英国爱情诗歌大全《吻》

第四讲 中西爱情诗比较_图文_百度文库
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第四讲 中西爱情诗比较
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你可能喜欢《法兰西之吻 French Kiss(情定巴黎)》英语 法语对白 中文字幕 美国 英国电影 爱情_土豆_高清视频在线观看英国人最喜爱的爱情诗歌&(1995)
&&前两天去图书馆,翻了翻济慈的诗歌全集,就看到了这一本书。居然和我以前买的
The Nation’s Favourite Love
Poems1997 1997 41998 6 22003 3
1995BBC 100
(已经翻译了的)
Sonnet from the Portuguese
(Elizabeth Browning, )
John Clare,
He Wishes for the cloths of
Oh, Tell Me the Truth about
the Love (W. H. Auden)
Delight in Disorder,
Sonnett LXXV (One day I
wrote the name upon the strand), (Edmund Spencer)
Come into the Garden Maud
(Alfred Tennyson)
After the lunch,
Wendy Cope,
Now sleeps the crimson
To Celia (Benjamin
The Baite (John
Love’s Philosophy (Percy
Bysshe Shelley)
Valentine (Wendy
The Passionate Shepherd to
A Subaltern’s Love-Song
(John Betjeman)
subaltern[英][ˈsʌbltən][美][sʌbˈɔltən,
ˈsʌbəlˌtɚn]
n.次长,中尉,副官
adj.下的,副的,次的
复数:subalterns;
From The Rubaiyat of Omar
Khayyam (Edward Fitzgerald)
To the virgins, to make much
To His Coy Mistress (Andrew
The canonization (John
canonization
n.正式宣布为圣徒;追封为圣者,承认为圣典
Song (Edmund
Giving up smoking (Wendy
Shall I Compare Thee to a
Summer’s Day? (William Shakespeare)
Machina (John Updike)
She Walks in Beauty (George
Gordon, Lord Byron)
Flowers (Wendy
Sonnet 29 (When in disgrace
with fortune) (William Shakespeare)
Field Work (Seamus
Warming Her Pearls (Carol
Ann Duffy)
Sonnet 106 (William
Shakespeare)
You’re (Sylvia
The face that launched a
thousand ships (Christopher Marlowe)
Valentine (John
The confirmation (Edwin
Celia, Celia (Adrian
Bobby Shafto’s Gone to Sea
Shafto is a surname. The
origins can be traced back to the Ffolliot family, who were
established by the 14th century at Shafto Crag,
and adopted the alternative surname of Shafto. The following people
have the name Shafto:
century British Member of Parliament (MP), the likeliest subject of
a famous North East English folk song
(1810&92) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament in
Wanganui, New Zealand
(), British Liberal Party
politician
(), British politician from
Whitworth Hall, Spennymoor, County Durham
(), British politician from
Whitworth Hall, Spennymoor, County Durham
The most common modern version is:
Bobby Shafto's gone to sea,
He'll come back and marry me,
Bonny Bobby Shafto!
Bobby Shafto's bright and fair,
He's my love for evermore,
Bonny Bobby Shafto!
This is very close to the earliest printed version in 1805. A
version published in 's,
(1812) gives the additional
bairn[英][bɛən][美][bɛrn]
复数:bairns;
Bobby Shafto's getten a bairn,
In his arm and on his knee,
Bobby Shafto loves me.
The original Bobby Shafto has been identified with a resident of
Hollybrook, County Wicklow, Ireland, who died in 1737.
It was used by the supporters of
(sometimes spelt Shaftoe), who was an eighteenth-century
(MP) for County Durham (c. 1730-97), and later the
borough of
Supporters used another verse in the 1761 election:
Bobby Shafto's looking out,
All his ribbons flew about,
All the ladies gave a shout,
Hey for Boy Shafto!
The song is said to relate the story of how he broke the heart
of Bridget Belasyse of , County Durham, where his brother Thomas was ,
when he married Anne Duncombe of
Yorkshire. Bridget Belasyse is said to have died two weeks after
hearing the news.
