1678.
The second edition, / corrected by the author, and enlarged by an addition of several other poems found amongst her papers after her death.
Microform
JLC Title 245h
[microform] :
Printed by John Foster, ,
Microform
Several poems [microform] : compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight, wherein especially is contained a compleat discourse, and description of the four elements constitutions, ages of man, seasons of the year. : Together with an exact epitome of the three first monarchyes viz. the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian. And beginning of the Romane Common-Wealth to the end of their last king: : with diverse other pleasant & serious poems,
Tenth muse lately sprung up in America.
Early American imprints. First series ;
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672. Tenth muse lately sprung up in America.
by a gentlewoman in New-England.
1678
Several poems [microform] : compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight, wherein especially is contained a compleat discourse, and description of the four elements constitutions, ages of man, seasons of the year. : Together with an exact epitome of the three first monarchyes viz. the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian. And beginning of the Romane Common-Wealth to the end of their last king: : with diverse other pleasant & serious poems,
Twayne Publishers,
9780805785333
Book
The complete works of Anne Bradstreet
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
McElrath, Joseph R.
Robb, Allan P.
edited by Joseph R. McElrath, Jr. and Allan P. Robb.
1981
The complete works of Anne Bradstreet
Dover Publications
9780486221601
Book
Poems of Anne Bradstreet.
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Hutchinson, Robert, 1924-
Edited with an introd. by Robert Hutchinson.
1969
Poems of Anne Bradstreet.
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press,
Book
The works of Anne Bradstreet.
The John Harvard library
John Harvard library.
To her most honoured father by A.B. -- Prologue -- Four elements -- Four humors in man's constitution -- Four ages of man -- Four seasons of the year -- Four monarchies -- Dialogue between old England and new : concerning their present troubles, anno, 1642 -- Elegy upon that honorable and renowned knight Sir Philip Sidney who was untimely slain at the siege of Zutphen, anno 1586 -- In honour of Du Bartas, 1641 -- In honour of that high and mighty Princess Queen Elizabeth of happy memory -- David's lamentation for Saul and Jonathan : II Sam. 1:19 -- To the memory of my dear and ever honoured father Thomas Dudley Esq. who deceased July 31, 1653, and of his age 77 -- Epitaph on my dear and ever-honoured mother Mrs. Dorothy Dudley, who deceased December 27, 1643, and of her age 61 -- Contemplations -- Flesh and the spirit -- Vanity of all worldly things -- Author to her book.
Upon a fit of sickness, anno 1632 aetatis suae 19 -- Upon some distemper of body -- Before the birth of one of her children -- To my dear and loving husband -- Letter to her husband, absent upon public employment -- Another -- Another -- To her father with some verses -- in reference to her children : 23 June, 1659 -- In memory of my dear grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, who deceased August, 1665, being a year and half old -- In memory of my dear grandchild Anne Bradstreet who deceased June 20, 1669, being three years and seven months old -- On my dear grandchild Simon Bradstreet, who died on 16 November, 1669, being but a month and one day old -- To the memory of my dear daughter-in-law, Mrs. Mercy Bradstreet, who deceased Sept. 6, 1669, in the 28 year of her age.
To my dear children -- Here follow several occasional meditations -- For deliverence from a fever -- From another sore fit -- Deliverance from a fit of fainting -- Meditations when my sould hath been refreshed with the consolations which the world knows not -- Upon my son Samuel his going for England Nov., 6, 1657 -- For the restoration of my dear husband from a burning ague, June 1, 1661 -- Upon my daughter Hannah Wiggin her recovery from a dangerous fever -- On my son's return out of England July 17, 1661 -- Upon my dear and loving husband his going into England Jan. 16, 1661 -- In my solitary hours in my dear husband his absence -- In thankful acknowledgment for the letters I received from my husband out of England -- In thankful remembrance for my dear husband's safe arrival Sept. 3, 1662 -- For my dear son Simon Bradstreet -- Meditations divine and moral -- Here follows some verses upon the burning of our house July 10th, 1666 : copied out of a loose paper -- As weary pilgrim.
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Hensley, Jeannine, editor.
Edited by Jeannine Hensley. Foreword by Adrienne Rich.
1967
The works of Anne Bradstreet.
P. Smith,
Book
The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse,
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Ellis, John Harvard, 1841-1870. ed.
edited by John Harvard Ellis.
1962
The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse,
1867.
Microform
JLC Title 245h
[microform]
A. E. Cutter,
Microform
The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse [microform]
Library of American civilization ;
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Ellis, John Harvard, 1841-1870.
edited by John Harvard Ellis.
