℗2008.
CD
JLC Title 245h
[sound recording].
Hip-O Select,
CD
The complete Motown singles. Vol. 11B, 1971 [sound recording].
Sound of young America : album favorites
That's the way a woman is ; In the jungle ; That's the way a woman is Take me girl, I'm ready ; Right on brothers and sisters ; Take me girl I'm ready Keep me ; A man without love Lo and behold ; The things we have to do ; Lo and behold You can come right back to me ; Dinah It takes all kinds of people ; The way you do the things you do ; It takes all kinds of people If you really love me ; Think of me as your soldier Can I ; I did it all for you ; Can I My piece of Heaven ; Down, down ; My piece of Heaven
Surrender ; I'm a winner Can't it wait until tomorrow ; Back to nowhere Happiness ; I hope I see it in my lifetime ; Happiness MacArthur Park (part II) ; MacArthur Park (part I) Funky Rubber Band Funky Rubber Band Funky Rubber Band I'm an easy rider ; Concrete and clay ; I'm an easy rider Who you gonna run to ; Forgive my jealousy Act like a shotgun ; Girl I really love you ; Act like a shotgun Walk down the path of freedom ; It's just a dream ; Walk down the path of freedom Heaven must have sent you
Inner city blues (make me wanna holler) ; Wholy holy Touch ; It's so hard for me to say goodbye ; Touch Bless you ; Hope I don't get my heart broke ; Bless you Colour combination ; Swim ; Colour combination Got to be there ; Maria (you were the only one) ; Got to be there I'm still waiting ; A simple thing like cry Zip-a-dee-doo-dah ; Bah-bah-bah Zip-a-dee-doo-dah Whatever happened to love ; Baby I need your loving ; Whatever happened to love When sundown comes ; Flower girl
Superstar (Remember how you got where you are) ; Gonna keep on tryin' till I win your love ; Superstar (Remember how you got where you are) Satisfaction ; Satisfaction We've only just begun ; I'll be there ; I can get away from you (but I can't get over you) ; We've only just begun ; I'll be there Hey Lordy ; Just a little bit closer I want to go back there again ; Pick of the week ; I want to go back there again Hey big brother ; Under God's light ; Hey big brother Way back home Way back home Way back home We all end up in boxes ; We all end up in boxes I can't believe you're really leaving ; You ain't sayin' nothin' new ; I can't believe you're really leaving
You make your own Heaven and Hell right here on earth ; Ball of confusion (that's what the world is today) Make me the woman that you go home to ; It's all over but the shoutin' Sugar daddy ; I'm so happy ; Sugar daddy Simple song of freedom ; I'll be your baby tonight ; Simple song of freedom I'll be your baby tonight The greatest man who ever lived ; A child is waiting What Christmas means to me ; Bedtime for toys ; What Christmas means to me Floy joy ; This is the story ; Floy joy In and out of my life ; Your love makes it worthwhile ; In and out of my life T.L.C. (Tender loving care) ; T.L.C. (Tender loving care)
Maria (you were the only one) ; Got to be there
Regan, Scott.
Flory, Andrew.
Walker, Jr.
Meat Loaf (Vocalist), 1947-2022
Ruffin, David.
Ruffin, Jimmy.
Murphy, Shaun, 1948-
Wonder, Stevie.
Kendricks, Eddie.
Ross, Diana, 1944-
Simpson, Valerie, 1946-
Wylie, Popcorn.
Jackson, Chuck.
Cameron, G. C.
Gaye, Marvin.
Reeves, Martha.
Hammer, Jack, 1940-
Jackson, Michael, 1958-2009.
Ikeda, Suzee.
Clay, Tom.
Robinson, Smokey, 1940-
Taylor, Bobby.
Houston, Thelma.
Henry, Virgil.
Darin, Bobby.
Prince, Dave, musician.
P. J. (Patti Jerome), -2000.
Motown Record Corporation.
Messengers (Musical group : Milwaukee, Wis.)
All Stars (Musical group : Jr. Walker)
Originals (Musical group)
Rustix (Musical group)
Lodi (Musical group)
Four Tops (Musical group)
Supremes (Musical group)
My Friends (Musical group)
Sunday Funnies (Musical group)
Elgins (Musical group)
Vandellas (Musical group)
Miracles (Musical group)
Temptations (Musical group)
Tony and Carolyn.
Rare Earth (Musical group)
Undisputed Truth (Musical group)
Gladys Knight and the Pips.
Jackson 5 (Musical group)
(the Messengers) -- (Jr. Walker & the All Stars) -- (the Originals) -- (David and Jimmy Ruffin) -- (David Ruffin) -- (Stoney [Shaun Murphy] and Meatloaf) -- (Stevie Wonder) -- (Eddie Kendricks) -- (the Rustix).
(Diana Ross) -- (Valerie Simpson) -- (Lodi) -- (Four Tops) -- (Popcorn Wylie) -- (My Friends) -- (Chuck Jackson) -- (G.C. Cameron) -- (Sunday Funnies) -- (the Elgins).
(Marvin Gaye) -- (the Supremes) -- (Martha Reeves & the Vandellas) -- (Jack Hammer) -- (Michael Jackson) -- (Diana Ross) -- (Suzee Ikeda) -- (Suzee Ikeda) -- (Tom Clay) -- (Smokey Robinson & the Miracles).
(the Temptations) -- (Smokey Robinson & the Miracles) -- (Tony & Carolyn) -- (Bobby Taylor) -- (Thelma Houston) -- (Rare Earth) -- (Jr. Walker & the All Stars) -- (the Rustix) -- (Virgil Henry).
(the Undisupted Truth) -- (Gladys Knight & the Pips) -- (the Jackson 5) -- (Bobby Darin) -- (Dave Prince) -- (Stevie Wonder) -- (the Supremes) -- (Martha Reeves & the Vandellas) -- (P.J.).
(Michael Jackson).
2008
1971
The complete Motown singles. Vol. 11B, 1971 [sound recording].
1994, ©1991.
Rev., corr., and expanded ed. containing all the published poetry.
This centennial edition of E.E. Cummings's Complete Poems, published in celebration of his birth on October 14, 1894, contains all of the poems p
Book
Liveright,
9780871401526
9780871401458
9780871407108
Book
Complete poems, 1904-1962
Poems
Tulips -- Epithalamion -- Of nicolette -- Songs -- (thee will I praise between those rivers whose -- when life is quite through with -- Always before your voice my soul -- Thy fingers make early flowers of -- All in green went my love riding -- Where's Madge then, -- Doll's boy's asleep -- cruelly, love -- when God lets my body be -- Puella Mea -- Chansons innocentes -- in Just -- hist whist -- little tree -- why did you go -- Tumbling-hair picker of buttercups violets -- Orientale -- i spoke to thee -- my love -- listen -- unto thee i -- lean candles hunger in -- The emperor -- Amores -- your little voice over the wires came leaping -- in the rain- -- there is a -- consider O -- as is the sea marvelous -- into the smiting -- if I believe -- The glory is fallen out of -- I like -- after five -- O distinct -- La Guerre -- Humanity I love you -- earth like a tipsy -- The bigness of cannon -- little ladies more -- O sweet spontaneous -- Impressions -- Lady of silence -- The sky a silver -- writhe and -- The hills -- stinging -- the sky was -- i was considering how -- between green mountains -- The hours rise up putting off stars and it is -- i will wade out till my thighs are steeped in burning flowers -- Portraits -- of my -- being -- III. as usual i did not find him in cafes, the more dissolute atmosphere -- The skinny voice -- Babylon slim -- The dress was a suspicious madder, importing the cruelty of roses. -- of evident invisibles -- ta -- it's just like a coffin's -- between nose-red gross -- i walked the boulevard -- 5 -- The young -- one April dusk the -- between the breasts -- but the other.
in the, exquisite; -- The rose -- spring omnipotent goddess thou dost -- spring omnipotent goddess thou dost -- Buffalo Bill's -- Cleopatra built -- Picasso -- conversation with my friend is particularly -- my mind is -- The waddling -- raise the shade -- somebody knew Lincoln somebody xerxes -- Post impressions -- windows go orange in the slowly. -- beyond the brittle towns asleep -- The moon is hiding in -- riverly is a flower -- any man is wonderful -- into the strenuous briefness -- at the head of this street a gasping organ is waving motheaten -- i was sitting in mcsorley's outside it was New York and beautifully snowing. -- at the ferocious phenomenon of 5 o'clock i find myself gently decompos- -- SNO -- i am going to utter a tree, nobody -- Chimneys -- Sonnets-realities -- The Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls -- when i am in Boston, i do not speak. -- goodby Betty, don't remember me -- ladies and gentlemen this little girl -- by god i want above fourteenth -- when you rang at Dick Mid's Place -- A fragrant sag of fruit distinctly grouped. -- irreproachable ladies firmly lewd -- near:breath of my breath:take not thy tingling -- when thou hast taken thy last applause, and when -- god pity me whom (god distinctly has) -- kitty. sixteen, 5' 1", white, prostitute. -- it started when Bill's chip of clenched arms -- she sits dropping on a caret of clenched arms -- unnoticed woman from whose kind large flesh -- twentyseven bums give a prostitute the once.
of this wilting wall the colour drub -- where as by dark really released, the modern -- XIX. my girl's tall with hard long eyes -- life boosts herself rapidly at me -- Sonnets -- unrealities -- what were roses. Perfume? for i do -- when unto nights of autumn do complain -- A connotation of infinity -- Thou in whose swordgreat story shine the deeds -- when my sensational moments are no more -- god gloats upon Her stunning flesh. Upon -- O Thou to whom the musical white spring -- when the proficient poison of sure sleep -- this is the garden : colours come and go, -- X. it is at moments after i have dreamed -- it may not always be so ; and i say -- I have seen her a stealthily frail -- if learned darkness from our searched world -- who's most afraid of death? thou art of him -- come nothing to my comparable soul -- when citied day with the sonorous homes -- will suddenly trees leap from winter and will -- A wind has blown the rain away and blown -- when my love comes to see me it's -- it is funny, you will be dead some day. -- A connotation of infinity -- Thou in whose swordgreat story shine the deeds -- V. when the proficient poison of sure sleep -- let's live suddenly without thinking -- yours is the music for no instrument -- fabulous against, a, fathoming jelly -- by little accurate saints thickly which tread -- A thing most new complete fragile intense, -- autumn is : that between a building -- my love is building a building -- perhaps it is to feel strike -- The ivory performing rose -- my naked lady framed -- i have found what you are like -- GOM splashes-sink -- my sonnet is A light goes on in -- phonograph's voice like a keen spider skipping -- you asked me to come : it was raining a little, -- (let us tremble) a personal radiance sits.
utterly and amusingly i am pash -- notice the convulsed orange inch of moon -- this day it was spring ... us -- Dedication -- Post impressions -- The wind is a lady with -- Take for example this: -- Paris ; this April sunset completely utters -- I remark this beach has been used too. much Too. orginally -- my smallheaded pearshaped -- of this sunset (whuch is so -- my eyes are fond of the east side -- suppose -- Portraits -- when the spent day begins to frail -- impossibly -- here is little Effie's head -- & : seven poems -- i will be -- i'll tell you a dream i had once i was away up in the sky Blue, everything: -- Spring is like a perhaps hand -- Who threw the silver dollar up into the tree? I didn't said the little -- gee i like to think of dead it means nearer because deeper firmer -- (one!) -- who knows if the moon's -- Sonnets-Realities -- O It's Nice To Get Up In, the slipshod musous kiss -- my strength becoming wistful in a glib -- The dirty colours of her kiss have just -- light cursed falling in a singular block.