Thomas & George Allan, in their illustrated
edition of Tyneside Songs and Readings (1891), argued that the
"Bobby Shafto" of the song was in fact his son, although his father
fits the description of the lyrics better.
In reality, it is likely that his grandson, Robert Duncombe Shafto,
also used the song for electioneering in 1861, with several of the
later verses being added around this time.
This section
any . Please help
improve this section by . Unsourced material may be
challenged and . (August 2012)
In literature
Bobby Shaftoe is also the name of a (female) character in John
Crowley's novel
The rhyme is sung (incorrectly) in
(1995) by .
It is also the name of a character in 's novel
(1999) and an ancestor of his in Stephenson's .
The character is referred to in the
1934 feature "Babes in Toyland," now better known as
"" During the song, "Never Mind,
" (regarding her
lost sheep), we hear the following: "Where they are hiding, Tom
T Simon or Peter or Bobby Shaftoe."
In Television
The tune was included in the "Three Rivers Fantasy" by composer
, as the daily opening theme for .
The TV series
"The Marked" also mentioned a fictitious movie in which a
character, an ex-marine called Robert Shafto, was named as the
killer of JFK, likely a reference to Cryptonomicon, where Bobby
Shaftoe was also a marine.
The TV series ""
season 7, episode "The Young and the Restless"
refers to a young doctor
as a "Bobby Shaftoe"
On the 31 March 1958 episode of the TV game show ","
the question, "Who went to sea, silver buckles at his knee?
In philosophy
In "Moral Realism", philosopher
references a hypothetical Bobby Shaftoe in describing what he
refers to as .
I. Opie and P. Opie, The Oxford Dictionary of
Nursery Rhymes (Oxford University Press, 1951, 2nd edn., 1997),
, URL accessed
September 30th, 2006.
, giving this opinion.
URL accessed September 30th, 2006
by , URL accessed July 1, 2008
Retrieved from ""
Words, wide night
(Carol Ann Duffy, )
A Valediction: Forbidding
morning (John Donne)
A Red, Red
To Lucasta, Going to the
Warres (Richard Lovelace)
Western Wind
The good-morrow (John
A birthday (Christina G.
On marriage (Kahill
Love (III), (George
The Undertaking (John
Lullaby (W. H.
Sonnet 116 (William
Shakespeare)
Aire and angels (John
Bright Star (John
The Sonne Rising,
(John Donne, )
The first day ((Christina G.
In a Bath teashop,
(Sir John Betjeman, )
Wedding-wind (Philip
John Anderson, my Jo,
To his mistress going to bed
(John Donne)
From Summer with Monika
(Roger McGough)
Sonnet from the Portuguese
XLIII& (Elizabeth
The owl and pussy cat
(Edward Lear)
When I was one-and-twenty
(A. E. Housman)
La Belle Dame Sans Berci
(John Keats)
In honour of love (Jenny
The clod and the pebble
(William Blake)
Unfortunate Coincidence
(Dorothy Parker)
Lovesong (Ted
For Ann Gregory (W. B.
He Fembles at your
spirit (Emily Dickinson)
Symptoms of love (Robert
Song (from Twelfth Night),
(William Shakespeare)
Love without hope,
(Robert Greaves, )
Twelve Songs (IX),
W. H. Auden
Lady Greensleeves
When we two parted (George
Gordon Noel, Lord Byron)
from me that sometime did me seke (Sir Thomas
Never seek to tell thy love
(William Blake)
The courtship of the
Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo (Edward Lear)
Down by the Salley
The secret (John
To Lizbie Browne (Thomas
Go now (Edward
Love’s farewell (Michael
After a Journey (Thomas
Coat (Vicki
One art (Elisabeth
Indoor games near Newbury
(John Betjeman)
Non sum Qualis Eram Bonae
sub Regno Cynarae (Ernest Dowson)
Last night, ah, yesternight, betwixt her
lips and mine
There fell thy shadow, Cynara! thy breath was shed
Upon my soul between the
And I was desolate and sick of an old passion,
&&&Yea, I was
desolate and bowed my head:
I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion.
All night upon mine heart I felt her warm
heart beat,
Night-long within mine arms in lo
Surely the kisses of her bought
But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,
&&&When I awoke
and found the dawn was gray:
I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion.
