lay on the bed near the balcony in Guadalajara”) 1880 White Egrets 1881 54 ( This page is a cloud between whose fraying edges”) 1881 GARY SNYDER (b. 1930) Above Pate Valley 1882 Four Poems for Robin 1882 Gnarly 1884 1882 KAMAU BRATHWAITE (b. 1930) The Arrivants: A New World Trilogy 1885 New World A-Comin’ 1885 1 (“Flelpless like this”) 1885 2 (“It will be a long long time before we see”) Ancestors 1888 1885 1887
I I CONTENTS 1 (“Every Friday morning my grandfather ) 2 (“All that 1 can remember ol his wife”) 3 (“Come-а look ) 1889 Naima 1889 ROY FISHER (1930-2017) The Entertainment of War 1 890 Of the Empirical Self anil for Me ITypnopaedia 1892 1888 1 888 1890 189 1 TED HUGHES (1930-1998) The Thought-Fox 1893 Wind 1893 Hawk Roosting 1894 Pike 1895 Theology 1896 The Black Beast 1 896 Birth of Rainbow 1897 Daffodils 1898 Platform One 1900 1893 JAY MacPHERSON (1931 -2012) The Swan 1901 A Lost Soul 1901 The Well 1902 1901 ARUN KOLATKAR (1931-2004) Irani Restaurant Bombay 1902 Jejuri 1903 The Bus 1903 Biograph 1904 1902 JOHN UPDIKE (1932-2009) V. B. Nimble, V. B. Quick 1905 I Missed His Book, but 1 Read His Name 1905 1906 GEOFFREY HILL (1932-2016) Genesis 1907 September Song 1908 Mercian Hymns 1909 VI (“The princes of Mercia were badger and raven. Thrall”) VII (“Gasholders, russet among fields. Milldams, marlpools ) VIII (“The mad are predators. Too often lately they harbour”) Lachrimae 1910 1. Lachrimae Verae 1910 An Apology for the Revival of Christian Architecture in England 9. The Laurel Axe 1911 From The Mystery of the Charity of Charles Péguy 1911 Pisgah 1913 From The Triumph of Love 1913 1907 1909 1909 1910 1911
CONTENTS The Jumping Boy Nachwort 1916 I Π 1915 SYLVIA PLATH (1932-1963) The Colossus 1916 Morning Song 1917 Lady Lazarus 1918 Tulips 1920 Elm 1921 Ariel 1923 Daddy 1924 The Munich Mannequins 1926 1916 ANNE STEVENSON (b. 1933) Temporarily in Oxford 1927 Willow Song 1928 Arioso Dolente 1929 1927 FLEUR ADCOCK (b. 1934) Ehe Ex-Queen Among the Astronomers Poem Ended by a Death 1932 The Soho Hospital for Women 1932 1931 1931 AUDRE LORDE (1934-1992) Coal 1935 From the House ofYemanjá 1936 Echoes 1937 1935 N. SCOTT MOMADAY (b. 1934) Headwaters 1938 The Eagle- Feather Fan 1938 The Gift 1939 Two Figures 1939 1938 MARK STRAND (1934-2014) Keeping Things Whole 1939 The Prediction 1940 Always 1940 Dark Harbor 1941 XVI (“It is true, as someone has said, that in”) 1941 XX (“Is it you standing among the olive trees”) 1941 Two De Chiricos 1942 2. The Disquieting Muses 1942 The Mysterious Arrival of an Unusual Letter 1943 Nocturne of the Poet Who Loved the Moon 1943 1939 AMIRI BARAKA [LEROI JONES] (1934-2014) In Memory of Radio 1944 An Agony. As Now. 1945 1944
IM I CONTENTS CHARLES WRIGHT (b. 1935) Homage to Claude Lorraine I 946 Chinese Journal 1947 As Our Bodies Rise, Our Names Turn into Light Quotations 1948 Lullaby 1949 EDWARD BAUGH (b. 1936) Sometimes in the Middle of the Story You Ever Notice How 195 I 1946 1948 1950 1950 LUCILLĽ CLIFTON (1936-2010) jasper texas 1 998 1951 mulberry fields 1952 195 I C. K. WILLIAMS (1936-2015) Repression 1953 Snow: II 1953 The Coffin Store 1954 1953 TONY HARRISON (b. 1937) On Not Being Milton 1955 Classics Society 1956 A Kumquat lor John Keats 1956 1955 ELEANOR WILNER (b. 1937) Reading the Bible Backwards 1959 High Noon at Los Alamos 1961 1959 CHARLES SIMIC (b. 1938) Watch Repair 1963 Prodigy 1964 A Book Hull of Pictures 1 964 Cameo Appearance 1965 Preachers Warn 1966 1963 DOM MORALS (1938-2004) Kanheri Caves 1966 Snow on a Mountain 1967 Two from Israel 1968 Rendezvous 1969 1966 LES MURRAY (b. 1938) Noonday Axeman 1969 Once in a Lifetime, Snow 1971 The Quality of Sprawl 1972 Morse 1974 The Conversations 1975 1969