The bed is not very big -- The poem her belly marched through me as -- an amiable putrescence carpenters -- her careful distinct sex whose sharp lips comb -- in making Marjorie god hurried -- Sonnets -- actualities 5 -- before the fragile gradual throne of night -- when i have thought of you somewhat too -- if i should sleep with a lady called death -- upon the room's silence, i will sew -- A blue woman with sticking out breasts haning -- when you went away it was morning -- i like my body when it is with your -- is 5 (1926) -- One -- Five Americans -- Liz -- Mame -- Gert -- Marj -- Fran -- Poem, or beauty hurts Mr. Vinal -- curtains part) -- workingman with hand so hairy-sturdy -- yonder deadfromtheneckup graduate of a -- Jimmie's got a goil goil goil, Jimmie -- listen my children and you -- even if all desires things moments be -- death is more than -- nobody loses all the time -- now dis daughter uv eve(who aint precisely slim)sim -- (and i imagine -- it really must -- Item -- XV. Ikey (Goldberg)'s worth I'm -- ? -- this young question mark man -- mr youse needn't be so spry -- XIX. she being Brand
slightly before the middle of Congressman Pudd -- Ode -- on the Madam's best april the -- (as that named Fred -- my uncle -- than(by yon sunset's wintry glow -- weazened Irrefutable unastonished -- Memorabilia -- a man who had fallen among thieves -- this evangelist -- (ponder, darling, these busted statues -- poets yeggs and thirsties -- Will i ever forget that precarious moment? -- voices to voices, lip to lip -- life hurl my -- Two -- the season 'tis, my lovely lambs, -- opening of the chambers close -- "next to of course god america i -- it's jolly -- look at this) -- first Jock he -- lis -- come, gaze with me upon this dome -- 16 heures -- my sweet old etcetera -- Three -- now that fierce few -- Among these red pieces of -- it is winter a moon in the afternoon -- candles and -- will out of the kindness of their hearts a few philosophers tell me -- but observe ; although -- sunlight was over -- Four -- the moon looked into my window -- if being mortised with a dream -- here's a little mouse) and.
but if i should say -- in spite of everything -- you are not going to, dear. You are not going to and -- since feeling is first -- some ask praise of their fellows -- supposing i dreamed this) X. you are like the snow only -- because -- you being in love -- Nobody wears a yellow -- it is so long since my heart has been with yours -- i am a beggar always -- if within tonight's erect -- how this uncouth enchanted -- i go to this window -- Five -- after all white horses are in bed -- touching you i say (it being Spring -- along the brittle treacherous bright streets -- our touching hearts slenderly comprehend -- V. if i have made, my lady, intricate -- W [ViVa] (1931) -- mean- -- oil tel duh woil doi sez -- the surely -- there are 6 doors. -- V. myself, walking in Dragon st -- VI. but my can you maybe listen there's -- Space being (don't foreget to remember) Curved -- (one fine day) -- y is a well know athlete's bride -- thethe -- a mong crum bling people (a -- poor But TerFly -- remarked Robinson Jefferson -- XIV. what time is it i wonder never mind -- well) here's looking at ourselves -- tell me not how electricity or -- Full Speed Astern) -- Gay is the captivating cognomen of a young woman of cambridge, mass. -- i will cultivate within.
but granted that it's nothing paradoxically enough beyond mere personal -- helves surling out of eakspeasies per(reel) hapsingly -- Lord John Unalive (having a fortune of fifteengrand -- buncha hardboil guys from duh A.C. fulla -- serene immediate silliest and whose -- XXIX. in the middle of a room -- i sing of Olaf glad and big -- memory believes -- Wing Wong, uninterred at twice -- innerly -- sunset) edges become swiftly -- how -- n(o)w the -- An(fragrance) of -- thou firsting a hugeness of twi-light -- twi- is -Light bird -- structure, miraculous challenge, devout am -- if there are any heavens my mother will (all by herself) have -- i'd think wonder -- you -- i met a man under the moon -- when rain whom fear -- come a little further -- why be afraid- -- A light out) & first of all foam -- when hair falls off and eyes blur and -- A clown's smirk in the skull of a baboon -- it)It will it -- breathe with me this fear -- if i live you -- speaking of love (of -- lady will you come with me into -- somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond -- is there a flower (whom -- my darling since.
because i love you) last night -- if you and i awakening -- item: is Clumsily with of -- be unto love as rain is unto colour ; create -- greanted the all saving our young kiss only -- but being not amazing : without love -- nothing is more exactly terrible than -- put off your faces, Death : for day is over -- but if a living dance upon dead minds -- so standing, out eyes filled with wind, and the -- here is the ocean, this is moonlight : say -- No thanks (1935 Manuscript) -- Initial dedication -- mOOn Over tOwns mOOn -- moon over gai -- that which we who're alive in spite of mirrors -- i -- a)glazed mind layed in a urinal -- exit a kind of unkindness exit -- sonnet entitled how to run the world -- The (Wistfully -- o pr -- little man -- ci-gît 1 Foetus (unborn to not die -- why why -- r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r -- mouse) Won -- one nonsufficiently inunderstood -- may i feel said he -- O -- this little -- who before dying demands not rebirth -- go(perpe) go -- In) all those who got -- when muckers pimps and tratesmen -- he does not have to feel because he thinks -- let's start a magazine -- this (that.
what does little Ernest croon -- little joe gould has lost his teeth and dosen't know where -- that famous fatheads find that each -- most (people -- kumrads die because they're told) -- does yesterday's perfection seem not quite -- numb(and -- emptied.hills.listen. -- snow)says! Says -- how dark and single, where he ends, the earth -- into a truly -- conceive a man, should he have anything -- SNOW -- move -- as if as -- here's to opening and upward. to leaf and to sap -- out of a supermetamathical subpreincestures -- theys sO alive (who is?niggers) -- The boys i mean are not refined -- sometimes in) Spring a someone will lie (glued -- swi(across! gold's -- ondumonde -- floatfloafloflf -- silent unday by silently not night -- much i cannot) -- at dusk just when -- Spring(side -- what a proud dreamhorse pulling(smoothloomingly) through -- Jehovah buried, Satan dead, -- worshipping Same -- this mind made war -- when from a sidewalk out of (blown never quite to -- love is a place -- sh estiffl -- (b eLl s? bE -- love's function is to fabricate unknownness -- we) under) over, the thing of floathing Of.
birds(here, inven -- Do. -- if night's mostness(and whom did merely day -- death (having lost) put on his universe -- come (all you mischief- -- be of love (a little -- reason let others give and realness bring- -- 70. brIght -- morsel miraculous and meaningless -- Terminal dedication -- New poems [from collected poems] (1938) -- un -- kind) -- A football with white eyebrows the -- (of ever-ever land i speak -- lucky means finding -- Q:dwo -- & -moon-He-be-hind-a-mills -- this little bride & groom are -- so little he is -- nor woman -- my speicailty is living said -- The mind's ( -- if i -- hanged -- economic secu -- beware beware beware -- only as what (out of a flophouse) floats -- must being shall -- may my heart always be open to little -- The people who -- porky & porkie -- you shall above all things be glad and young. -- Dedication -- !blac -- fl -- If you can't eat you got to.
nobody loved this -- am was. are leaves few this. is these a or -- flotsam and jetsam -- moan -- The Noster was a ship of swank -- warped this perhapsy -- spoke joe to jack -- red-rag and pink-flag -- (will you teach a -- proud of his scientific attitude -- The way to hump a cow is not -- mrs -- )when what hugs stopping earth than silent is -- youful -- ecco a leatter starting dearest we -- there is a here and -- harder perhaps than a newengland bed -- six -- nouns to nouns -- A pretty a day -- these people socalled were not given hearts -- as freedom is a breakfastfood -- wherelings whenlings -- buy me an ounce and i'll sell you a pound. -- there are possibly 21/2 or impossibly 3. -- anyone lived in a pretty how town -- The silently little blue elephant shyly (he was terri -- not time's how (anchored in what mountaining roots -- newlys of silence -- one slopshlouch twi -- my father moved through dooms of love -- you which could grin three smiles into a dead -- i say no world -- these children singing in stone a -- love is the every only god -- denied night's face -- A peopleshaped toomany-ness far too -- up into the silence the green -- love is more thicker than forget -- hate blows a bubble of despair into -- air, -- enters give -- grEEn's d -- (sitting in a tree- ) -- mortals) 49. ia am so glad and very -- what freedom's not some under's mere above.
1X1 [One times one] (1944) -- 1 -- nonsun blob a -- neither could say -- it's over a (see just -- of all the blessings which to man -- squints a blond -- my (his from daughter's mother's zero mind -- ygUDuh -- applaws) -- A salesman is an it that stinks excuse -- A politician is an arse upon -- mr u will not be missed -- it was a good co -- plato told -- pity told -- (free stop thief help murder save the world -- one's not half two. It's two are halves of one: -- X pme (Floatingly) arrive -- as any (men's hell having wrestled with -- when you are silent, shinning host by guest -- what if a much of a which of a wind -- dead every enormous piece -- no man, if men are gods : but if gods must -- rain or hail -- let it go-the -- Hello is what a mirror says -- a- -- old mr ly -- open green those -- nothing false and possible is love -- nothing false and possible is love -- except in your -- true lovers in each happening of their hearts -- we love each other very dearly, more -- yes is a pleasant country : -- all ignorance toboggans into know -- darling! because my blood can sing.
how -- might these be thrushes climbing through almost (do they -- if (among -- these (whom ; pretends -- i think you like -- open your heart : -- until and i heard -- so isn't small one littlest why, -- trees were in (give -- which is the very -- sweet spring is your -- life is more than reason will deceive -- o by the by -- if everything happens that can't be done -- Dedication -- Xaipe (1950) -- Dedication -- this (let's remember) day died agian and -- hush) -- 3. purer than purest pure -- this out of within itself moo -- swim so now million many worlds in each -- dying is fine) but Death -- we miss you, jack -- tactfully you (with one cocked -- o -- possibly thrice we glimpsed -- more likely twice -- or who and who) -- so many selves (so many fiends and gods -- tw -- chas sing does (who -- out of more find than seeks -- hair your a brook -- if the -- (swooning) a pillar of youngly -- a(ncient) a -- out of the mountain of his soul comes -- goo-dmore-ning (en -- jake hates all the girls (the -- when serpents bargain for the right to squirm.
three wealthy sisters swore they'd never part -- one day a nigger -- pieces (in darker -- who sharpens every dull -- summer is over -- noone autumnal this great lady's gaze -- nine birds (rising -- 30. snow means that -- infinite jukethrob smoke & swallow to dis -- blossoming are people -- if a cheerfulest elephantangelchild should sit -- A thrown a -- light's lives lurch a once world quickly from rises.
Cummings, E. E. (Edward Estlin), 1894-1962.
Firmage, George James.
E.E. Cummings ; edited by George J. Firmage.
1994
1991
Complete poems, 1904-1962
1996.
An anthology of the works of 120 black writers, spanning two centuries, beginning with Lucy Terry's poem, Bars Fight. The anthology features poem
Book
W.W. Norton & Co.,
9780393040012
9780393959086
Book
The Norton anthology of African American literature
Were you there when they crucified my Lord? ; City called heaven ; God's a-gonna trouble the water ; Walk together children ; I know moon-rise ; I'm a-rollin' ; I been rebuked and I been scorned ; Didn't my Lord deliver Daniel? ; Soon I will be done ; No more auction block ; Swing low, sweet chariot ; Steal away to Jesus ; Go down, Moses ; Been in the storm so long ; Oh, freedom! -- This little light of mine ; Down by the riverside ; Freedom in the air ; Take my hand, precious Lord ; Peace be still ; Stand by me -- Yellow dog blues ; St. Louis blues ; Beale Street blues ; Down-hearted blues ; See, see rider ; Prove it on me blues ; Gulf Coast blues ; Trouble in mind ; Backwater blues ; In the house blues ; How long blues ; Hellhound on my trail ; It's a low down dirty shame ; Good morning, blues ; Sent for you yesterday ; Going to Chicago blues ; Fine and mellow ; Hoochie coochie ; Sunnyland.
We raise de wheat ; Me and my captain ; Promises of freedom ; Jack and Dinah want freedom ; Run, nigger, run ; Learn to count ; Another man done gone ; You may go but this will bring you back -- Poor Lazarus ; The signifying monkey ; Wild Negro Bill ; John Henry ; Frankie and Johnny ; Railroad Bill ; Stackolee ; Sinking of the Titanic ; Shine and the Titanic -- Pick a bale of cotton ; Go down, old Hannah ; Can't you line it?
(What did I do to be so) black and blue / It don't mean a thing (if it ain't got that swing) / Parker's mood
The revolution will not be televised / The message / Don't believe the hype / The evil that men do
God -- The Eagle stirreth her nest / Faith hasn't got no eyes / I have a dream ; I've been to the mountaintop / The ballot or the bullet
All God's chillen had wings ; Big talk ; Deer hunting story ; How to write a letter ; "'Member youse a nigger" ; "Ah'll beatcher makin' money" ; Why the sister in black works hardest ; Why women always take advantage of men ; "De reason niggers is working so hard" ; The ventriloquist ; You talk too much, anyhow ; The king buzzard ; A flying fool ; Bur Rabbit in Red Hill churchyard ; Brer Rabbit tricks Brer Fox again ; The wonderful tar-baby story ; How Mr. Rabbit was too sharp for Mr. Fox ; The awful fate of Mr. Wolf ; What the rabbit learned.