I have forgot much, Cynara! gone with the
Flung roses, roses riotously with the throng,
Dancing, to put thy pale, los
But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,
&&&Yea, all the
time, because the dance was long:
I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion.
I cried for madder music and for stronger
But when the feast is finished and the lamps expire,
Then falls thy shadow, Cynara!
And I am desolate and sick of an old passion,
&&&Yea, hungry
for the lips of my desire:
I have been faithful to thee Cynara! in my fashion.
(尤克强译)
昨夜呀!在昨夜 她和我即将亲吻
你的影子却飘现 西娜拉!你的气息化身
在我与香唇美酒交错的热情中;
我多麼孤寂再也受不了回想那旧情
是噢!我多麼孤寂只好把头垂下
就算我依然对你忠诚吧 西娜拉!
长夜漫漫我感觉到她温暖的心跳
她整夜躺在我臂弯裏安详地沉睡
买来的红唇莫当然也付出了香甜的吻
但我多麼孤寂再也受不了回想那旧情
当我醒过来望著灰暗的晨霞
就算我依然对你忠诚吧 西娜拉!
我已遗忘了许多 西娜拉!随风飘去
玫瑰 恣意地抛掷那带刺的玫瑰
狂舞 为把你那苍冷的百合忘却
但我多麼孤寂再也受不了回想那旧情
是噢!夜舞绵绵忆无尽时
就算我依然对你忠诚吧 西娜拉!
我嫌音乐不够狂野酒也不够烈
但是筵席总会散灯火总会灭
你的影子又会再飘现 西娜拉!今夜还属於你
我现在多麼孤寂再也受不了回想那旧情
是噢!我充满著欲念渴望你的双唇
就算我依然对你忠诚吧 西娜拉!
Oh, When I was in love with
you (A. E. Housman)
The hill (Rupert
Love in a life (Robert
R. Alcona to J. Braenzaida
(Emily Bronte)
Sonnet XLII (Edna St.
Vincent Millay)
The voice (Thomas
Sonnet II (Edna St. Vincent
Love songs in age (Philip
The lost love (William
Wordsworth)
So, We’ll go no more
Tarantella (Hilaire
Jenny Kissed
When You Are Old,
The Nation’s Favourite
Poems19961997 199811
If &(Rudyard
The Lady of Shalott
The Listeners(Rupert Brooke)
Not waving but Drowning (Stevie Smith)
The Daffodils
To Autumn 致
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
Dulce Et Decorum Est (Wilfred Owen)
Dulce Et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen 带中文翻译:
Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs,
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame,
D deaf even to the hoots
Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.
把身子扳弯,像个包袱底下的老叫花子
膝外翻,像个老太婆一样地咳嗽,我们在污泥之中咒诅,
直到那不祥的照明弹出现,我们转过背去
开始朝着我方休整兵营跋涉。
人们半睡半醒地行进。许多人丢了靴子
却仍步履蹒跚,血流不止地走。都瘸了;都瞎了;
累晕了;聋得都听不到弹片飞鸣,
在刚刚走过的地方掉下的沉重的五九炮弹。
Gas! Gas! Quick, boys! - An ecstay of fumbling,
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time,
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And floundering like a man in fire or lime. -
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
氯气弹!氯气弹!快跑啊,兄弟们!——一阵疯狂的折腾,
及时地把粗劣的面具带上了;
但是有些人还在喊叫,跌跌撞撞,
像是在火焰或是消石灰之中苦苦挣扎……
黑暗,透过雾蒙蒙的镜片和浓绿的亮光,
像在绿色之海下面,我看见他在溺亡。
In all my dreams before my helpless sight
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.
在我的迷梦中,在我无助的视线前,
他投向我,奄奄一息,呛溺。
If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil'
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Bitter as the cud
of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues, -
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori.