CONTENTS liii R. F. LANGLEY (1938-2011) Cakes and Ale 1976 Skrymir’s Glove 1977 1976 SEAMUS HEANEY (1939-2013) Digging 1978 Bogland 1979 Toome 1980 Punishment 1981 Singing School 1982 6 Exposure 1982 The Skunk 1983 Glanmore Sonnets 1984 VII (“Dogger, Rockall, Malin, Irish Sea”) 1984 X (“I dreamt we slept in a moss in Donegal”) 1985 The Harvest Bow 1985 Clearances 1986 (“She taught me what her uncle once taught her”) 1986 HI (“When all the others were away at Mass”) 1986 VIII (“I thought of walking round and round a space”) 1987 Fosterling 1987 Squarings 1988 Lightenings VIII (“The annals say: when the monks of Clonmacnoise”) 1988 Two Lorries 1988 In a Field 1989 Banks of a Canal 1990 1978 MICHAEL LONGLEY (b. 1939) Swans Mating I 990 Wreaths 1991 The Linen Industry 1992 Corse Fires 1993 Ghetto 1993 The Stairwell 1995 1990 MARGARET ATWOOD (b. 1939) This Is a Photograph of Me 1995 At the Tourist Center in Boston I 996 You Begin 1997 Up 1998 My Mother Dwindles . . . 1999 Questioning the Dead 2000 1995 ROBERT PINSKY (b. 1940) A Long Branch Song 2001 The Street 2001 Instrument 2003 2001
Mv I CONTENTS ROBERT HASS (b. 1941) Meditation at Lagunitas 2005 Tahoe in August 2005 Winged and Acid Dark 2007 2005 BILLY COLLINS (b. 1941) Japan 2007 Litany 2009 2007 ERIC ORMSBY (b. 1941) Starfish 2010 Skunk Cabbage 2010 Origins 2011 2010 DEREK MAHON (b. 1941) Leaves 2011 The Snow Party 2012 A Disused Shed in Co. Wexford Courtyards in Delft 2014 2011 2012 DOUGLAS DUNN (b. 1942) A Removal from Terry Street 201 5 Thirteen Steps and the Thirteenth of March 2015 2016 ARTHUR NORTJE (1942-1970) Soliloquy: South Africa 2017 Reflections in a Passing Mirror 2018 Sonnet Two 2020 CHARLES MARTIN (b. 1942) From Certain Footprints Found at Laetoli 2017 2020 2020 LOUISE GLÜCK (b. 1943) Gretel in Darkness 2024 The Garden 2025 Vita Nova 2025 The Past 2026 2024 JOHN TRANTER (b. 1943) The Revolutionaries 2027 The Germ 2028 Notes from the Late Tang 2029 2027 ROBERT ADAMSON (b. 1943) Sonnets to Be Written from Prison 2030 6 (“We will take it seriously as we open our morning paper”) Addiction 2030 2030 2030
CONTENTS I Iv ALFRED CORN (b. 1943) Navidad, St. Nicholas Ave. 2031 A Conch from Sicily 2032 2031 MICHAEL ONDAATJE (b. 1943) Letters Other Worlds 2033 Driving with Dominic in the Southern Province We See Hints of the Circus 2035 House on a Red Cliff 2035 2033 EAVAN BOLAND (b. 1944) That the Science of Cartography Is Limited The Dolls Museum in Dublin 2037 The Pomegranate 2038 CRAIG RAINE (b. 1944) The Onion, Memory 2040 A Martian Sends a Postcard Home 2036 2036 2040 2041 WENDY COPE (b. 1945) Bloody Men 2042 Flowers 2043 Valentine 2043 2042 KAY RYAN (b. 1945) Half a Loaf 2043 Intention 2044 Cloud 2044 Spiderweb 2045 2043 BILL MANHIRE (b. 1946) My Sunshine 2045 An Inspector Calls 2046 Kevin 2047 2045 JANE SHORE (b. 1947) High Holy Days 2047 2047 YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA (b. 1947) Facing It 2050 Banking Potatoes 2050 The Smokehouse 2051 Sunday Afternoons 2052 2050 LORNA GOODISON (b. 1947) Where the Flora of Our Village Came From 2053 Change If You Must Just Change Slow 2053 The Cruel Room 2054 2053