Bars fight / The interesting narrative of the life of Olaudah Equiano, or, Gustavus Vassa, the African, written by himself. Volume 1. Chapter I ; Chapter II ; from Chapter III ; from Chapter IV / Poems on various subjects, religious and moral. Preface ; Letter sent by the author's master to the publisher ; To the publick / To Mæcenas ; To the University of Cambridge, in New-England ; On being brought from Africa to America ; On the death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield, 1770 ; To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth ; On imagination ; To S.M., a young African painter, on seeing his works ; To Samson Occom ; To his excellency General Washington / David Walker's appeal in four articles; together with a preamble, to the coloured citizens of the world. Preamble ; Article I : our wretchedness in consequence of slavery / The lover's farewell ; On hearing of the intention of a gentleman to purchase the poet's freedom ; Division of an estate ; The creditor to his proud debtor ; George Moses Horton, myself
Ar'n't I a woman? speech to the Women's Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio, 1851 ; from The Anti-slavery bugle, June 21, 1851 ; from The narrative of Sojourner Truth, 1878 / Religion and the pure principles of morality, the sure foundation on which we must build. Introduction / Lecture delivered at the Franklin Hall / Incidents in the life of a slave girl. Preface ; Childhood ; The new master and mistress ; The trials of girlhood ; A perilous passage in the slave girl's life ; Another link to life ; The flight ; The loophole of retreat ; Preparations for escape ; The confession ; The Fugitive Slave Law ; Free at last / Narrative of William W. Brown, a fugitive slave. Chapter V ; from Chapter VI / Clotel, or, The president's daughter. The Negro sale ; Going to the South ; The quadroon's home ; To-day a mistress, tomorrow a slave ; Escape of Clotel / Lines suggested on reading "An appeal to Christian women of the South, " by A.E. Grimke / An address to the slaves of the United States of America / The mulatto / Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American slave, written by himself / My bondage and my freedom. Introduced to the abolitionists ; Twenty-one months in Great Brittain
from What to the slave is the Fourth of July? : an address delivered in Rochester, New York, on 5 July 1852 / Life and times of Frederick Douglass. Second part. Weighed in the balance / Life and times of Frederick Douglass. Third part. Later life / America ; Yes! strike again that sounding string ; Self-reliance / Ethiopia ; Eliza Harris ; The slave mother ; Vashti ; Bury me in a free land ; Aunt Chloe's politics ; Learning to read ; A double standard ; Songs for the people ; An appeal to my country women ; The two offers ; Our greatest want / Fancy etchings. Enthusiasm and lofty aspirations ; Dangerous economies / Woman's political future / Our nig, or, sketches from the life of a free black, in a two-story white house, north. Preface ; Mag Smith, my mother ; My father's death ; A new home for me ; Visitor and departure ; Perplexities, another death ; The winding up of the matter
A parting hymn / Journals. from Journal one ; from Journal three / Up from slavery. A slave among slaves ; Boyhood days ; The struggle for an education ; The Atlanta Exposition address / The goopherd grapevine ; The passing of Grandison ; The wife of his youth / Womanhood a vital element in the regeneration and progress of a race / Contending forces. The sewing-circle ; Will Smith's defense of his race / Famous men of the Negro race. Booker T. Washington / Famous women of the Negro race. Literary workers : Frances E.W. Harper / Letter from Cordelia A. Condict and Pauline Hopkins's reply : March 1903 / A red record. The case stated ; The remedy / A litany of Atlanta ; The song of the smoke ; The souls of black folk ; The damnation of women ; Criteria of Negro art ; Two novels
The snapping of the bow ; Me 'n' Dunbar ; Paul Laurence Dunbar ; At the closed gate of justice ; An indignation dinner / Sence you went away ; Lift ev'ry voice and sing ; O black and unknown bards ; Fifty years ; Brothers ; The creation ; My city ; The autobiography of an ex-colored man / The book of American Negro poetry. Preface / Ode to Ethiopia ; Worn out ; A Negro love song ; The colored soldiers ; An ante-bellum sermon ; Ere sleep comes down to soothe the weary eyes ; Not they who soar ; When Malindy sings ; We wear the mask ; Little brown baby ; Her thought and his ; A cabin tale ; Sympathy ; Dinah kneading dough ; The haunted oak ; Douglass ; Philosophy ; Black Samson of Brandywine ; The poet ; The Fourth of July and race outrages / The hindered hand, or, The reign of the repressionist. The fugitives flee again ; The blaze / Violets ; I sit and sew ; April is on the way ; Violets / The watchers ; The house of falling leaves ; Sic vita ; Turn me to my yellow leaves ; Quiet has a hidden sound / Singing hallelujia ; Song of the whirlwind ; My God in heaven said to me ; The lonely mother ; Tired ; The scarlet woman
The Negro digs up his past / A winter twilight ; The black finger ; For the candle light ; When the green lies over the earth ; Tenebris / Before the feast of Shushan ; Dunbar ; At the carnival ; Lady, lady ; Letter to my sister ; The wife-woman / Plum bun : a novel without a moral. from Home. Black Philadelphia ; Sundays / The new Negro / The heart of a woman ; Youth ; My little dreams ; Lost illusions ; I want to die while you love me / Africa for the Africans ; The future as I see it / Harlem shadows ; If we must die ; To the white fiends ; Africa ; America ; My mother ; Enslaved ; The White House ; Outcast ; St. Isaac's Church, Petrograd / Home to Harlem. He also loved / Harlem runs wild / Sweat ; How it feels to be colored me ; The gilded six-bits ; Characteristics of Negro expression / Mules and men. Negro folklore / Their eyes were watching God. The return ; Pear tree / Dust tracks on a road. Research / Quicksand. To Denmark ; New life ; Talk of marriage ; Proposal ; Good-bye / Cane / The Negro-art hokum / The city of refuge ; The Caucasian storms Harlem
The wharf rats / On being young, a woman, and colored / Odyssey of Big Boy ; Long gone ; Southern road ; Strong men ; Memphis blues ; Slim Greer ; Tin roof blues ; Ma Rainey ; Cabaret ; Sporting Beasley ; Sam Smiley / Heritage ; To a dark girl ; Sonnet, 2 ; Hatred / Infants of the spring. Harlem salon / Golgotha is a mountain ; A black man talks of reaping ; Nocturne at Bethesda ; Southern mansion ; Miracles ; A summer tragedy / The Negro speaks of rivers ; Mother to son ; Danse africaine ; Jazzonia ; When Sue wears red ; Dream variations ; The weary blues ; I too ; A house in Taos ; Homesick blues ; Po' boy blues ; Gypsy man ; Lament over love ; Red silk stockings ; Bad man ; Song for a dark girl ; Gal's cry for a dying lover ; Hard daddy ; Sylvester's dying bed ; Ballad of the landlord ; Juke box love song ; Dream boogie ; Harlem ; Motto ; The Negro artist and the racial mountain ; The blues I'm playing / The big sea. When the Negro was in vogue ; Harlem literati ; Downtown / The best of Simple. Feet live their own life ; A toast to Harlem ; Jealousy / Yet do I marvel ; Tableau ; Incident ; Saturday's child ; The shroud of color ; Heritage ; To John Keats, poet at spring time ; From the dark tower / Poem ; Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem ; Remember not ; Invocation
An ex-judge at the bar ; Dark symphony ; A legend of Versailles ; Libretto for the Republic of Liberia ; The birth of John Henry ; Satchmo / The living is easy. Cleo ; Cleo's high jinks ; Cleo goes north / Blueprint for Negro writing ; The ethics of living Jim Crow, an autobiographical sketch ; Long black song ; The man who lived underground / Black boy. Booklist ; Chicago / Salute to the passing / Like a winding sheet / The street. The apartment / The diver ; Homage to the empress of the blues ; Middle passage ; O Daedalus, fly away home ; Runagate runagate ; Frederick Douglass ; A ballad of remembrance ; Mourning poem for the Queen of Sunday ; Soledad ; El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz ; A letter from Phillis Wheatley / Invisible man. Battle royal ; Epilogue / Change the joke and slip the yoke ; The world and the jug
For my people ; Poppa chicken ; For Malcolm X ; Prophets for a new day / Kitchenette building ; The mother ; A song in the front yard ; Sadie and Maud ; The vacant lot ; The preacher : ruminates behind the sermon ; The Sundays of Satin-Legs Smith ; Maxie Allen ; The rites for Cousin Vit ; The children of the poor ; The lovers of the poor ; We real cool ; The Chicago Defender sends a man to Little Rock ; A lovely love ; Malcolm X ; Two dedications ; Riot ; The third sermon on the Warpland ; Young heroes ; When you have forgotten Sunday : the love story ; Maud Martha / Everybody's protest novel ; Many thousands gone ; Stranger in the village ; Notes of a native son ; Sonny's blues / Walking Parker home ; Grandfather was queer, too ; Jail poems ; Unanimity has been achieved, not a dot less for its accidentalness ; War memoir : jazz, don't listen to it at your own risk / A raisin in the sun
Status symbol ; I am a black woman / Towards a black aesthetic / The autobiography of Malcolm X. Saved / The man who cried I am. In an outdoor cafe ; Memories, Margrit, and morphine ; Picture of the writer / Letter from Birmingham jail / The idea of ancestry ; Hard rock returns to prison from the hospital for the criminal insane ; For black poets who think of suicide / The black aesthetic. Introduction / Preface to a twenty volume suicide note ; In memory of radio ; A poem for black hearts ; I don't love you ; Three movements and a coda ; SOS ; Black art ; The invention of comics ; Dutchman ; The revolutionary theatre
Homecoming ; Poem at thirty ; For our lady ; Summer words of a sistuh addict / A blues book for blue black magical women. Part three. Present / Goin' a buffalo : a tragifantasy / Soul on ice. The primeval mitosis / Did John's music kill him? / How long has Trane been gone / The black arts movement / Black art : mute matter given force and function / Back again, home ; Introduction : to Think black ; The long reality ; Malcolm spoke/who listened? ; A poem to complement other poems / For Saundra ; Beautiful black men ; Nikki-Rosa / A solo song : for Doc / In Texas grass ; Conversation overheard ; Impressions/of Chicago, for Howlin' Wolf / Jesus was crucified ; It is deep ; For sistuhs wearin' straight hair
Train whistle guitar. History lessons / Still I rise ; My Arkansas / I know why the caged bird sings. Mrs. Flowers ; "Mam" / Reena ; To Da-duh, in memoriam ; The making of a writier : from the poets in the kitchen / A movie star has to star in black and white / Sula / The sky is gray / Father Son and Holy Ghost ; The winds of Orisha ; Coal ; Now that I am forever with child ; A litany for survival ; The evening news ; Poetry is not a luxury / Pike Street bus ; The Griots who know Brer Fox ; Tapestries ; Caledonia / The bodies broken on ; The lost baby poem ; Prayer ; Malcolm ; Kali ; If mama/could see ; Homage to my hips ; What spells raccoon to me ; 1. At Jonestown ; A woman who loves ; Wishes for sons ; Move / In memoriam : Martin Luther King Jr. ; I must become a menace to my enemies ; Poem about my rights ; Poem for Guatemala ; The female and the silence of a man ; Intifada ; A new politics of sexuality / Swallow the lake ; Round midnight ; On watching a caterpillar become a butterfly ; Chicago heat
There is a tree more ancient than Eden. The epistle of Sweetie Reed / Dear John, dear Coltrane ; Deathwatch ; Here where Coltrane is ; Br'er Sterling and the rocker ; Grandfather ; "Goin' to the territory" ; In Hayden's collage ; The ghost of soul-making / I am a cowboy in the boat of Ra ; Railroad Bill, a conjure man ; Dualism : in Ralph Elliison's Invisible man ; Chattanooga ; Oakland blues ; Neo-HooDoo manifesto / Mumbo jumbo. Chapters 1-2 / Raymond's run / A dance for Ma Rainey ; Conjugal visits / The seduction of light. Ben Franklin ; Secondhand business / Brothers and keepers. Robby's version / Damballah / Atlantis : model 1924 (d) / The peacock poems : 1 ; I want Aretha to set this to music ; Tell Martha not to moan / Women ; Outcast ; On stripping bark from myself ; "Good night, Willie Lee, I'll see you in the morning" ; In search of our mothers' gardens ; Everyday use ; Advancing Luna, and Ida B. Wells / The color purple. God love all them feelings / Fences / Within the veil ; Columba
Emmett Till ; Today I am a homicide in the north of the city ; Be quiet, go away ; At the record hop ; American sonnet (10) ; Bedtime story ; Mastectomy / Bloodchild / February in Sydney ; Facing it ; Sunday afternoons ; Banking potatoes ; Birds on a powerline / Falso brilhante ; Song of the Andoumboulou : 8 / Djbot Baghostu's run. 26.IX.81 / The education of Mingo / from For colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf ; Nappy edges ; Bocas : a daughter's geography / Annie John. The circling hand / The Chaneysville incident. Old Jack / The women of Brewster Place. The two / Quilting on the rebound / David Walker (1785-1830) ; Parsley ; Receiving the stigmata ; from Thomas and Beulah ; The event ; Motherhood ; Daystar ; The Oriental ballerina ; Pastoral ; from Mother love ; Persephone abducted ; Statistic : the witness ; Mother love ; Demeter mourning ; History ; Demeter's prayer to Hades / Devil in a blue dress. DeWitt Albright ; Joppy ; Daphne Monet / Conditions. XXI ; XXII ; XXIV
Gates, Henry Louis.
