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03/10/2024
Horses of the Hills and other Verses cover

Horses of the Hills and other Verses

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Marie Elizabeth Josephine Pitt (1869–1948) was an Australian poet and socialist activist. Pitt wrote very highly coloured nature poetry, once much anthologised; and also wrote poetry in support of the socialist and labour movements. Marie Pitt was the companion of fellow poet and socialist Bernard O’Dowd. – Summary by Wikipedia Second Prooflistener – neecheelok70     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Poems of James Hebblethwaite cover

Poems of James Hebblethwaite

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James Hebblethwaite (22 September 1857 – 13 September 1921) was an English-born Australian poet, teacher and clergyman. Hebblethwaite was a man of charming personality. Apparently immersed in a world of dreams, he never allowed himself to neglect his work as a parish clergyman. He was interested in his young men and their sports, and his own simple and sincere piety earned him much respect and affection. As a writer of lyrical poems he has a secure place among the Australian poets of his time. – Summary by Wikipedia     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Heart of Spring cover

Heart of Spring

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John Shaw Neilson was born at Penola, South Australia in 1872, the son of a farmer and contractor who removed to Victoria when Neilson was nine years of age. The boy had little schooling and early went to work in the hard way of the Bush. His poems were long meditated and slowly brought to utterance. His equipment was a few books well conned, and the strong blood and high heart of his Scottish ancestry. (From the Book’s Preface)     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Chants for Socialists cover

Chants for Socialists

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As well as being influential in the Arts and Crafts Movement and writing numerous poems and novels, William Morris was deeply involved in political reform. These poems, the earliest of which were first collected in 1885, reflect his socialist beliefs. (Summary by Newgatenovelist)     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Verses of a V. A. D. cover

Verses of a V. A. D.

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This is a collection of poems by Vera M. Brittain, an Englishwoman, who served in World War I as a member of the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD). She worked as a nurse during the war. These poems are based on her wartime experiences. – Summary by mleigh     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Color cover

Color

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Countee Cullen’s poetry in Color contemplates Black Americans’ fractured sense of self—at once spiritually tied to homelands where their ancestors were kidnapped and rooted in the white supremacist society where they live. With poems about love, tradition, the intertwined lives of Black people and whites, and the experience of a “Negro in a day like this,” Color is a profound early work of the Harlem Renaissance. The collection’s most famous poem is “Heritage”. (Summary by Mike Overby)     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Morna Lee, and Other Poems cover

Morna Lee, and Other Poems

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Mary Hannay Foott (pen name, La Quenouille) was a Scottish-born Australian poet and editor. She is well remembered for a bush-ballad poem, “Where the Pelican Builds”. – Summary by Wikipedia     [chương_files]  

03/10/2024
Harlem Shadows cover

Harlem Shadows

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An award winning Jamaican poet who writes passionately about his birth home and his adopted home, USA. Claude McKay vividly describes family life, love, hate, work, and social life. The reader obtains a strong sense of black life through his colorful and emotional poetry. . – Summary by Denise Ray     [chương_files]  

02/10/2024
Summer of Love cover

Summer of Love

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Joyce KIlmer may yet be an obscure poet had he not had his poem, Trees, published in Poetry in 1913. But, this book precedes that, and shows his flowing lyricism and the dripping sentimentality of his earlier work. – Summary by Larry Wilson     [chương_files]  

02/10/2024
In Excelsis cover

In Excelsis

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In 1924, Lord Alfred Douglas was sued by Winston Churchill after he alleged that the politician had been part of a Jewish-backed conspiracy to commit various acts of wartime misconduct. Douglas lost the case and was jailed for six months. During his time at Wormwood Scrubs, Douglas wrote a sonnet sequence that he would title In Excelsis (in the highest), a reversal of the title of the prison letter written by his former lover, Oscar Wilde (De Profundis – from the depths). Douglas claims in the preface to the volume that the poems are spiritual in nature. They also include poorly disguised attacks on Wilde and support for anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. (Rob Marland)     [chương_files]