假使是在一个窒息的梦里,你也可以跟随
在我们将他装进去的车的后面,
看着他脸上苍白的眼睛扭动,
他那如绞死般的面容,像是魔鬼的罪恶之病;
假使你能听见,当每一次的颠簸,血
从肺泡破碎的肺叶中流出,在嘴里发出漱口的声音,
如癌症般猥琐,苦得像是难咽的反刍物,
不治的疮在无罪的舌头上,
我的朋友,你就不会如此热情地传讲
古老的谎言:为国捐躯,
甘美而合宜。
&作者简介:
Wilfred Owen (维尔浮莱德.欧文),反战诗人于25岁英年早逝Owen生于日。虽然一直自视为反战份子,Owen仍于1915年10月入伍,并受阶为中尉。他于1917年1月加入法国曼彻斯特军团。在法国其间,Owen开始将他的战争经验写成诗篇。 1915年夏天Owen因为被诊断患有弹震击(战争精神病的一种)而遣返英国。在休养复原其间,Owen遇到诗人Siegfried Sassoon (席格佛烈.沙森),指导并鼓励其写作,同一时期的作家还有Robert Graves (劳勃.格瑞夫)。在接着的几个月里Owen写下了一系列的诗篇,包括Anthem for Doomed Youth (青春挽歌)、Disabled (残)、Dulce et Decorum Est (为国捐躯) 、以及Strange Meeting (不可思议的聚会)。 1918年8月Owen返回其被授与十字勋章的西线战场。 日,当Owen领军横越Sambre运河时,遭机关枪扫射身亡。一周后,停战协定被签订。
屋外灰蒙蒙一片,
透过挂满露珠的窗玻璃和窗外泛着浓绿色的光线,
我看到他淹没在绿色的海洋里。
在我所有的梦中,
在我感到无助和恐怖的时刻,
他总是冲向我,
一会儿在水中左右摇摆、挣扎,
一会儿又被水淹没,
还不时地发出嘶哑的呼叫。
在一些令人窒息的梦中,
我们把他抛进了一辆囚车,
如果你能紧紧地跟在囚车后面,
望着他的脸上白色的眼珠不停地转动,
他的一张吊死鬼的脸,
就像恶魔一样可怖。
在囚车的每一次电波中,
如果你能听到鲜血从污染的肺叶中喷出,
这颗肺就像患了癌一样令人可怖,
就像从口中吐出的血块一样令人感到痛苦、窒息。
——我的朋友,你不能怀着高涨的热情,
向狂热的孩子们讲述这些骇人听闻的故事。
还是这句古老的格言说得好:为祖国牺牲愉快而又光荣。
这个诗人曾经也是军人,是从自己的经验写这首诗的
他觉得打战太残酷 战士们太辛苦
不希望以后的人在选择当兵 当兵不是什么荣耀的事
这个题目的意思是为你的国家死是正确的这是一个老话了
作者把这句话称为谎言
Ode to a Nightingale
He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (Thomas
Fern Hill (Dylan Thomas)
Leisure (William Henry Davies)
To Highwayman (Alfred Noyes)
To His Coy Mistress (Andrew Marvell)
Dover Beach
The Tyger,
Stop All the Clocks,
Adlestrop (Edward Thomas)
The Soldier (Rupert Brooke)
Warning (Jenney Joseph)
Sea-Faver (John Masefield)
Upon Westminster Bridge, ,
How Do I love Thee? (Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (T. S.
Cargoes (John Masefield)
Jabberwocky (Lewis Carroll)
The Rime of Ancient Mariner (Samuel T.