McKay, Nellie Y.
Andy Razaf -- Duke Ellington -- King Pleasure.
Gil Scott-Heron -- Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five -- Public Enemy -- Queen Latifah.
C.L. Franklin -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Martin Luther King -- Malcolm X.
Lucy Terry -- Olaudah Equiano -- Phillis Wheatley -- Phillis Wheatley -- David Walker -- George Moses Horton.
Sojourner Truth -- Maria W. Stewart -- Maria W. Stewart -- Harriet Jacobs -- William Wells Brown -- William Wells Brown -- Ada (Sarah L. Forten) -- Henry Highland Garnet -- Victor Séjour -- Frederick Douglass -- Frederick Douglass.
Frederick Douglass -- Frederick Douglass -- Frederick Douglass -- James M. Whitfield -- Frances E.W. Harper -- Frances E.W. Harper -- Frances E.W. Harper -- Harriet E. Wilson.
Charlotte Forten Grimké -- Charlotte Forten Grimké -- Booker T. Washington -- Charles W. Chesnutt -- Anna Julia Cooper -- Pauline E. Hopkins -- Pauline E. Hopkins -- Pauline E. Hopkins -- Pauline E. Hopkins -- Ida B. Wells-Barnett -- W.E.B. Du Bois.
James D. Corrothers -- James Weldon Johnson -- James Weldon Johnson -- Paul Laurence Dunbar -- Sutton E. Griggs -- Alice Moore Dunbar Nelson -- William Stanley Braithwaite -- Fenton Johnson.
Arthur A. Schomburg -- Angelina Weld Grimké -- Anne Spencer -- Jessie Redmon Fauset -- Alain Locke -- Georgia Douglas Johnson -- Marcus Garvey -- Claude McKay -- Claude McKay -- Claude McKay -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Nella Larsen -- Jean Toomer -- George Samuel Schuyler -- Rudolph Fisher.
Eric Walrond -- Marita Bonner -- Sterling A. Brown -- Gwendolyn B. Bennett -- Wallace Thurman -- Arna Bontemps -- Langston Hughes -- Langston Hughes -- Langston Hughes -- Countee Cullen -- Helene Johnson.
Melvin B. Tolson -- Dorothy West -- Richard Wright -- Richard Wright -- Chester B. Himes -- Ann Petry -- Ann Petry -- Robert Hayden -- Ralph Ellison -- Ralph Ellison.
Margaret Walker -- Gwendolyn Brooks -- James Baldwin -- Bob Kaufman -- Lorraine Hansberry.
Mari Evans -- Hoyt Fuller -- Malcolm X (El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz) -- John Alfred Williams -- Martin Luther King Jr. -- Etheridge Knight -- Addison Gayle Jr. -- Amiri Baraka.
Sonia Sanchez -- Sonia Sanchez -- Ed Bullins -- Eldridge Cleaver -- A.B. Spellman -- Jayne Cortez -- Larry Neal -- Maulana Karenga -- Haki R. Madhubuti -- Nikki Giovanni -- James Alan McPherson -- Quincy Troupe -- Carolyn M. Rodgers.
Albert Murray -- Maya Angelou -- Maya Angelou -- Paule Marshall -- Adrienne Kennedy -- Toni Morrison -- Ernest J. Gaines -- Audre Lorde -- Colleen McElroy -- Lucille Clifton -- June Jordan -- Clarence Major.
Leon Forrest -- Michael S. Harper -- Ishmael Reed -- Ishmael Reed -- Toni Cade Bambara -- Al Young -- Al Young -- John Edgar Wideman -- John Edgar Wideman -- Samuel R. Delany -- Sherley Anne Williams -- Alice Walker -- Alice Walker -- August Wilson -- Michelle Cliff.
Wanda Coleman -- Octavia Butler -- Yusef Komunyakaa -- Nathaniel Mackey -- Nathaniel Mackey -- Charles Johnson -- Ntozake Shange -- Jamaica Kincaid -- David Bradley -- Gloria Naylor -- Terry McMillan -- Rita Dove -- Walter Mosley -- Essex Hemphill.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., general editor, Nellie Y. McKay, general editor.
1996
The Norton anthology of African American literature
[2020]
Across a turbulent history, Black poets created a rich and multifaceted tradition that has been both a reckoning with American realities and an i
Book
9781598536669
Book
African American poetry : 250 years of struggle & song
Library of America ;
Introduction / Bury me in a free land: 1770-1899 -- Lift every voice: 1900-1918 -- The dark tower: 1919-1936 -- Ballads of remembrance: 1936-1959 -- Ideas of ancestry: 1959-1975 -- Blue light sutras: 1976-1989 -- Praise songs for the day: 1990-2008 -- After the hurricane: 2009-2020
ONE: BURY ME IN A FREE LAND 1770-1899. On imagination ; On Recollection ; On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield. 1770 ; To S. M. a young African Painter, on seeing his Works ; To His Excellency General Washington / An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatly, Ethiopian Poetess, in Boston / [Bars Fight] / A Mathematical Problem in Verse / To Eliza ; The Slave's Complaint ; On hearing of the intention of a gentleman to purchase the Poet's freedom ; Division of an estate ; The Art of a Poet ; George Moses Horton, Myself / An Appeal to Woman ; The Grave of the Slave / Concatination [Selected Pottery Verses, 1834-1862] / The Natives of America ; Reflections / Armand Lanusse: Epigram ; Camille Thierry Ideas ; Pierre Dalcour: Verse Written in the Album of Mademoiselle _____ ; Victor-Ernest Rillieux: Love and Devotion/ Les Cenelles -- America ; To Cinque / Hope and Confidence / A Life-Day / The Emigrant / Song for the First of August / A June Song ; A Parting Hymn ; In the earnest path of duty / Toussaint L'Ouverture ; Self-Mastery / from The Rape of Florida ; A Question / The Slave Mother ; Bury Me in a Free Land ; Learning to Read ; A Double Standard ; Songs for the People
TWO: LIFT EVERY VOICE 1900-1918. The House of Falling Leaves / Driftwood / America ; Character or Color--Which? ; Late Mother / Paul Laurence Dunbar / A Prayer ; And What Shall You Say? ; Supplication ; A Woman at Her Husband's Grave / Dr. Booker T Washington to the National Negro Business League / A Litany at Atlanta / We Wear the Mask ; A Negro Love Song ; When Malindy Sings ; When de Co'n Pone's Hot ; An Ante-Bellum Sermon ; Sympathy ; A Death Song ; Compensation / Violets ; I Sit and Sew ; The Proletariat Speaks / The Black Finger ; A Mona Lisa ; El Beso ; You ; Rosabel ; The Eyes of My Regret ; Trees ; Tenebris ; Grass Fingers ; To Keep the Memory of Charlotte Forten Grimké / Wooing ; A Spade Is Just a Spade ; Here and Hereafter / Retrospect / When I Die ; The Lonely Mother ; Who Is That A-Walking in the Corn? ; from African Nights / Lift Every Voice and Sing ; Sence You Went Away ; O Black and Unknown Bards ; My City ; Go Down Death / from The Fledgling Poet and the Poetry Society / Ode to the Sun / To a Little Colored Boy / The New Negro
THREE: THE DARK TOWER 1919-1936. Japanese Hokku ; Negro Woman ; Effigy / Heritage ; Lines written at the Grave of Alexander Dumas ; Fantasy ; To a Dark Carl ; Dirge for a Free Spirit ; I Build America ; Epitaph / The Return ; A Black Man Talks of Reaping ; Southern Mansion ; The Day-breakers / Ma Rainey ; Old Lem ; Slim Greer ; Strange Legacies ; Southern Cop ; To a Certain Lady, in Her Garden ; Let Us Suppose / Portraiture ; Black Baby ; Impressions from a Family Album ; Coveted Epitaph ; Denial ; Idle Wonder / Longings ; Goal ; Farewell ; Having Had You ; Four Poems--After the Japanese ; For a New Mother ; I Look at Death / Yet Do I Marvel ; Incident ; Tableau ; Saturday's Child ; Heritage ; from Epitaphs ; From the Dark Tower ; Uncle Jim ; Scottsboro, Too, Is Worth Its Song / No Images ; Nineteen-twenty-nine ; My Lord, What a Morning ; Down-Home Boy ; Carry Me Back / The Mask ; Solace / Dead Fires ; La Vie C'est la vie ; Oblivion / My Last Name / Notes Found Near a Suicide / The Negro Speaks of Rivers ; The Weary Blues ; Mother to son ; Jazz Band in a Parisian Cabaret ; Beale Street Love ; Cross ; Personal ; Midwinter Blues ; Bound No'th Blues ; Dream Variations ; I, Too ; Song for a Dark Girl ; Let America be America Again ; from Montage of a Dream Deferred ; Madam and the Rent Man ; from Ask Your Mama / The Singer ; The Maestro / The Heart of a Woman ; Cosmopolite ; Black Woman ; Old Black Men ; Common Dust ; I Want to Die While You Love Me ; Interracial / Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem ; Poem ; Invocation / Jamaica Market / Christmas in de Air ; The Harlem Dancer ; Harlem Shadows ; If We Must Die ; On Broadway ; The Tropics in New York ; The Lynching ; America ; My Mother ; "The white man is a tiger at my throat" / Man and Maid / Shadow / Requiem ; This Is My Vow / October Prayer ; Flag Salute / Black and Blue ; The Tree of Hope / At the Carnival ; White Things ; Sybil Warns Her Sister / Five Vignettes ; Her Lips Are Copper Wire ; from Cane ; from Essentials ; Be with Me
FOUR: BALLADS OF REMEMBRANCE 1936-1959. To Satch (American Gothic) ; Nat Turner or Let Him Come ; If the Stars Should Fall / Narrative ; Night and a Distant Church ; It's Here in The ; Spyrytual / from A Street in Bronzeville ; Beverly Hills, Chicago ; The Bean Eater ; We Real Cool ; A Bronzeville Mother Loiters in Mississippi. Meanwhile, a Mississippi Mother Burns Bacon ; The Last Quatrain of the Ballad of Emmett Till ; The Chicago Defender Sends a Man to Little Rock ; The Lovers of the Poor ; Malcolm X ; The Second Sermon on the Warpland ; Paul Robeson ; The Life of Lincoln West ; The Boy Died in My Alley ; Infirm ; I Am a Black ; An Old Black Woman, Homeless, and Indistinct / To Julia de Burgos ; Ay, Ay, Ay of the Kinky-Haired Negress ; Poem of the Unborn Child ; Farewell in Welfare Island ; The Sun in Welfare Island / The Small Bells of Benin ; Etta Moten's Attic / from Ebony Under Granite ; Mojo Mike's Beer Garden ; Four Glimpses of Night / Sorrow Is the Only Faithful One ; The Morning Duke Ellington Praised the Lord and Six Little Black Davids Tapped Danced Unto / Those Winter Sundays ; Frederick Douglass ; Middle Passage ; Runagate Runagate ; A Letter from Phillis Wheatley ; Paul Laurence Dunbar ; [American Journal] / The Truth ; Jazz Is My Religion ; The Nice Colored Man / Hawk Lawler: Chorus ; I, Too, Know What I Am Not ; Would You Wear My Eyes? ; War Memoir ; Walking Parker Home ; Crootey Songo ; Heavy Water Blues ; Blues for Hal Waters ; Oregon / from Dark Testament ; Prophecy / A Private Letter to Brazil ; Review from Staten Island ; Man White, Brown Girl and All That Jazz / Young Poet / Harlem Dawn ; A Definition ; Jean-Jaques / Booker T. and W.E.B. ; An Answer to Lerone Bennett's Questionnaire On a Name for Black Americans ; A Poet Is Not a Jukebox / Ballad of American Mores ; Face of Poverty / Dark Symphony ; from Harlem Gallery, Book I: The Curator / For My People ; Molly Means ; October Journey / Between the World and Me ; Selected Haiku