Ivi I CONTENTS RICHARD KENNEY (b. 1948) Air Sublime 2055 Final Exam 2055 Honor Guard 2056 2055 HEATHER McHUGH (b. 1948) Ghazal of the Better-Unbegun 2057 Sun Grounded in Sky Pool 2057 Webcam the World 2058 2057 AGHA SHAHID ALI (1949-2001) The Dacca Gauzes 2059 Lenox Hill 2060 2059 JAMES FENTON (b. 1949) Dead Soldiers 2062 A German Requiem 2064 God, A Poem 2066 2062 JULIA ALVAREZ (b. 1950) New Clothes 2067 Weeping Willow 2069 2067 JORIE GRAHAM (b. 1950) The Geese 2070 At Luca Signorelli’s Resurrection ol the Body Cagnes Sur Mer 1950 2073 2070 2071 ANNE CARSON (h. 1950) New Rule 2075 Sumptuous Destitution 2076 Lines 2076 Some Afternoons She Does Not Pick up the Phone 2075 2077 LINDA GREGERSON (b. 1950) “Flalfe a Yard of Rede Sea” 2077 Prodigal 2079 2077 DANA GIOIA (b. 1950) Prayer 2080 The Next Poem 2081 2080 NICHOLAS CHRISTOPI 1ER (b. 1951) The Palm Reader 2082 Far from Home 2083 2082 PAULMULDOON (b. 1951) Lunch with Pancho Villa 2084 Cuba 2086 2084
CONTENTS ļ Ivii W hy Brownlee Leit 2086 I rom Immrain 2087 Irance 2089 Airille 2089 Tlie Fox 2090 Milkweed and Monarch 2091 GABY SOTO (b. 1952) The Soup 2092 Not Knowing 2092 2092 BITA DOVL (h. 1952) Parsley 2093 Dusting 2095 The Bistro Styx 2096 2093 ALBERTO RÍOS (b. 1952) 2098 Teodoro Luna Confesses After Years to His Brother, Anselmo the Priest, Who Is Required to Understand, But Who LJnderstands Anyway, More Than People Think When There Were Ghosts 2100 2098 AN DR LAV MOTION (b. 1952) Great [Expectations 2101 Are You There? 2 1 02 210! DA NIIEL HALL (b. 1952) Mangosteens 2102 Memento 2104 Neoclassical 2 104 2102 ROSANNA WARREN (b. 1953) Moment 2106 forgiveness 2107 Hydrangea 2107 2106 GJERTRUD SCHNĄC KEN В ERG (b. 1953) Darw in in 1 88 I 2108 Supernatural Love 2111 The 1 brone of Labdacus 2112 4. The Shepherd Speaks 2112 2108 VIJAY Sl SIIADRI (b, 1954) Imaginary Number 2113 This Morning 2114 Script Meeting 2114 2113
Ivііі I CONTENTS LOUISE ERDRICH (Ь. 1954) The Butcher’s Wife 2115 1 Was Sleeping Where the Black Oaks Move Birth 2117 CAROL ANN DUFFY (h. 1955) Warming Her Pearls 2117 Prayer 2118 Richard 2118 2115 2116 2117 CLAUDIA EMERSON (1957-2014) Metatastasis: Worry-Moth 21 19 Chain Chain Chain 2120 MRI 2121 2119 LI-YOUNG LEE (b. 1957) Persimmons 2123 Station 2125 2128 CYNTHIA ZARIN (b. 1959) The Ant Hill 2126 Song 2127 2126 KATHLEEN JAMIE (b. 1962) Lepidoptery 2128 The Wishing Tree 2 I 29 2 128 LAVINIA GREENLAW (b. 1962) Skin Full 2130 A World Where News Travelled Slowly peter McDonald Travellers 2131 Standstill 2131 Fifties 2132 (b. 1962) 2 130 2 1 30 21 з i GLYN MAXWELL (b. 1962) Stargazing 2133 The Snow Village 2134 2133 SIMON ARMITAGE (b. 1963) A Glory 2134 The Shout 2135 2 I 34 JOHN K1NSELLA (b. 1963) Drowning in Wheat 2136 The Fable of the Great Sow 2136 2137
CONTENTS I lix DON PATERSON (b. 1963) The Fern man’s Arms 2138 Rain 2139 2138 GREG WILLIAMSON (b. 1964) Double Exposures 2140 111. Visiting Couple Kissing and Halved Onion XXV. Group Photo with Winter Trees 2140 New Year’s: A Short Pantoum 2 140 Line 2141 Internet 2141 2140 2140 ALICE OSWALD (b. 1966) Pruning in Frost 2142 Moon 1 lymn 2143 A Short Story of Falling 2143 2142 NATASI IA TRETHEWEY (b. 1966) Flounder 2144 Graveyard Blues 2145 Elegy 2145 2144 KAREN SOLIL (b. 1966) Mole 2147 File Road In Is Not The Same Road Out Life Is a Carnival 2148 2147 2147 CHRISTIAN BÖK (b. 1966) Lunnia 2149 Chapter A (“Awkward grammar appals a craftsman.”) 2149 Chapter Ľ (“Enfettered, these sentences repress free speech. ) Chapter 1 ( Writing is inhibiting.’’) 2 1 50 Chapter О ( Monks who vow to do God’s work . . .”) 21 50 Chapter U ( Kultur spurns Ubu . . . ) 2151 2149 2150 A. L. STALLINGS (b. 1968) The Dollhouse 2152 Clean Break 2152 Persephone to Psyche 2153 2152 TERRANCE HAYES (b. 1971) Fhe Golden Shovel 2154 2154 TRACY K. SMITH (b. 1972) Fhe Museum of Obsolescence 2156 The Universe: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack 2156 21 57
