Poets on PoetsNick Rennison, Michael Schmidt To mark National Poetry, Day Nick Rennison, who compiled the Waterstone's Guide to Poetry, and Michael Schmidt, editorial director of Carcanet, invited a number of contemporary poets to select work by poets of the past, beginning in the late fourteenth century and ending in the early twentieth, and to provide brief headnotes to describe their choices. The result is an anthology with a difference. From Gower to Yeats, from the old and the new worlds, the selectors and the selected converge in a volume of wonderful poetry and rich surprise. Providing more than 450 pages of poetry and commentary in a handsome large two-column format, Poets on Poets celebrates vital continuities: the range of poets making selections and the range of poetry selected is without precedent in an English-language poetry anthology. Its aim is to encourage a wider readership of classic English poetry and to signal the generative connection between new poetry and the best of the past. |
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Page 85
... nature of its subject as to Coleridge's nature : how could Christabel be saved , or Geraldine redeemed ? I include one excerpt , the revelation of Geraldine as a species of lamia or vampire and her dominance over the seemingly ...
... nature of its subject as to Coleridge's nature : how could Christabel be saved , or Geraldine redeemed ? I include one excerpt , the revelation of Geraldine as a species of lamia or vampire and her dominance over the seemingly ...
Page 91
... nature gave me at my birth , My shaping spirit of Imagination . For not to think of what I needs must feel , But to be still and patient , all I can ; And haply by abstruse research to steal From my own nature all the natural man This ...
... nature gave me at my birth , My shaping spirit of Imagination . For not to think of what I needs must feel , But to be still and patient , all I can ; And haply by abstruse research to steal From my own nature all the natural man This ...
Page 157
... Nature herself doth her own self deflower To hate those errors she herself doth give . But how should man think what he may not do . If Nature did not fail , and punish too ? Tyrant to others , to herself unjust , Only commands things ...
... Nature herself doth her own self deflower To hate those errors she herself doth give . But how should man think what he may not do . If Nature did not fail , and punish too ? Tyrant to others , to herself unjust , Only commands things ...
Contents
New Rome | 3 |
from The Geäte aVallèn | 9 |
The Oviparous Tailor | 15 |
Copyright | |
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Andrew Marvell ANNABEL LEE beauty Ben Jonson beneath BERNARD O'DONOGHUE birds Born breast breath bright C. H. SISSON CAELICA Chaucer clouds dark dead dear death delight doth dream earth Emily Brontë eternal eyes face fair fear fire flowers forto grace grave green hand hast hath head hear heart heaven hire hope hour kiss Lady Lady of Shalott land leaves light lines live Lizie Wan look Lord love's moon morning Muse never night nymph o'er pain poems poet poetry praise rose round sche scho shadows shine shore sigh sight sing sleep song sorrow soul sound spirit spring stars sweet tears tell thee thine things thou art thought Timor Mortis conturbat tree Twas unto verse voice wild wind wings wonder woods words wyllowe youth