FIVE: IDEAS OF ANCESTRY 1959-1975. Still I Rise ; Phenomenal Woman / Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note ; Look for You Yesterday, Here You Come Today ; Notes for a Speech ; The Liar ; Short Speech to My Friends ; Three Modes of History and Culture ; SOS ; Black Art ; Why's 12 / King: April 4, 1968 / Blues ; All God's Chillun ; The White River ; Sam Lord / "in the inner city" ; miss rosie ; good times ; admonitions ; "being property once myself" ; the lost baby poem ; from some jesus ; cutting greens ; homage to my hips ; "the light that came to lucille clifton" ; jasper texas 1998 ; why some people be mad at me sometimes ; "i am accused of tending to the past" ; Jump Rope Rhymes (transcribed) ; study the masters ; to my last period ; wishes for sons ; "surely i am able to write poems" ; "won't you celebrate with me" / How Long Has Trane Been Gone ; Orisha ; Rape ; Jazz Fan Looks Back / Son of Msippi ; Black Star Line ; Outer Space Blues / I Am a Black Woman / I Would Be for You Rain / High on the Hog / Black Power ; Nikki-Rosa ; For Saundra ; Ego Tripping ; A Poem for Carol ; Legacies / American History ; Dear John, Dear Coltrane ; Nightmare Begins Responsibility ; Reuben, Reuben ; Tongue-Tied in Black and White ; Last Affair: Bessie's Blues Song ; The Love Letters of Helen Pitts Douglass / Do Nothing till You Hear from Me ; A Coltrane Memorial / Medicine Man / What Would I Do White? ; These Poems ; I Must Become a Menace to My Enemies ; Poem about My Rights ; Poem for Haruko / Blues for Some Literary Friends & Myself ; For Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers / A Poem for Myself ; The Idea of Ancestry ; The Bones of My Father ; Haiku ; For Freckle-Faced Gerald ; The Violent Space ; Hard Rock Returns to Prison from the Hospital for the Criminal Insane ; For Eric Dolphy ; Feeling Fucked Up / On Being Head of the English Department / Coal ; Revolution Is One Form of Social Change ; A Litany for Survival ; Power ; Lunar Eclipse ; Inheritance--His / But He Was Cool ; Don't Cry, Scream / Swallow the Lake ; Hair / Malcolm X--An Autobiography ; Don't Say Goodbye to the Porkpie Hat / 26 Ways of Looking at a Black Man / Howlin Wolf ; Big Maybelle / Beware: Do Not Read This Poem ; Paul Laurence Dunbar in the Tenderloin ; The Reactionary Poet / sonnet ; poll ; the poor houses ; othello jones dresses for dinner ; American Jazz Quartet / how i got ovah / for our lady ; A Poem for My Father ; A poem for my brother ; from Philadelphia: Spring, 1985 ; haiku (for Osage ave and Doorknop) ; haiku (for mungu and morani and the children of soweto) ; two haiku (for Clarence H. Watson and The Count) ; tanka (for papa Joe Jones who used to toss me up to the sky) ; haiku (for domestic workers in the african diaspora) ; haiku ("man. you write me so") ; tanka ("like dark old men the") ; haiku ("like ermine when i") ; haiku ("i want to make you") ; blues ; Song No. 2 / Whitey on the Moon ; The Revolution Will Not Be Televised ; Home Is Where the Hatred Is / After Vallejo / Inauguration ; Song / One for Charlie Mingus ; Poem for My Father ; After Hearing a Radio Announcement: A Comment on Some Conditions / A Far Cry from Africa ; Codicil ; Blues ; from The Schooner Flight ; Sea Canes ; Volcano ; Easter ; from Omeros: Chapter VIII / Women / blues for franks wooten ; from Maumau American Cantos: Canto 4 / How Stars Start ; Dance of the Infidels ; Boogie with O.O. Gabugah ; The Old O.O. Blues ; A Poem for Players
SIX: BLUE LIGHT SUTRAS 1976-1989. Twenty-Year Marriage ; I Can't Get Started ; Two Brothers ; The Good Shepherd: Atlanta, 1981 / from Haiti / Titta / Soul Make a Path Through Shouting ; Sally Hemings to Thomas Jefferson / from Portrait of a Nude Woman as Cleopatra / What It Means to Be Dark ; Mastectomy ; from American Sonnets / Harriet in the Promised Land / Blackbottom ; The Weakness ; On the Turning Up of Unidentified Black Female Corpses ; Black Boys Play the Classics / Leaving Eden ; from The Arcanum Poems ; Father / Tour Guide: La Maison des Esclaves ; Turning Forty in the 90's ; Wednesday Mourning ; Heartbeats / The House Slave ; David Walker (1785-1830) ; Adolescence--II ; Banneker ; from Thomas and Beulah ; Canary ; The Return of Lieutenant James Reese Europe ; Hattie McDaniel Arrives at the Cocoanut Grove ; from Sonata Mulattica / The Dance ; The Supremes ; from Brutal Imagination / Brown Girl Levitation, 1962-1989 ; Concerto no. 7: Condoleezza [working out] at the Watergate / Some Pieces ; Hand Me Down Blues ; Dark Mirror / This Bridge Across ; Time with Stevie Wonder in It ; Chris Gilbert: An Improvisation / Vernacular Examples ; Palaver ; Sotto Voce / For My Mother (May I Inherit Half Her Strength) ; For Claude McKay / Goldsboro Narrative #4: My father's Viet Nam tour near over ; Goldsboro Narrative #28 ; Goldsboro Narrative #33 ; Goldsboro Narrative #7 ; Annual Visit of the Quiet, Unmarried Son / Heavy Corners ; Civil Servant ; For My Own Protection / "C"ing in Colors: Blue / Surplus Future Imperfect ; Woman, with wings ; Should you find me / Deep Song / i done got so thirsty that my mouth waters at the thought of rain / Fragments from the Diary of Amelie Patiné, Quadroon, Mistress of Monsieur Jacques R _____ / from The Women of Plums / Annabelle ; More Girl Than Boy ; Letter to Bob Kaufman ; Blue Light Lounge Sutra for the Performance Poets at Harold Park Hotel ; February in Sydney ; from Dien Cai Dau ; Venus's-flytraps ; My Father's Love Letters ; Anodyne ; Ode to the Maggot / Falso Brilhante ; Song of the Andoumboulou: 31 / Gra'ma ; Try to Understand Papa ; Throwing Stones at the All White Pool ; Fade to Black / Life in a Sterile Environment: A Case Study ; The Day before Kindergarten: Taluca, Alabama, 1959 ; A Reconsideration of the Blackbird ; An Anointing ; Poem for My Mothers and Other Makers of Asafetida ; The Lynching / from Muse & Drudge ; from Sleeping with the Dictionary / A Strange Beautiful Woman ; Sleepless Nights ; Lonely Eagles ; Star-Fix / How I Became the Blues / The Broken English Dream / The Black Back-Ups / All the Way Home ; from Dreamer / Trying for Fire / from for colored girls who have considered suicide / Building Nicole's Mama ; Don't Drink the Water / from Free! / Inside the Blues Whale ; Scrapple ; Washing the car with My Father ; John Henry Sleeping in High Grass / from Letters to a New England Negro
SEVEN: PRAISE SONGS FOR THE DAY 1990-2008. Blue ; The New Religion / The Venus Hottentot ; Nineteen ; Ars Poetica #28: African Leave-Taking Disorder ; Ars Poetica #100: I Believe ; Praise Song for the Day / loose strife ; Doug Flutie's 1984 Orange Bowl Hail Mary as Water into Fire / Verbal Mugging / Prayer of the Backhanded ; Bullet Points ; 'N'em ; Another Elegy ; The Tradition / A Balance of Blues & Angels / nap-i-ness / Natural ; Black Funk / Wednesday Poem / Frequently Asked Questions #10 / View of the Library of Congress from Paul Laurence Dunbar High School / Sugar and Brine: Ella's Understanding ; Salt / burial ; A Small Needful Fact / Santa Ana of Grocery Carts ; Teeth ; Ode to the Little "r" / Seeing the Body / Black Mary Integrates the School House / Touch ; Satchmo Returns to New Orleans ; The Golden Shovel ; Carp Poem / How to Listen ; Euphoria ; Ferguson / The Gospel of Barbecue / Charity on Blind Tom ; General Bethune on Blind Tom ; Blind Boone's Vision ; Minnehaha / Jesse Owens, 1963 ; Rope / Thirty Lines About the Fro ; My Father's Kites / Drop it Like It's Hottento Venus / Hostage / Plantation ; from Voyage of the Sable Venus ; "Lucy Terry Prince Prepares for Her Marriage" / Ode to the Diasporican / from Good Stock Strange Blood / from The Big Smoke ; Robot Music / What the Oracle Said / The Keepin' It Real Awards / Blackout 1977 / gayl jones ; cecil taylor ; johnny cash ; I ran from it but was still in it / On Confessionalism / Written by Himself ; Raisin / Bembe-Faced ; Arroz con Son y Clave / Blue ; Cotillion ; A Great Noise ; Speak Low / I want to not have to write another word about who cops keep killing / from Citizen: An American Lyric / The Difficult Music ; The Lucky One ; Hesitation Theory ; My Mother Was No White Dove / from The Lost Letters of Frederick Douglass ; statistical haiku (or, how do they discount us? let me count the ways) ; ode to my blackness / Don't You Wonder, Sometimes? ; The Universe Is a House Party ; Declaration / Offering ; Snow / Ode to Gentrification / Flounder ; Drapery Factory, Gulfport, Mississippi, 1956 ; Graveyard Blues ; Pilgrimage ; Miscegenation ; Incident / Strip ; RR Lyrae: Matter / Wind Talker ; Work Ethic / Dissidence ; Gwendolyn Brooks / "The reeds shook. A wide flat ass cradled in leather pants. This" / Amethyst Rocks / Money Road
EIGHT: AFTER THE HURRICANE 2009-2020. How Can Black People Write about Flowers at a Time Like This / La Negra Takes Medusa to the Hair Salon / Cento Between the Ending and the End / America Will Be / A Postmodern Two-Step / upon viewing the death of basquiat / Massa's House / Nashville / Dear _____, / My First Black Nature Poem(TM) / I saw Emmett Till this week at the grocery store / Aunt Flo and Uncle Phineas / (Afterward) One Corner More / After the Hurricane / Kansas / Kudzu / The moon rose over the bay. I had a lot of feelings / One Country / Still When I Picture It the Face of God Is a White Man's Face / Closer / #sayhername / The President's Wife / Violins / History / Black Can Sleep / Children Listen / Why Is We Americans / Object Permanence / Gnawa Boy, Marrakesh, 1968 / Fisherman's Daughter / dinosaurs in the hood / Your National Anthem / Prayer / Ode to Herb Kent
Young, Kevin, 1970- editor.
by Kevin Young --
Phillis Wheatley -- Jupiter Hammon -- Lucy Terry -- Benjamin Banneker -- George Moses Horton -- Sarah Louisa Forten -- David Drake -- Ann Plato -- James M. Whitfield -- Charles L. Reason -- George B. Vashon -- Benjamin Clark -- James Madison Bell -- Charlotte Forten Grimḱe -- Henrietta Cordelia Ray -- Albery A. Whitman -- Frances Ellen Watkins Harper.
William Stanley Braithwaite -- Olivia Ward Bush -- Carrie Williams Clifford -- James D. Corrothers -- Joseph Seamon Cotter, Jr. -- Joseph Seamon Cotter, Sr. -- W. E. B. Du Bois -- Paul Laurence Dunbar -- Alice Dunbar-Nelson -- Angelina Weld Grimké -- Walter Everette Hawkins -- Josephine D. Heard -- Fenton Johnson -- James Weldon Johnson -- George R. Margetson -- Eloise Bibb Thompson -- Priscilla Jane Thompson -- Lucian B. Watkins.
