Poetry/Romanticism: Difference between revisions

From Gerald R. Lucas
(Fixed links.)
(Added new layout.)
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{{:Poetry/Tabs}}
{{:Poetry/Tabs}}
{{see also|Romanticism: Revolt of the Spirit}}
{{see also|Romanticism: Revolt of the Spirit}}
[[File:Giovanni Battista Lusieri - Eruption on Vesuvius by night - 1793.jpg|thumb|400px]]
{{start|Poetry from the latter-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries.}}
Poetry from the latter-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries.
<blockquote>
{{Big|William Blake}}
* “[[London]]”
* “[[The Sick Rose]]”
* “[[The Tyger]]”


{{Big|Elizabeth Barrett Browning}}
{{FH}}
* “[[The Cry of the Children]]”
* “[[How do I love thee?]]”


{{Big|Mary Elizabeth Coleridge}}
{| style="width: 100%;"
* “[[We Never Said Farewell]]”
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|William Blake}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| style="width: 34%;" | From ''Songs of Innocence'': {{bulleted list|“[[Introduction (SI)|Introduction]]”|“[[The Lamb]]”|“[[The Chimney Sweeper (SI)|The Chimney Sweeper]]”|“[[The Blossom]]”|“[[The Divine Image]]”}}
| style="width: 34%;" | From ''Songs of Experience'': {{bulleted list|“[[Introduction (SE)|Introduction]]”|“[[Earth’s Answer]]”|“[[The Tyger]]”|“[[The Chimney Sweeper (SE)|The Chimney Sweeper]]”|“[[The Sick Rose]]”|“[[Human Abstract]]”|“[[London]]”}}
| [[File:William Blake, by C B Currie.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Elizabeth Barrett Browning}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="3" |{{bulleted list|“[[The Cry of the Children]]”|“[[How do I love thee?]]”}}
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|George Gordon, Lord Byron}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[Darkness]]”|“[[She Walks in Beauty]]”|“[[So We’ll No More Go A-Roving]]”|“[[There is a pleasure in the pathless woods]]”}}
| [[File:Byron 1813 by Phillips.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Mary Elizabeth Coleridge}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="3" | {{bulleted list|“[[We Never Said Farewell]]”}}
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Samuel Taylor Coleridge}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[Kubla Khan]]”|“[[The Rime of the Ancient Mariner]]”}}
| [[File:Coleridge.jpeg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Emily Dickinson}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="3" | {{bulleted list|“[[Above Oblivion’s Tide]]”}}
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|John Keats}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[La Belle Dame Sans Merci]]”|“[[Ode to a Grecian Urn]]”|“[[Ode to a Nightingale]]”|“[[On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer]]”|“[[When I have fears that I may cease to be]]”}}
| [[File:John Keats by William Hilton.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Edgar Allan Poe}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[Alone]]”|“[[A Dream Within a Dream]]”|“[[The Masque of the Red Death]]” (short story)|“[[Ulalume]]”}}
| [[File:Edgar Allan Poe, circa 1849, restored, squared off.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|Percy Bysshe Shelley}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[Good-Night]]”|“[[Ozymandias]]”|“[[To a Sky-Lark]]”}}
| [[File:Percy Bysshe Shelley by Alfred Clint.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|- style="font-align: left;"
| colspan="3" | {{Big|William Wordsworth}}
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| colspan="2" | {{bulleted list|“[[Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey]]”|“[[The World Is too Much with Us]]”}}
| [[File:William Wordsworth 001.jpg|thumb]]
|-
| colspan="3" | {{Line}}
|}


{{Big|Samuel Taylor Coleridge}}
* “[[Kubla Khan]]”
* “[[The Rime of the Ancient Mariner]]”
{{Big|Emily Dickinson}}
* “[[Above Oblivion’s Tide]]”
{{Big|John Keats}}
* “[[La Belle Dame Sans Merci]]”
* “[[Ode to a Grecian Urn]]”
* “[[Ode to a Nightingale]]”
* “[[On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer]]”
* “[[When I have fears that I may cease to be]]”
{{Big|Edgar Allan Poe}}
* “[[Alone]]”
* “[[A Dream Within a Dream]]”
* “[[The Masque of the Red Death]]” (short story)
* “[[Ulalume]]”
{{Big|Lord Byron}}
* “[[Darkness]]”
* “[[She Walks in Beauty]]”
* “[[So We’ll No More Go A-Roving]]”
* “[[There is a pleasure in the pathless woods]]”
{{Big|Percy Bysshe Shelley}}
* “[[Good-Night]]”
* “[[Ozymandias]]”
* “[[To a Sky-Lark]]”
{{Big|William Wordsworth}}
* “[[Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey]]”
* “[[The World Is too Much with Us]]”
</blockquote>
[[Category:Index]]
[[Category:Index]]
[[Category:Poetry]]
[[Category:Poetry]]
[[Category:Romanticism]]
[[Category:Romanticism]]

Revision as of 06:52, 2 September 2021

Poetry from the latter-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries.

Calligraphic-swirls-flourishes-6.png
William Blake
From Songs of Innocence: From Songs of Experience:
William Blake, by C B Currie.jpg

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

George Gordon, Lord Byron
Byron 1813 by Phillips.jpg

Mary Elizabeth Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Coleridge.jpeg

Emily Dickinson

John Keats
John Keats by William Hilton.jpg

Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe, circa 1849, restored, squared off.jpg

Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley by Alfred Clint.jpg

William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth 001.jpg