A Book of Love PoetryJon Stallworthy Oxford University Press, 1986 - 393 sayfa From the civilization of the Lower Nile to that of the Lower Hudson, more poets have written more convincingly, more poignantly about love than about any other subject. Jon Stallworthy has here selected some of the most moving, funny, shameless, and erotic love poems in the English language. Representing the work of more than 190 poets, from Sappho to Byron and Browning, from Rossetti to Wordsworth and E. E. Cummings, he offers a startling collection of love poetry down throughout the ages. Arranged thematically, beginning with the first dawnings of young love and ending with the "long look back" of the aged, and revealing love in all its different aspects and perversities, this anthology demonstrates vividly man's changeless responses to the changing seasons of the heart. About the Editor: Jon Stallworthy is John Wendell Anderson Professor of English Literature at Cornell University and author of Wilfred Owen and editor of The Oxford Book of War Poetry. |
İçindekiler
INTRODUCTION | 19 |
EZRA POUND Commission | 29 |
W B YEATS Brown Penny | 36 |
AUSTIN CLARKE Penal Law | 44 |
CHRISTINA ROSSETTI The First Day | 50 |
A Sort of Love | 55 |
LORD BYRON She Walks in Beauty | 61 |
EDMUND SPENSER Iambicum Trimetrum | 67 |
MARTIAL Lycóris darling once I burned for you | 216 |
WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR You smiled you spoke | 218 |
ANON Walking in a meadow green | 225 |
ROBERT BURNS A Red Red Rose | 231 |
ROBERT BROWNING The Lost Mistress | 238 |
JOHN GAY Sweet Williams Farewell to Blackeyed | 244 |
HAROLD MONRO The Terrible Door 348 | 248 |
ALEXANDER POPE Epistle to Miss Blount on | 254 |
ROBERT HERRICK To the Virgins to Make Much | 75 |
THOMAS MOORE An Argument | 82 |
JOHN KEATS This living hand now warm and capable | 88 |
Chapter 2 | 97 |
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI Sudden Light | 102 |
ROBERT BROWNING from In a Gondola | 108 |
OVID Elegy 5 | 114 |
THOMAS CAREW On the Marriage of T K and C C | 120 |
WALT WHITMAN From pentup aching rivers | 135 |
RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIBAN The Geranium | 139 |
CATULLUS Phyllis Corydon clutched to him | 145 |
WILLIAM DAVENANT Under the WillowShades | 152 |
ROBERT GRAVES She Tells Her Love While Half | 158 |
ROBERT GRAVES The Quiet Glades of Eden | 164 |
ROBERT CREELEY The Way | 167 |
GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE The Mirabeau Bridge | 173 |
SIR WALTER SCOTT An Hour with Thee | 179 |
W B YEATS A Last Confession | 185 |
SIR JOHN HARINGTON Of an Heroical Answer of | 190 |
THOMAS RANDOLPH Phyllis | 196 |
EZRA POUND The Temperaments | 202 |
GEORGE WITHER A Lovers Resolution | 210 |
LADY HEGURI A thousand years you said | 260 |
Your love is dead lady your | 266 |
SIR HENRY WOTTON Upon the Death of Sir Albert | 272 |
ANDREW MARVELL The Definition of Love | 278 |
DONALD JUSTICE In Bertrams Garden | 284 |
A E HOUSMAN When I was oneandtwenty | 292 |
WILLIAM BLAKE The Sick Rose 204 | 294 |
LOUIS MACNEICE Les Sylphides | 301 |
ROBERT GRAVES Call It a Good Marriage | 307 |
W B YEATS When You Are Old | 315 |
ALEXANDER SCOTT A Rondel of Love | 320 |
W B YEATS Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop | 328 |
EDWIN MORGAN Strawberries | 334 |
WILLIAM SOUTAR The Trysting Place | 340 |
SIR THOMAS WYATT Remembrance 147 | 347 |
ROBERT LOWELL The Old Flame | 353 |
EDGAR ALLAN POE To One in Paradise | 360 |
WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR Rose Aylmer | 367 |
PABLO NERUDA Tonight I can write the saddest lines | 369 |
93 | 381 |
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