Lewis Grandison Alexander -- Gwendolyn B. Bennett -- Arna Bontemps -- Sterling A. Brown -- Anita Scott Coleman -- Mae V. Cowdery -- Countee Cullen -- Waring Cuney -- Clarissa Scott Delany -- Jessie Redmon Fauset -- Nicolas Guillen -- Frank Horne -- Langston Hughes -- Eva A. Jessye -- Georgia Douglas Johnson -- Helene Johnson -- Agnes Maxwell-Hall -- Claude McKay -- Myra Estelle Morris -- Richard Bruce Nugent -- Lucia Mae Pitts -- Esther Popel -- Andy Razaf -- Anne Spencer -- Jean Toomer.
Samuel Allen -- Russell Atkins -- Gwendolyn Brooks -- Julia de Burgos -- Margaret Danner -- Frank Marshall Davis -- Owen Dodson -- Robert Hayden -- Ted Joans -- Bob Kaufman -- Pauli Murray -- Gloria C. Oden -- Myron O'Higgins -- Oliver Pitcher -- Dudley Randall -- Lucy E. Smith -- Melvin B. Tolson -- Margaret Walker -- Richard Wright.
Maya Angelou -- Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones) -- Gerald Barrax -- Kamau Brathwaite -- Lucille Clifton -- Jayne Cortez -- Henry Dumas -- Mari Evans -- Sarah Webster Fabio -- Julia Fields -- Nikki Giovanni -- Michael S. Harper -- David Henderson -- Calvin Hernton -- June Jordan -- Keorapetse Kgositsile -- Etheridge Knight -- PInkie Gordon Lane -- Audre Lorde -- Haki Madhubuti (Don L. Lee) -- Clarence Major -- Larry Neal -- Raymond R. Patterson -- Sterling D. Plumpp ; From Where the Blues? ; "WE NEED" ; " ; Metagnomy / N. H. Pritchard -- Ishmael Reed -- Ed Roberson -- Carolyn Rodgers -- Sonia Sanchez -- Gil Scott-Heron -- A. B. Spellman -- Lorenzo Thomas -- Quincy Troupe -- Derek Walcott -- Alice Walker -- Tom Weatherly -- Al Young.
AI -- Will Alexander -- George Barlow -- Cyrus Cassells -- Barbara Chase-Riboud -- Wanda Coleman -- Sam Cornish -- Toi Derricotte -- Ralph Dickey -- Melvin Dixon -- Rita Dove -- Cornelius Eady -- Nikky Finney -- Calvin Forbes -- Christopher Gilbert -- C. S. Giscombe -- Lorna Goodison -- Forrest Hamer -- Essex Hemphill -- Safiya Henderson-Holmes -- Erica Hunt -- Gayl Jones -- Patricia Spears Jones -- Sybil Kein -- Dolores Kendrick -- Yusef Komunyakaa -- Nathaniel Mackey -- Colleen J. McElroy -- Thylias Moss -- Harryette Mullen -- Marilyn Nelson -- Brenda Marie Osbey -- Pedro Pietri -- Kate Rushin -- Primus St. John -- Tim Seibles -- when the rainbow is enuf / Ntozake Shange -- Patricia Smith -- Sekou Sundiata -- Afaa Michael Weaver -- Sherley Anne Williams.
Chris Abani -- Elizabeth Alexander -- Quan Barry -- Paul Beatty -- Jericho Brown -- Darrell Burton -- Kyle Dargan -- Kwame Dawes -- Joel Dias-Porter -- Camille Dungy -- Thomas Sayers Ellis -- Vievee Francis -- Ross Gay -- Aracelis Girmay -- Rachel Eliza Griffiths -- Duriel E. Harris -- Terrance Hayes -- Major Jackson -- Honorée Fannone Jeffers -- Tyehimba Jess -- A. Van Jordan -- Allison Joseph -- Douglas Kearney -- Daniell Legros Georges -- Robin Coste Lewis -- Mariposa -- Dawn Lundy Martin -- Adrian Matejka -- Shara mcCallum -- Tony Medina -- Tracie Morris -- Fred Moten -- John Murillo -- Gregory Pardlo -- Willie Perdomo -- Carl Phillips -- Khadijah Queen -- Claudia Rankine -- Reginald Shepherd -- Evie Shockley -- Tracy K. Smith -- Sharan Strange -- Samantha Thornhill -- Natasha Trethewey -- Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon -- Frank X. Walker -- Anthony Walton -- Simone White -- Saul Williams -- Kevin Young.
Hanif Abdurraqib -- Elizabeth Acevedo -- Cameron Awkward-Rich -- Joshua Bennett -- Reginald Dwayne Betts -- Mahogany L. Browne -- Dominique Christina -- Tiana Clark -- DeLana R. A. Dameron -- LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs -- Eve L. Ewing -- Sean Hill -- Notes on a Letter to the Singer Abbey Lincoln from Her Lover, Abraham Lincoln / Harmony Holiday -- Ishion Hutchinson -- Gary Jackson -- Saeed Jones -- Donika Kelly -- Rickey Laurentiis -- Shane McCrae -- Anis Mojgani -- Aja Monet -- Morgan Parker -- Rowan Ricardo Phillips -- Camille Rankine -- Justin Phillip Reed -- Roger Reeves -- Alison C. Rollins -- Nicole Sealey -- Charif Shanahan -- Safiya Sinclair -- Danez Smith -- Clint Smith -- Phillip B. Williams -- Jamila Woods.
Kevin Young, editor.
2020
African American poetry : 250 years of struggle & song
Scott, Foresman,
Book
English poetry and prose of the Romantic movement
The tree ; from The petition for an absolute retreat ; To the nightingale ; A nocturnal reverie / A fairy tale ; A night-piece on death ; A hymn to contentment / The highland laddie ; My Peggy ; Sweet William's ghost ; Through the wood laddie ; An thou were my ain thing ; from The gentle shepherd. Patie and Peggy / Preface to the evergreen / The braes of Yarrow / William and Margaret ; The Birks of Endermay / Grongar Hill ; The fleece. from Book I / The seasons. from Winter ; from Summer ; from Autumn / A hymn on the seasons ; The castle of indolence. from Canto I / Tell me, thou soul of her I love ; To Amanda ; Preface to winter
Night thoughts. from Night I ; from Night III ; from Night V ; from Night VI ; from Night IX / from Conjectures on original composition / from The grave / from The schoolmistress / The pleasures of the imagination. from Part I / For a grotto ; Ode to the evening star / A song from Shakespear's Cymbelyne ; Ode to simplicity ; Ode on the poetical character ; Ode written in the beginning of the year 1746 ; Ode to evening ; The passions ; Ode on the death of Mr. Thomson ; An ode on the popular superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland / Ode on the spring ; Ode on a distant prospect of Eton College ; Hymn to adversity ; Elegy written in a country churchyard ; The progress of poesy ; The bard ; Ode on the pleasure arising from vicissitude ; Song (Thyrsis, when we parted, swore) ; The fatal sisters ; The descent of Odin ; The triumphs of Owen ; The death of Hoel ; Caràdoc ; Conan ; from Journal in France ; From Gray's letters. To Mrs. Dorothy Gray ; To Richard West ; To Horace Walpole ; To Richard Stonehewer ; To Thomas Wharton To the Reverend William Mason ; from Journal in the lakes / from The pleasures of melancholy ; from Ode on the approach of summer ; The crusade ; Written in a blank leaf of Dugdale's monasticon ; Written at Stonehenge ; While summer suns o'er the gay prospect play'd ; On King Arthur's Round Table at Winchester / from Observations on the Fairy queen of Spenser / The enthusiast : or the lover of nature ; Ode to fancy ; from Essay on the genius and writing of Pope / Carthon : a poem ; Oina-Morul : a poem ; from Fingal : an ancient epic poem. Book I / from Letters on chivalry and romance. Letter I ; Letter VI / from The castle of Otranto. Chapter I
from Reliques of ancient English poetry. Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne ; The ancient ballad of Chevy-Chase ; Sir Patrick Spence ; Edom o'Gordon ; Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor / Retirement ; The minstrel, or, The progress of genius ; from Book I / Bristowe tragedie, or, The dethe of Syr Charles Bawdin ; The accounte of W. Canynges feast ; from Ælla : a tragycal enterlude. Mynstrelles song (the boddynge flourettes bloshes atte the lyghte) ; Mynstrelles song (o! synge untoe mie ruondelaie) / An excelente balade of charitie ; Epitaph on Robert Canynge / from The history of the Caliph Vathek / from Olney hymns. Lovest thou me ; Light shining out of darkness / The task. from Book I. The sofa ; from Book II. The time-piece ; from Book VI. The winter walk at noon / The poplar-field ; The Negro's complaint ; On the receipt of my mother's picture out of Norfolk ; Yardley Oak ; To Mary ; The castaway / from The village. Book I ; from The borough. Letter I. General description / At Tynemouth Priory ; The bells, Ostend ; Bereavement ; Bamborough Castle ; Hope ; Influence of time on greif ; Approach of summer ; Absence / from Poetical sketches. To spring ; To the evening star ; Song : "How sweet I roam'd" ; Song : "My silks and fine array" ; Song : "Love and harmony combine ; Song : "I love the jocund dance" ; Song : "Memory, hither come ; Mad song ; Song : Fresh from the dewy hill" ; To the muses / from Songs of innocence. Introduction ; A dream ; The lamb ; The echoing green ; The divine image ; The chimney sweeper ; Infant joy ; The shepherd ; A cradle song ; Nurse's song ; Holy Thursday ; On another's sorrow ; Laughing song ; The little black boy / The book of Thel ; from The marriage of heaven and hell. The voice of the Devil ; A memorable fancy : as I was walking among the fires of hell" ; Proverbs of hell ; A memorable fancy : "The Prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel" ; A memorable fancy : an angel came to me and said" ; A memorable fancy : "once I saw a devil in a flame" / A song of liberty ; from Visions of the daughters of Albion ; from America : a prophecy ; from Songs of experience. Introduction ; Earth's answer ; The clod and the pebble ; Holy Thursday ; The chimney sweeper ; Nurse's song ; The sick rose ; The fly ; The angel ; The tyger ; Ah, sunflower ; The garden of love ; London ; The human abstract ; Infant sorrow ; A poison tree ; A little boy lost / A cradle song ; A divine image ; To Tirzah ; Love's secret ; Couplet : "Great things" ; from The four Zoas. from Night II / Auguries of innocence ; The mental traveller ; from Milton. Preface ; from Book the second / from Jerusalem. from To the public ; from To the deists ; from To the Christians / Dedication of the illustrations to Blair's "The grave" ; from The letters. To the Rev Dr. Trusler ; To John Flaxman / from Annotations to Sir Joshua Reynold's discourses ; from Annotations to "Poems" by William Wordsworth
O, once i lov'd a bonie lass ; A prayer in the prospect of death ; Mary Morison ; My nanie, O ; Poor Mailie's elegy ; Green grow the rashes O ; To Davie ; Epistle to J. Lapraik ; Epistle to the Rev. John M'Math ; The jolly beggars ; The Holy Fair ; The cotter's Saturday night ; To a mouse ; Address to the deil ; A bard's epitaph ; Address to the unco guide, or, The rigidly righteous ; To a mountain daisy ; To a louse ; The silver tassie ; Of a' the airts ; Auld Lang Syne ; Whistle o'er the lave o't ; My heart's in the Highlands ; John Anderson my Jo ; Sweet Afton ; Willie brew'd a peck of maut ; Tam Glen ; Thou ling'ring star ; Tam o' Shanter ; Ye flowery banks ; Ae fond kiss ; The deil's awa wi' th' exciseman ; Saw ye bonie Lesley ; Highland Mary ; Last May a braw wooer ; Scots, wha hae ; A red, red rose ; My nanie's awa ; Contented wi' little ; Lassie wi' the lint-white locks ; Is there for honest poverty ; O, wert thou in the cauld blast ; O, lay thy loof in mine, lass ; Preface to the first, or Kilmarnock edition of Burns's poems