Ix I CONTENTS A GLOSSARY OF POETIC TERMS Al BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES A2I PERMISSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS A93 INDEX All!
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any_adam_object | 1 |
author_GND | (DE-588)141555807 (DE-588)133005534 (DE-588)134156323 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV045089847 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PR1174 |
callnumber-raw | PR1174 |
callnumber-search | PR1174 |
callnumber-sort | PR 41174 |
callnumber-subject | PR - English Literature |
classification_rvk | HG 810 HP 1180 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1047806787 (DE-599)BVBBV045089847 |
dewey-full | 821.008 |
dewey-hundreds | 800 - Literature (Belles-lettres) and rhetoric |
dewey-ones | 821 - English poetry |
dewey-raw | 821.008 |
dewey-search | 821.008 |
dewey-sort | 3821.008 |
dewey-tens | 820 - English & Old English literatures |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
edition | Sixth edition |
era | Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV045089847 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:08:20Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780393679021 9780393283280 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-030480652 |
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physical | LXVIII, 2157, A 155 Seiten |
publishDate | 2018 |
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publisher | W. W. Norton |
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spelling | The Norton anthology of poetry Margaret Ferguson, Tim Kendall, Mary Jo Salter Sixth edition New York, London W. W. Norton [2018] LXVIII, 2157, A 155 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte gnd rswk-swf aEnglish poetry aAmerican poetry Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 s Geschichte z DE-604 USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g 1\p DE-604 2\p DE-604 Ferguson, Margaret W. 1948- Sonstige (DE-588)141555807 oth Kendall, Tim 1970- Sonstige (DE-588)133005534 oth Salter, Mary Jo 1954- Sonstige (DE-588)134156323 oth Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030480652&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | The Norton anthology of poetry aEnglish poetry aAmerican poetry Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4036774-5 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4002214-6 |
title | The Norton anthology of poetry |
title_auth | The Norton anthology of poetry |
title_exact_search | The Norton anthology of poetry |
title_full | The Norton anthology of poetry Margaret Ferguson, Tim Kendall, Mary Jo Salter |
title_fullStr | The Norton anthology of poetry Margaret Ferguson, Tim Kendall, Mary Jo Salter |
title_full_unstemmed | The Norton anthology of poetry Margaret Ferguson, Tim Kendall, Mary Jo Salter |
title_short | The Norton anthology of poetry |
title_sort | the norton anthology of poetry |
topic | aEnglish poetry aAmerican poetry Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd |
topic_facet | aEnglish poetry aAmerican poetry Englisch Lyrik USA Anthologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030480652&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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