Coleridge)
Ozymandias of Egypt (Percy Bysshe Shelley)
Stopping by woods on a Snowy Evening()
About Ban Adhem (Leigh Hunt)
Everyone Sang (Siegfried Sassoon)
The Windhover (Gerard M. Hopkins)
Do Not Go Gentle on That Good Night (Dylan
Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day? (William
Shakespeare)
When You Are Old,
Naming of Parts (Henry Reed)
The Darkling Thrush
Please Mr. Butler (Allan Ahlberg)
Kubla Khan (Samuel T. Coleridge)
Home-Thoughts, from Abroad
High Flight (John G. Magee)
Journey of the Magi (T. S. Eliot)
The Owl and The Pussy-Cat (Edward Lear)
The Glory of the Garden (Rudyard Kipling)
The Road not Taken (Robert Frost)
The Way Through the Woods (Rudyard Kipling)
Anthem for Doomed Youth (Alfred Owen)
Bloody Men (Wendy Cope)
Emmonsail’s Heath in Winter
La Figlia Che Piange (T. S. Eliot)
The Whitsun Weddings (Philip Larkin)
The Ballad of Reading Gaol (Oscar Wilde)
I Remember, I Remember (Thomas Hood)
This be the Verse (Philip Larkin)
Snake (D. H. Lawrence)
The Great Lover (Rupert Brooke)
A Red, Red Rose
The Sunlight on the Garden (Louis Macneice)
The Old Vicarage, Grantchester (Rupert Brooke)
Diary of a Church Mouse (John Betjeman)
Silver (Walter De La Mare)
Pied Beauty (Gerard M. Hopkins)
Prayer before Birth (Louis Macneice)
Macavity: The Mystery Cat (T. S. Eliot)
Afterwards (Thomas Hardy)
The Donkey (G. K. Chesterton)
My Last Duchess (Robert Browning)
Christmas (John Betjeman)
The Thought-Fox (Ted Hughes)
Preludes (T. S. Eliot)
Love (George Herbert)
The Charge of the Light Brigade
I am (John Clare)
The Hound of Heaven (Frances Thompson)
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love ,
The Song of Wandering Aengus (W. B. Yeats)
She Walks in Beauty (George Gordon, Lord Byron)
Loveliest of Trees, The Cheery Now (A. E.
Ducks (F. W. Harvey)
An Arundel Tomb (Philip Larkin)
Let Me Not to the Marriage of True Minds (William
Shakespeare)
Snow (Louis Macneice)
Let Me Die in Youngman’s Death (Roger McGough)
The Ruined Maid (Thomas Hardy)
Toilet& (Hugo
Futility (Wilfred Owen)
Tam O’Shanter (Robert Burns)
Love’s Philosophy (Percy Bysshe Shelley)
The Song of Hiawatha (H. W. Longfellow)
God’s Grandeur (Gerard M. Hopkins)
Chocolate Cake (Michael Rosen)
Jenny Kissed Me
Blackberry-Picking (Seamus Heaney)
The Prelude (William Wordsworth)
Warming Her Pearls (Carol Ann Duffy)
[Paperback]
Happy Ending by Karen Fleur Adcock
The Ninth Secret Poem by Guillaume Apollinaire
More And More by Margaret Atwood
This Lunar Beauty by Wystan Hugh Auden
Twelve Songs: 4 by Wystan Hugh Auden
Twelve Songs: 9. Funeral Blues by Wystan Hugh Auden
Cynthia On Horseback by Philip Ayres
Sonnet To His Friend R.l. In Praise Of Musique And Poetrie by
Richard Barnfield
The Defiance by Aphra Behn
Happy The Man by Joachim Du Bellay
F Epigram by Hilaire Belloc
In A Bath Teashop by John Betjeman
Wrestling by Louisa S. Bevington
Cootchie by Elizabeth Bishop
Insomnia by Elizabeth Bishop
Late Air by Elizabeth Bishop
One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
To My Dear And Loving Husband by Anne Bradstreet
A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns
The Charm by Thomas Campion
First Love by Thomas Campion
Shall I Come? by Thomas Campion
Song Of Pleasure And Pain by Thomas Campion
Boldness In Love by Thomas Carew
Maria Wentworth by Thomas Carew
Mediocrity In Love Rejected by Thomas Carew
Persuasions To Joy: A Song by Thomas Carew
To My Inconstant Mistress by Thomas Carew
Two Rural Sisters: 1 by Charles Cotton
Two Rural Sisters: 2 by Charles Cotton
Love by Samuel Daniel
Song by William Davenant
If You Were Coming In The Fall by Emily Dickinson
The Master by Emily Dickinson
The Way I Read A Letter's - This by Emily Dickinson
The Apparition by John Donne