The pleasures of memory ; from Part I ; An Italian song ; Written at midnight -- Written in the Highlands of Scotland ; An inscription in the Crimea ; The boy of Egremond ; from Italy ; The lake of Geneva ; The gondola ; The fountain / Enquiry concerning political justice. from Book I. Of the powers of man considered in his social capacity ; from Book V. Of the legislative and executive power / Extract from the conclusion of a poem, composed in anticipation of leaving school. -- Written in very early youth ; from An evening walk ; Lines left upon a seat in a yew-tree ; The reverie of poor Susan ; We are seven ; The thorn ; Goody Blake and Harry Gill ; Her eyes are wild ; Simon Lee ; Lines written in early spring ; To my sister ; A whirl-blast from behind the hill ; Expostulation and reply ; The tables turned ; Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey ; The old Cumberland beggar ; Nutting ; Strange fits of passion have I known ; She dwelt among the untrodden ways ; I travelled among unknown men ; Three years she grew in sun and shower ; A slumber did my spirit seal ; A poet's epitaph ; Matthew ; The two April mornings ; The fountain ; Lucy Gray ; The prelude ; from Book I Introduction--childhood and school-time ; from Book II School-time ; from Book III Residence at Cambridge ; from Book IV Summer vacation ; from Book V Books ; from Book VI Cambridge and the Alps ; Book VIII Retrospect : love of nature leading to love of man ; from Book XI France ; from Book XII Imagination and taste, how impaired and restored--(concluded) ; Michael / It was an April morning ; "Tis said that some have died for love ; The excursion. from Book I The wanderer ; Pelion and Ossa ; The sparrow's nest ; To a butterfly ; My heart leaps up ; Written in March ; To the small celandine ; To the same flower ; Resolution and independence ; I grieved for Buonaparté ; Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1803 ; Composed by the sea-side, near Calais, August, 1802 ; It is a beauteous evening, calm and free ; On the extinction of the Venetian Republic ; To Toussaint L'Ouverture ; Composed in the valley near Dover, on the day of landing ; Near Dover, September, 1802 ; Written in London, September, 1802 ; London, 1802 ; Great men have been among us ; It is not to be thought of that the flood ; When I have borne in memory ; To H.C. ; To the daisy ; To the same flower ; To the daisy ; The green linnet ; Yew-trees ; At the grave of Burns ; To a Highland girl ; Stepping westward ; The solitary reaper ; Yarrow unvisited ; October, 1803 ; To the men of Kent ; Anticipation, October, 1803 ; To the cuckoo ; She was a phantom of delight ; I wandered lonely as a cloud ; The affliction of Margaret ; Ode to duty ; To a skylark ; Elegiac stanzas ; To a young lady ; Character of the happy warrior ; Power of music ; Yes, it was the mountain echo ; Nuns fret not at their convent's narrow room ; Personal talk ; Admonition ; How sweet it is, when mother fancy rocks ; Composed by the side of Grasmere Lake ; The world is too much with us; late and soon ; To sleep ; November, 1806 ; Ode : intimations of immortality ; Thought of a Briton on the subjugation of Switzerland ; Characteristics of a child three years old ; Here pause : the poet claims at least this praise ; Laodamía ; Yarrow visited ; Hast thou seen, with flash incessant ; Composed upon an evening of extraordinary splendor and beauty ; To a snowdrop ; There is a little unpretending rill ; Between Namur and Liege ; Composed in one of the Catholic cantons ; from The river Duddon. Sol listener, Duddon ; After-thought / from Ecclesiastical sonnets mutability ; Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge / To a skylark ; Scorn not the sonnet ; To the cuckoo ; Yarrow revisited ; On the departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford, for Naples ; The Trosachs ; If thou indeed derive thy light from heaven ; If this great world of joy and pain ; "There!" said a stripling, pointing with meet pride ; Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyes ; To a child ; Extempore effusion upon the death of James Hogg ; Hark! 'Tis the thrush ; A poet!--he hath put his heart to school ; So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive ; The unremitting voice of nightly streams ; Preface to the second edition of several of the foregoing poems (lyrical ballads)
Life ; Pantisocracy ; To a young ass ; La Fayette ; Koskiusko ; To the Reverend W.L. Bowles ; The Eolian harp ; Reflections on having left a place of retirement ; Sonnet to a friend who asked how I felt when the nurse first presented my infant to me ; Ode on the departing year ; This lime-tree bower my prison ; The dungeon ; The rime of the ancient mariner ; Christabel ; Frost at midnight ; France : an ode ; Lewti, or, The circassian love-chant ; Fears in solitude ; The nightingale ; The ballad of the dark ladie ; Kubla Khan ; Lines written in the album at Elbingerode ; Love ; Dejecton : an ode ; Hymn before sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni ; Inscription for a fountain on a heath ; Answer to a child's question ; The pains of sleep ; To a gentleman ; Time real and imaginary ; from Remorse hear, sweet spirit, hear the spell ; from Zapolya a sunny shaft did I behold ; The knight's tomb ; To nature ; Youth and age ; Work without hope ; The garden of Boccaccio ; Phantom or fact ; Epitaph ; The wanderings of Cain ; from Biographia literaria. Chapter XIV ; Chapter XVII ; from Chapter XVIII ; Chapter XXII / Characteristics of Shakespeare's dramas / Sonnet concerning the slave trade ; The battle of Blenheim ; The holly tree ; The old man's comforts ; God's judgement on a wicked bishop ; from The curse of Kehama. The funeral ; The march to Moscow ; Ode written during the negotiations with Buonaparte ; My days among the dead are past ; from A vision of judgement. The beatification ; The cataract of Lodore ; from The life of Nelson. The battle of Trafalgar / The pleasures of hope. from Part I ; Ye mariners of England ; Hohenlinden ; Lochiel's warning ; Lord Ullin's daughter ; Battle of the Baltic ; The last man ; The death-boat of Heligoland / A Canadian boat song ; from Irish melodies. Oh, breathe not his name ; When he who adores thee ; The harp that once through Tara's halls ; Oh! blame not the bard ; Lesbia hath a beaming eye ; The young May moon ; The minstrel boy ; Farewell!--but whenever you welcome the hour ; The time I've lost in wooing ; Dear harp of my country ; She is far from the land / from National airs. Oh, come to me when daylight sets ; Oft, in the stilly-night / Lalla Rookh from the light of the haram ; from Fables for the Holy Alliance. The dissolution of the Holy Alliance / The burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna ; Sonnet (my spirit's on the mountians, where the birds) ; Oh say not that my heart is cold
William and Helen ; The violet ; To a lady ; Glenfinlas, or Lord Ronald's coronach ; Cadyow castle ; from The minstrelsy of the Scottish border. Kinmont Willie ; Lord Randal / The lay of the last minstrel. from Canto VI ; Harold (the lay of Rosabelle) / The maid of Neidpath ; Hunting song ; from Marmion. Where shall the lover rest ; Lochinvar / from The lady of the lake. Canto I. The chase ; from Canto II. Boat song ; from Canto III. Coronach ; Canto VI. The guard-room / from Rokeby. Brignall banks ; Allen-a-Dale / from Waverley. Hie away, hie away ; from Guy Mannering. Twist ye, twine ye ; Wasted, weary, wherefore stay / Lines on the lifting of the banner of the house of Buccleuch ; Jock of Hazeldean ; Pibroch of Donuil Dhu ; from The antiquary. Why sitt'st thou by that ruin'd hall? ; from Old mortality. And what through winter will pinch severe ; Clarion / The dreary change ; from Rob Roy. Farewell to the land ; from The heart of Midlothian. Proud maisie ; from Ivanhoe. The barefooted friar ; Rebecca's hymn / from The monastery. Border march ; from The pirate. The song of the Reim-Kennar ; Farewell to the muse ; from Quentin Durward. County guy ; from The talisman. What brave chief ; from The doom of Devergoil. Robin Hood ; Bonny Dundee ; When friends are met / from Woodstock. Glee for King Charles ; The foray / from The beacon. Fishermann's song ; Woo'd and married and a' ; A Scotch song / The lovely lass of Preston Mill ; Gane were but the winter cauld ; A wet sheet and a flowing sea / When the kye comes hame ; The skylark ; When Maggy gangs away ; from The queen's wake. Kilmeny ; The witch o' Fife ; A boy's song ; M'Kimman ; Lock the door, Lariston ; The maid of the sea ;
Lachin y Gair ; Farewell! if ever fondest prayer ; Bright be the place of thy soul! ; When we two parted ; from English bards and Scotch reviewers ; Maid of Athens, ere we part ; The bride of Abydos ; Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte ; She walks in beauty ; Oh! snatch'd away in beauty's bloom ; My soul is dark ; Song of Saul before his last battle ; Herod's lament for Mariamne ; The destruction of Sennacherib ; Stanzas for music (there's not a joy the world can give) ; Fare thee well ; Stanzas for music (there be none of beauty's daughters) ; Sonnet on Chillon ; The prisoners of Chillon ; Stanzas to Augusta ; Epistle to Augusta ; Darkness ; Prometheus ; Sonnet to Lake Leman ; Stanzas for music (they say that hope is happiness) ; from Childe Harold's pilgrimage. Canto III ; from Canto IV / Manfred ; So, we'll go no more a-roving ; My boat is on the shore ; Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the Times ; Mazeppa ; from Don Juan. Dedication ; from Canto I ; from Canto II ; from Canto III. The isles of Greece ; from Canto IV ; from Canto XI / When a man hath no freedom to fight for at home ; The world is a bundle of hay ; Who kill'd John Keats? ; For Orford and for Waldegrave ; The vision of judgment ; Stanzas written on the road between Florence and Pisa ; On this day I complete my thirty-sixth year
Queen Mab. from Section II ; Section VIII / Mutability (we are as clouds that veil the midnight moon) ; To---(oh! there are spirits of the air) ; To Wordsworth ; Feelings of a republican on the fall of Bonaparte ; Alastor, or The spirit of solitude ; Hymn to intellectual beauty ; Mont Blanc ; Lines (the cold earth slept below ; To Mary ; Death (they die--the dead return not) ; Lines to a critic ; Ozymandias ; The past ; On a faded violet ; Lines written among the Euganean Hills ; Stanzas (the sun is warm, the sky is clear) ; Lines written during the Castlereagh administration ; The mask of anarchy ; Song to the men of England ; England in 1819 ; Ode to the west wind ; The Indian serenade ; Love's philosophy ; The poet's lover ; Proemtheus unbound ; The sensitive plant ; The cloud ; To a skylark ; To---(I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden) ; Arethusa ; Hymn of Apollo ; Hymn of Pan ; The question ; The two spirits : an allegory ; Autumn : a dirge ; The waning moon ; To the moon ; Death (death is here, and death is there) ; The world's wanderers ; Time long past ; An allegory ; The witch of Atlas ; Epipsychidion ; Song (rarely, rerely comest thou) ; To night ; Time ; To Emilia Viviani ; To---(music, when soft voices die) ; To---(when passion's trance is overpast) ; Mutability (the flower that smiles today) ; A lament ; Sonnet : political greatness ; Adonais ; from Hellas. Life may change, but it may fly not ; Worlds on worlds are rolling ever ; Darkness has dawned in the east ; The world's great age begins anew / Evening ; To---(one word is too often profaned) ; On Keats ; Tomorrow ; Remembrance ; To Edward Williams ; Music ; Lines (when the lamp is shattered) ; With a guitar : to Jane ; To Jane ; from Charles the first a widow bird sate mourning for her love ; A dirge ; Lines (we meet not as we parted) ; The isle ; from A defense of poetry
Imitation of Spenser ; To Byron ; To Chatterton ; Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain ; Written on the day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left prison ; To a young lady who sent me a laurel crown ; How many bards gild the lapses of time ; Keen, fitful gusts are whisp'ring here and there ; On first looking into Chapman's Homer ; As from the darkening gloom a silver dove ; Sonnet to solitude ; To one who has been long in city pent ; Oh! how I love on a fair summer's eve ; I stood tiptoe upon a little hill ; Sleep and poetry ; Addressed to Benjamin Robert Haydon ; To G.A.W. ; Stanzas (in a drear-nighted December) ; Happy is England ; On the grasshopper and the cricket ; After dark vapors have oppress'd our plains ; Written on the blank space at the end of Chaucer's tale of "The floure and the lefe" ; On a picture of Leander ; To Leigh Hunt, esq. ; On seeing the Elgin marbles ; On the sea ; Lines (unfelt, unheard, unseen) ; On Leigh Hunt's poem "The story of Rimini" ; When I have fears that I may cease to be ; On sitting down to read "King Lear" once again ; Lines on the Mermaid Tavern ; Robin Hood ; To the Nile ; To Spenser ; The human seasons ; Endymion ; Isabella, or The pot of basil ; To Homer ; Fragment of an ode to Maia ; To Ailsa Rock ; Fancy ; Ode (bards of passion and of mirth) ; Ode on melancholy ; Ode on a Grecian urn ; Ode on indolence ; La belle dame sans merci ; On fame ; Another on fame ; To sleep ; Ode to Psyche ; Ode to a nightingale ; Lamia ; The Eve of St. Agnes ; The Eve of St. Mark ; Hyperion ; To Autumn ; To Fannie ; Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art ; from Keats letters to Benjamin Bailey ; To John Hamilton Reynolds ; To John Taylor ; To James Augustus Hessey ; To George and Georgiana Keats ; To John Hamilton Reynolds ; To Percy Bysshe Shelley
