Sorted by

Single Author

18 bài viết found


19/07/2024
Selection of Poems by Sir Walter Raleigh cover

Selection of Poems by Sir Walter Raleigh

Rate this audiobook

Sir Walter Raleigh (c. 1552 – 29 October 1618) was an English aristocrat, writer, poet, soldier, courtier, spy, and explorer. He is also well known for popularising tobacco in England. Raleigh’s poetry is written in the relatively straightforward, unornamented mode known as the plain style. C. S. Lewis considered Raleigh one of the era’s “silver poets”, a group of writers who resisted the Italian Renaissance influence of dense classical reference and elaborate poetic devices. In poems such as “What is Our Life” and “The Lie”, Raleigh expresses a contemptus mundi (contempt of the world) attitude more characteristic of the Middle Ages than of the dawning era of humanistic optimism. But, his lesser-known long poem “The Ocean to Cynthia” combines this vein with the more elaborate conceits associated with his contemporaries Edmund Spenser and John Donne, expressing a melancholy sense of history. A minor poem of Raleigh’s captures the atmosphere of the court at the time of Queen Elizabeth I. His response to Christopher Marlowe’s “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” was “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd”. “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” was written in 1592, while Raleigh’s “The Nymph’s Reply to The Shepherd” was written four years later. Both were written in the style of traditional pastoral poetry. They follow the same structure of six four-line stanzas employing a rhyme scheme of AABB. (Introduction by Wikipedia) Sir Walter Raleigh (c. 1552 – 29 October 1618) was an English aristocrat, writer, poet, soldier, courtier, spy, and explorer. He is […]

18/07/2024
Selected Works: Poems cover

Selected Works: Poems

Rate this audiobook

Voltairine de Cleyre (November 17, 1866 – June 20, 1912)was an American anarchist. She was skilled in many subjects and wrote essays, poems, letters, sketches, stories and speeches. These are her selected poems. (Summary by enko)     [chương_files]  

18/07/2024
Farmer's Bride cover

Farmer’s Bride

Rate this audiobook

The Farmer’s Bride is a collection of 28 poems by British modernist writer Charlotte Mew. The original edition was published in 1916; this edition, published in 1921, contains 11 more poems. Mew’s poetry is varied in style and content, but manifests a concern with gender issues throughout. Mew’s life was marked by loneliness and depression, and she eventually committed suicide. Her work earned her the admiration of her peers, including Virginia Woolf, who characterized her as “very good and quite unlike anyone else.” (Summary by Elizabeth Klett)     [chương_files]  

17/07/2024
Forest cover

Forest

Rate this audiobook

The Forest is a short collection of Ben Jonson’s poetry. This collection of fifteen poems first appeared in the 1616 first folio of his collected works. (Summary by Sheldon Greaves)     [chương_files]  

16/07/2024
Passionate Pilgrim cover

Passionate Pilgrim

Rate this audiobook

The Passionate Pilgrim was published by William Jaggard, later the publisher of Shakespeare’s First Folio. The first edition survives only in a single fragmentary copy; its date cannot be fixed with certainty since its title page is missing, though many scholars judge it likely to be from 1599, the year the second edition appeared with the attribution to Shakespeare. This version of The Passionate Pilgrim, contains 15 romantic sonnets and short poems. The works contained, while disputed as to authorship, are in this writer’s most humble opinion among the best of the age. (Summary by Caliban and Wikipedia)     [chương_files]  

16/07/2024
Few Figs from Thistles cover

Few Figs from Thistles

Rate this audiobook

A collection of 23 poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay.     [chương_files]  

15/07/2024
Cornhuskers cover

Cornhuskers

Rate this audiobook

Carl Sandburg’s collection of 103 poems that earned a Pulitzer Prize Special Letters Award in 1919.     [chương_files]  

14/07/2024
Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins cover

Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins

Rate this audiobook

Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–89) was an English poet, educated at Oxford. Entering the Roman Catholic Church in 1866 and the Jesuit novitiate in 1868, he was ordained in 1877. Upon becoming a Jesuit he burned much of his early verse and abandoned the writing of poetry. However, the sinking in 1875 of a German ship carrying five Franciscan nuns, exiles from Germany, inspired him to write one of his most impressive poems “The Wreck of the Deutschland.” Thereafter he produced his best poetry, including “God’s Grandeur,” “The Windhover,” “The Leaden Echo,” and “The Golden Echo.” (Summary by Bartleby) Editor: Robert S. Bridges (1844-1930)     [chương_files]