Still To Be Neat by John Donne
Idea: 5 by Michael Drayton
Idea: 6 by Michael Drayton
Kisses Desired by William Drummond Of Hawthornden
Stolen Pleasure by William Drummond Of Hawthornden
Epitaph On The Monument Of Sir William Dyer by Catherine
Sonnet: A Dream by Gavin Ewart
Sonnet: What Is Needed by Gavin Ewart
Coat by Vicki Feaver
An Appeal To Cats In The Business Of Love by Thomas
The Bachelor's Song by Thomas Flatman
Meeting And Passing by Robert Frost
Love And Murder by Roy Fuller
The Constancy Of A Lover by George Gascoigne
For That He Looked Not Upon Her by George Gascoigne
I Looked Of Late And Saw Thee Look Askance by George
Cat-goddesses by Robert Ranke Graves
Childrenof Darkness by Robert Ranke Graves
Dancing Flame by Robert Ranke Graves
The Finding Of Love by Robert Ranke Graves
In Perspective by Robert Ranke Graves
Lovers In Winter by Robert Ranke Graves
Loving True, Flying Blind by Robert Ranke Graves
Mother, 1972 by Robert Ranke Graves
Secrecy by Robert Ranke Graves
The Snapped Thread by Robert Ranke Graves
The Starred Coverlet by Robert Ranke Graves
To Be In Love by Robert Ranke Graves
Whole Love by Robert Ranke Graves
Woman And Tree by Robert Ranke Graves
Caelica: 21 by Fulke Greville
The Love Song by Ivor Gurney
Silver Birch by Ivor Gurney
To His Love by Ivor Gurney
Home Travel by Joseph Hall
Long Distance Ii by Tony Harrison
An Dem Stillen Meeresstrande by Heinrich Heine
Doch Die Kastraten Klagten by Heinrich Heine
Du Bist Wie Eine Blume by Heinrich Heine
Es Stehen Unbeweglich by Heinrich Heine
Ich Liebe Solche Weisse Glieder by Heinrich Heine
Im Wunderschonen Monat Mai by Heinrich Heine
Mit Deinen Blauen Augen by Heinrich Heine
Sie Liebten Sich Beide, Doch Keiner by Heinrich Heine
Wir Standen An Der Strasseneck by Heinrich Heine
Love Dislikes Nothing by Robert Herrick
Of L A Sonnet by Robert Herrick
To His Dying Brother, Master William Herrick by Robert
To His Mistress Objecting To Him Neither Toying Or Talking by
Robert Herrick
Upon Love (10) by Robert Herrick
Love by Miroslav Holub
The Windhover: To Christ Our Lord by Gerard Manley
Advice by James Langston Hughes
Homecoming by James Langston Hughes
Juke Box Love Song by James Langston Hughes
Luck by James Langston Hughes
One Flesh by Elizabeth Jennings
Pastoral Dialogue by Anne Killigrew
Sonnet. The Double Rock by Henry W. King
Sonnet by Henry () King
Born Yesterday by Philip Larkin
Mother, Summer, I by Philip Larkin
Since The Majority Of Me by Philip Larkin
Wants by Philip Larkin
Cadet-picture Of Rilke's Father by Robert Lowell
For Aunt Sarah by Robert Lowell
The Infinite by Robert Lowell
Delirium In Vera Cruz by Malcolm Lowry
Syrinx by John Lyly
Angus's Dog by Norman Maccaig
Praise Of A Collie by Norman Maccaig
Sure Proof by Norman Maccaig
Black Candle by Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam
The Goldfinch by Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam
To Praise A Dead Woman by Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam
Father's Incantations by Czeslaw Milosz
The Road by Czeslaw Milosz
With Her by Czeslaw Milosz
Did Not by Thomas Moore
The Cuckoo by Ogden Nash
The Dog by Ogden Nash
For A Good Dog by Ogden Nash
Love Under The Republicans (or Democrats) (2) by Ogden
The Purist by Ogden Nash
To My Valentine by Ogden Nash
Comment by Dorothy Parker
Social Note by Dorothy Parker
Symphony Recital by Dorothy Parker
Unfortunate Coincidence by Dorothy Parker
The Azelea by Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore
The Lover Compareth His State To A Ship In Perilous Storm by
Sonnets To Laura In Life: 104 by Petrarch
His And Hers by Peter Porter
Emblem: 3 by Francis Quarles
All My Goodbyes Are Said by Rainer Maria Rilke
Blank Joy by Rainer Maria Rilke