The story of Rimini. from Canto III ; To Hampstead ; To the grasshopper and the cricket ; The Nile ; Mahmoud ; Song of fairies robbing orchard ; Abou Ben Adhem and the angel ; The glove and the lions ; Rondeau ; The fish, the man, and the spirit ; Hearing music ; The old lady ; Getting up on cold mornings ; from On the realities of imagination ; A "now," descriptive of a hot day ; Shaking hands ; from Dreams on the borders of the land of poetry . I. The demands of poetry ; II. My bower ; III. On a bust of Bacchus / Of the sight of shops. from Part II ; Proem to selection from Keats's poetry / from Crabbe's poems ; from Alison's Essays on the nature and principles of taste ; from Wordsworth's The excursion ; from Wordsowrth's The white doe of Rylstone ; from Childe Harold's pilgrimage, Canto the third / Endymion : a poetic romance by John Keats
The midnight wind ; Was it some sweet device of faery ; It from my lips some angry accents fell ; Childhood ; The old familiar faces ; Hester ; The three graves ; The gipsy's malison ; On an infant dying as soon as born ; She is going ; Letter to Wordsworth ; from Characters of dramatic writers contemporary with Shakespeare. Thomas Heywood ; John Webster ; John Ford ; George Chapman ; Francis Beaumont-- John Fletcher / from On the tragedies of Shakespeare, considered with reference to their fitness for stage representation ; The south-sea house ; Christ's Hospital five and thirty years ago ; The two races of men ; Mrs. Battle's opinions on whist ; Mackery End, in Hertfordshire ; Dream children ; A dissertation upon roast pig ; Old China ; Poor relations ; Sanity of true genius ; The death of Coleridge
from Gebir book I ; Rose Aylmer ; Child of a day, thou knowest not ; For an epitaph at Fiesole ; Lyrics to Ianthe. Homage ; On the smooth brow and clustering hair ; Heart's-ease ; It often comes into my head ; All tender thoughts that e'er possess'd ; Thou hast not raised, Ianthe, such desire ; Pleasure! Why thus desert the heart ; Renunciation ; You smiled, you spoke, and I believed ; So late removed from him she swore ; I held her hand, the pledge of bliss ; Absence ; Flow, precious tears! Thus shall my rival know ; Mile is the parting year, and sweet ; Past ruin'd Ilion Helen lives ; Here ever since you went abroad ; Years after ; She I love (alas in vain!) ; No, my own love of other years ; I wonder now that youth remains ; Your pleasures spring like daisies in the grass ; Years, many parti-colored years ; Well I remember how you smiled / A Fiesolan Idyl -- from The citation and examination of William Shakespeare. The maid's lament ; Upon a sweet-briar / from Pericles and Aspasia. Corinna to Tanagra, from Athens ; I will not love ; The death of Artemidora ; Life passes not as some men say ; Little Aglae to her father, on her statue being called like her ; We mind not how the sun in the mid-sky ; Sappho to Hesperus ; Dirce / On seeing a hair of Lucretia Borgia ; To Wordsworth ; To Joseph Ablett ; To the sister of Elia ; On his own Agamemnon and Iphigeneia ; I cannot tell, not I, why she ; You tell me I must come again ; Remain, ah not in youth alone ; "You must give back," her mother said ; The maid I love ne'er thought of me ; Very true, the linnets sing ; To a painter ; Dull is my verse : not even thou ; Sweet was the song that youth sang once ; To sleep ; Why, why repine ; Mother, I cannot mind my wheel ; To a bride, Feb. 17, 1846 ; One year ago my path was green ; Yes; I write verses now and then ; The leaves are falling; so am I ; The place where soon I think to lie ; Give me the eyes that look on mine ; Twenty years hence my eyes may grow ; Proud word you never spoke ; Alas, how soon the hours are over ; My hopes retire, my wishes as before ; Various the roads of life; in one ; It is not better at an early hour ; Pursuits! alas, I now have none ; With an album ; The day returns, my natal day ; How many voices gaily sing ; To Robert Browning ; from The Hellenics. On the Hellenics ; Thrasymedes and Eunöe ; Iphigeneia and Agamemnon ; The Hamadryad / Shakespeare and Milton ; To youth ; To age ; The chrysolites and rubies Bacchus brings ; So then, I feel not deeply ; On music (many love music but for music's sake) ; Death stands above me ; On his seventy-fifth birthday ; I entreat you, Alfred Tennyson ; To E. Arundell ; Age ; To his young rose an old man said ; Nay, thank me not again for those ; One lovely name adorns my song ; Separation ; All is not over while the shade ; God scatters beauty as he scatters flowers ; Thou needst not pitch upon my hat ; To a cyclamen ; On Southey's death ; The three roses ; Lately our songsters loiter'd in green lanes ; from Heroic Idyls Theseus and Hippolyta ; They are sweet flowers that only blow by night ; Memory ; An aged man who loved to doze away ; To my ninth decade ; from Imaginary conversations. Tiberius and Vipsania ; Marcellus and Hannibal ; Metellus and Marius ; Leofric and Godiva / from Pericles and Aspasia. Pericles to Aspasia ; Aspasia to Pericles ; Aspasia to Cleone / The Pentameron. from Fifth day's interview. The dream of Boccaccio ; from On the statue of Ebenezer Elliott
Beneath the Cypress shade ; from Headlong Hall. Hail to the Headlong ; from Nightmare Abbey. Seamen three! what men be ye? ; from Maid Marian. For the slender beech and the sapling oak ; Though I be now a gray, gray friar ; Oh! bold Robin Hood is a forester good ; Ye woods, that oft at sultry noon / Margaret Love Peacock ; from The misfortunes of Elphin. The circling of the mead horns ; The war song of Dinas Vawr / from Crochet Castle. In the days of old ; From Gryll Grange. Love and age / from Rural rides / from Characters of Shakespear's plays. Hamlet ; On familiar style ; The fight ; On going a journey ; My first acquaintance with poets ; On the feeling of immortality in youth / Confessions of an English opium eater. from Preliminary confessions ; The pleasures of opium ; from Introduction to the pains of opium ; The pains of opium / On the knocking at the gate in Macbeth ; from Recollections of Charles Lamb ; Style. from Part 1 ; from Autobiographic sketches. The affliction of childhood ; from Suspiria de profundis. Levana and our ladies of sorrow ; Savannah-la-Mar / from The poetry of Pope. Literature of knowledge and literature of power ; The English mail-coach. Section I--The glory of motion ; Section II--The vision of sudden death ; Secton III--Dream-fugue
Lines (write it in gold--a spirit of the sun) ; from The bride's tragedy. Poor old pilgrim misery ; A ho! a ho! / from The second brother. Strew not earth with empty stars ; from Torrismond. How many times do I love thee, dear? ; from Death's jest book. To sea, to sea! ; The swallow leaves her nest ; If thou wilt ease thine heart ; Lady, was it fair of thee ; A cypress-bough, and a rose-wreath sweet ; Old Adam, the carrion crow ; We do lie beneath the grass / r Thomas Lovell Beddoes -- The boding dreams ; Dream-pedlary ; Let the dew the flowers fill / from The Christian year. First Sunday after Trinity ; Twentieth Sunday after Trinity / United States / Song ; Faithless Nelly Gray ; Fair Ines ; Ruth ; I remember, I remember ; The stars are with the voyager ; Silence ; False poets and true ; Song (there is dew for the flow'ret) ; Autumn ; Ballad (it was not in the winter) ; The dream of Eugene Aram, the murderer ; The death-bed ; Sally Simpkin's lament ; The song of the shirt ; The bridge of sighs ; The lay of the laborer ; Stanzas (farewell, life! My senses swim) ; Queen Mab / from The troubador. Spirits, that walk and wail tonight ; Oh fly with me! 'tis passion's hour / Time's song ; from Letters from Teignmouth. I--our ball ; from Every-day characters. The belle of the ball-room ; Tell him I love him yet ; Fairy song ; Stanzas (o'er yon churchyard the storm may lower) ; The talented man ; Stanzas on seeing the speaker asleep
The song of the western men ; Clovelly ; The first fathers ; Mawgan of Melhuach ; Featherstone's doom ; The silent tower of Bottreaux ; "Pater vester pascit illa" ; Death song ; Are they not all ministering spirits? ; Queen Guennivar's round ; To Alfred Tennyson / from Noctes Ambrosaine / A dirge ; England's dead ; The graves of a household ; The landing of the pilgrim fathers in New England ; The homes of England / The sword chant of Thorstein Raudi ; Jeanie Morrison ; My heid is like to rend, Willie ; The forester's carol ; Song (if to thy heart I were as near) / Song (child, is thy father dead?) ; Battle song ; The press ; Preston Mills ; Spenserian ; A poet's epitaph ; Sabbath morning ; The way broad-leaf ; Religion ; Plaint / The sea ; The stormy petrel ; The hunter's song ; Life ; Peace! what do tears avail ; A poet's thought ; The poet's song to his wife ; Inscription for a fountain ; A petition to time / Song (she is not fair to outward view) ; An old man's wish ; Whither is gone the wisdom and the power ; November ; Night ; To Shakespeare ; May, 1840 ; "Multum dilexit" ; Homer ; Prayer
from Windsor Forest ; from An essay on criticism. Part I ; from An essay on man. Epistle I / from Preface to Shakespeare ; The lives of the English poets from Pope ; Letter to Macpherson / from Reflections on the revolution in France
Woods, George Benjamin, 1878-1958.
Anne, Countess of Winchilsea -- Thomas Parnell -- Allan Ramsay -- Allan Ramsay -- William Hamilton of Bangour -- David Mallet -- John Dyer -- James Thomson -- James Thompson -- James Thomson.
Edward Young -- Edward Young -- Robert Blair -- William Shenstone -- Mark Akenside -- Mark Akenside -- William Collins -- Thomas Gray. -- Thomas Warton -- Thomas Warton -- Joseph Warton -- James Macpherson -- Richard Hurd -- Horace Walpole.
Thomas Percy -- James Beattie -- Thomas Chatterton -- Thomas Chatterton -- William Beckford -- William Cowper -- William Cowper -- William Cowper -- George Crabbe -- William Lisle Bowles -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Blake.
Robert Burns.
Samuel Rogers -- William Godwin -- William Wordsworth -- William Wordsworth -- William Wordsworth -- William Wordsworth.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge. -- Robert Southey. -- Thomas Campbell. The lake of the dismal swamp ; Thomas Moore -- Thomas Moore -- Thomas Moore -- Charles Wolfe.
Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Sir Walter Scott -- Joanna Baillie -- Allan Cunningham -- James Hogg.
George Noel Gordon, Lord Byron -- George Noel Gordon, Lord Byron -- George Noel Gordon, Lord Byron.
Percy Bysshe Shelley -- Percy Bysshe Shelley -- Percy Bysshe Shelley.
John Keats.
James Henry Leigh Hunt -- James Henry Leigh Hunt -- Francis Jeffrey -- John Wilson Croker.
Charles Lamb -- Charles Lamb.
Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor -- Walter Savage Landor.
Thomas Love Peacock -- Thomas Love Peacock -- Thomas Love Peacock -- William Cobbett. -- William Hazlitt -- Thomas De Quincey -- Thomas De Quincey -- Thomas De Quincey.
Thomas Lovell Beddoes -- Thomas Lovell Beddoes -- John Keble -- John Keble -- Thomas Hood -- Winthrop Mackworth Praed -- Winthrop Mackworth Praed.
Robert Stephen Hawker -- John Wilson "Christopher North" -- Felicia Dorothea Heman -- William Motherwell -- Ebenezer Elliott -- Bryan Waller Procter, "Barry Cornwall" -- Hartley Coleridge.
Alexander Pope -- Samuel Johnson -- Edmund Burke.
edited by George Benjamin Woods.
1950
English poetry and prose of the Romantic movement
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