Three Centuries of American PoetryAllen Mandelbaum, Robert D. Richardson, Jr. A comprehensive overview of America's vast poetic heritage, Three Centuries of American Poetry features the work of some 150 of our nation's finest writers. It includes selections from Anne Bradstreet, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Emily Dickinson, Edgar Allan Poe, Walt Whitman, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, e. e. cummings, Wallace Stevens, Robert Frost, and Gertrude Stein, as well as significant works of lesser-known American poets. From the Revolutionary and Civil Wars to the Romantic Era and the Gilded and Modern Ages, this unrivaled anthology also presents a memorable array of rare ballads, songs, hymns, spirituals, and carols that echo through our nation's history. Highlights include Native American poems, African American writings, and the works of Quakers, colonists, Huguenots, transcendentalists, scholars, slaves, politicians, journalists, and clergymen. These discerning selections demonstrate that the American canon of poetry is as diverse as the nation itself, and constantly evolving as we pass through time. Most important, this collection strongly reflects the peerless stylings that mark the American poetic experience as unique. Here, in one distinguished volume, are the many voices of the New World. |
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... Gone (Unknown, 1867) Michael Row the Boat Ashore (Unknown, 1867) O Little Town of Bethlehem (Phillips Brooks, 1868) There Is a Balm in Gilead (Unknown) V - THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION AND EXPANSION: 1870–1900 EMMA LAZARUS The New Ezekiel ...
... Gone (Unknown, 1867) Michael Row the Boat Ashore (Unknown, 1867) O Little Town of Bethlehem (Phillips Brooks, 1868) There Is a Balm in Gilead (Unknown) V - THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION AND EXPANSION: 1870–1900 EMMA LAZARUS The New Ezekiel ...
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... dead, It makes things gone perpetually to last, And calls back moneths and years that long since fled It makes a man more aged in conceit, Then was Methuselah, or's grand-sire great: While of their persons & their acts his mind doth.
... dead, It makes things gone perpetually to last, And calls back moneths and years that long since fled It makes a man more aged in conceit, Then was Methuselah, or's grand-sire great: While of their persons & their acts his mind doth.
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... gone. from The Four Ages of Man OLD AGE My memory is short, and braine is dry. My Almond-tree (gray haires) doth flourish now, And back, once straight, begins apace to bow. My grinders now are few, my sight doth faile My skin is ...
... gone. from The Four Ages of Man OLD AGE My memory is short, and braine is dry. My Almond-tree (gray haires) doth flourish now, And back, once straight, begins apace to bow. My grinders now are few, my sight doth faile My skin is ...
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... gone. Thou, stranger, that shalt come this way, No fraud upon the dead commit— Observe the swelling turf, and say They do not lie, but here they sit. Here still a lofty rock remains, On which the curious eye may trace (Now wasted, half ...
... gone. Thou, stranger, that shalt come this way, No fraud upon the dead commit— Observe the swelling turf, and say They do not lie, but here they sit. Here still a lofty rock remains, On which the curious eye may trace (Now wasted, half ...
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Three Centuries of American Poetry, 1620-1923 Allen Mandelbaum,Robert D. Richardson No preview available - 1999 |
Three Centuries of American Poetry: 1620-1923 Allen Mandelbaum,Robert Richardson No preview available - 1999 |
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