From Father To Son by Rainer Maria Rilke
From The Back Of The Room by Rainer Maria Rilke
O My Friends by Rainer Maria Rilke
Firelight by Edwin Arlington Robinson
The Tree In Pamela's Garden by Edwin Arlington
Vain Gratuities by Edwin Arlington Robinson
The Apparition by Theodore Roethke
The Manifestation by Theodore Roethke
My Papa's Waltz by Theodore Roethke
The Other by Theodore Roethke
She by Theodore Roethke
Wish For A Young Wife by Theodore Roethke
By Too Long Gazing On Your Flawless Face by Pierre De
If Through The Icebound Mazes Of Your Grace by Pierre De
Lately As Dreaming On A Stair I Stood by Pierre De
The House Of Life: 53. Without Her by Dante Gabriel
In Time Like Air by Eleanor May Sarton
Invocation by Eleanor May Sarton
A Light Left On by Eleanor May Sarton
Strangers by Eleanor May Sarton
Sonnet: 106 by William Shakespeare
Sonnet: 107 by William Shakespeare
Sonnet: 144 by William Shakespeare
Sonnet: 33 by William Shakespeare
Sonnet: 44 by William Shakespeare
Astrophel And Stella: 39 by Philip Sidney
Astrophel And Stella: 98 by Philip Sidney
To Mistress Margaret Hussey by John Skelton
Autumn by Florence Margaret Smith
The Broken Heart by Florence Margaret Smith
Conviction (4) by Florence Margaret Smith
The Frog Prince by Florence Margaret Smith
Nodding by Florence Margaret Smith
Tender Only To One by Florence Margaret Smith
The Magnet by Thomas Stanley
Song [or, Orsames' Song] by John Suckling
The Look by Sara Teasdale
Upon Kinde And True Love by Aurelian Townsend
Apples Be Ripe by Anonymous
Blest, Blest And Happy He by Anonymous
Down By The Salley Gardens by Anonymous
Four Arms, Two Necks by Anonymous
If You Don't Like My Apples by Anonymous
Marriage by Anonymous
At The Piano by John Updike
Dea Ex Machina by John Updike
Marriage Counsel by John Updike
A Japanese Fan by Margaret Veley
The Avowal by Jean Marie Mathias P. A. Villiers De
L'isle-adam
Bleecker Street, Summer by Derek Walcott
Brise Marine by Derek Walcott
Coral by Derek Walcott
Love After Love by Derek Walcott
Winding Up by Derek Walcott
An Apology For Having Loved Before by Edmund Waller
Of A Fair Lady Playing With A Snake by Edmund Waller
Of Youth He Singeth by Robert Wever
A Shallot by Richard Wilbur
Transit by Richard Wilbur
Song (1) by John Wilmot
Upon His Leaving His Mistress by John Wilmot
Advice by Mary Wortley Montagu
On His Mistress, The Queen Of Bohemia by Henry Wotton
A Description Of Such A One As He Would Love by Thomas
A Woman Young And Old: 2. Before The World Was Made by William
Butler Yeats
-- Table of Poems from
--This text refers to the
From the Inside Flap
The Everyman's Library Pocket Poets hardcover series is
popular for its compact size and reasonable price which does not
compromise content. Love Songs and Sonnets includes
Ronsard's famous sonnets to Helene, Dorothy Parker's sardonic
reflections on men and Anne Bradstreet's touching poem "To my
Husband." Shakespeare is
here,&&of course, and Burnas,
whose comparison of his love to a red, red rose remains one of the
most celebrated of all poetic similes. This edition also includes a
variety of delights by everyone from Thomas Wyatt to Langston
Hughes, from Aphra Behn to John Updike. With a Foreword by Peter
Washington, and an index of first lines. --This text refers to
Product Details
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: Everyman's Library (February 27, 1997)
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-
Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 4.2 x 0.9 inches
Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
Average Customer Review:
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,614,183 in Books ()
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