Poetry: Difference between revisions

From Gerald R. Lucas
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* “[[March 23, 2020#2|Sonnet 2]]”
* “[[March 23, 2020#2|Sonnet 2]]”
* “[[March 24, 2020#3|Sonnet 3]]”
* “[[March 24, 2020#3|Sonnet 3]]”
* “[[March 25, 2020#4|Sonnet 4]]”
* “[[March 26, 2020#5|Sonnet 5]]”
* “[[March 26, 2020#6|Sonnet 6]]”
* “[[June 15, 2003#Sonnet23|Sonnet 23]]”
* “[[June 15, 2003#Sonnet23|Sonnet 23]]”
* “[[March 21, 2020#116|Sonnet 116]]”
* “[[March 21, 2020#116|Sonnet 116]]”

Revision as of 09:06, 28 March 2020

Most of these poems (and occasional short story) I have posted over the years on various blogs as I (re)discovered them. This will explain why the articles are dates, rather than the poems’ titles. Some of them even accompany those online musings still. Each has meant something to me at one time, and many continue to resonate. A few I teach.

Charles Meynier, Calliope, Muse of Epic Poetry, ca. 1800.

Margaret Atwood

Constantine Cavafy

Hart Crane

John Donne

T. S. Eliot

Robert Frost

Philip Larkin

Andrew Marvell

Ovid

Edgar Allan Poe

Carl Sandberg

William Shakespeare


Percy Bysshe Shelley

Mark Strand

Derek Walcott

William Butler Yeats