1867
The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse [microform]
in the year M.DCC.LVIII. [1758]
The third edition, / corrected by the author, and enlarged by an addition of several other poems found amongst her papers after her death.
Microform
JLC Title 245h
[microform] :
[publisher not identified] Re-printed from the second edition,
Microform
Several poems [microform] : compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight; wherein especially is contained, a compleat discourse and description of the four elements, constitutions, ages of man, seasons of the year. : Together with an exact epitome of the three first monarchies, viz. the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian, and Roman Common Wealth, from its beginning, to the end of their last king. : With divers other pleasant and serious poems.
Early American imprints. First series ;
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
By a gentlewoman in New-England.
1758
Several poems [microform] : compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight; wherein especially is contained, a compleat discourse and description of the four elements, constitutions, ages of man, seasons of the year. : Together with an exact epitome of the three first monarchies, viz. the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian, and Roman Common Wealth, from its beginning, to the end of their last king. : With divers other pleasant and serious poems.
1965.
Book
Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints,
Book
The Tenth Muse (1650) and, from the manuscripts: Meditations divine and morall, together with letters and occasional pieces,
Bradstreet, Anne Dudley, 1612?-1672.
Piercy, Josephine Ketcham. ed.
by Anne Bradstreet. Facsim. reproductions, with an introd. by Josephine K. Piercy.
1965
The Tenth Muse (1650) and, from the manuscripts: Meditations divine and morall, together with letters and occasional pieces,
Paulist Press,
9780809104161
Book
Early New England meditative poetry
Sources of American spirituality
Hambrick-Stowe, Charles E.
Bradstreet, Anne, 1612?-1672.
Taylor, Edward, 1642-1729.
edited by Charles E. Hambrick-Stowe.
1988
Early New England meditative poetry
1985.
Contains 658 poems not longer than thirteen lines and written since the thirteenth century.
Book
Oxford University Press,
9780192141354
9780192820730
Book
The Oxford book of short poems
'Fowls in the frith' -- 'Lord, Thou Clèpedest me' -- 'When I see on Rood' -- 'Why have you no ruth?' -- Roundel ('Now welcome, summer') from The Parliament of Fowls -- Unto Adam, His Own Scrivèyn -- Roundel ('Since I from Love escapèd am') from Merciless Beauty -- 'I shall say what inordinate love is' -- 'Onmes gentes plaudite!' -- 'Blessed Mary' -- 'Peace maketh plenty' -- 'Hail, Queen of Heaven' -- 'I have been a foster' -- 'Western wind' -- 'Though ye suppose' -- 'Madam, withouten many words' -- 'Who hath heard' -- 'The enemy of life' -- 'Sighs are my food' -- 'Lux, my fair falcon' -- 'Throughout the world' -- The Spouse to the Younglings -- 'Thou sleepest fast' -- To an Old Gentlewoman that Painted Her Face -- 'The lowest trees have tops' -- Epigram ('Were I a king') -- To His Son -- 'What is our life?' -- 'Even such is time' -- 'Sleep, baby mine, Desire' -- 'Like those sick folks' -- 'Whenas man's life' -- Bathsabe's Song ('Hot sun, cool fire') from David and Bethsabe -- Bridal Song ('Now, Sleep, bind fast') from The Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn -- 'Thyrsis, sleepest thou?' -- 'A sparrow-hawk proud' -- 'Thule' -- 'My love in her attire' -- 'Since first I saw your face' -- 'Love me not' -- 'Sweet, let me go!' -- 'He that hath no mistress' -- 'Sweet Cupid, ripen her desire' -- To His Wife, for Striking Her Dog -- Song ('O mistress mine') from Twelfth Night -- Song ('When daffodils begin to peer') from The Winter's Tale -- song ('Jog on, jog on') from The Winter's Tale -- Song ('Full fathom five') from The Tempest -- Song ('The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I') from The Tempest -- Song ('Where the bee sucks') from The Tempest -- A Remembrance of My Friend Mr. Thomas Morley -- 'Happy were he' -- 'Happy were he' -- De Puero Balbutiente -- 'Fair summer droops' -- 'When thou must home' -- 'Never weather-beaten sail' 'Thrice toss these oaken ashes in the air' -- 'Thus I resolve' -- 'Sleep, angry beauty' -- Think'st thou to seduce me then' -- Song ('In a maiden-time professed') from The Witch -- Melancholy Conceit -- Song ('Care-charming sleep') from The Tragedy of Valentinian --
Discontents in Devon -- Dreams -- Impossibilities, to His Friend -- Upon Himself -- The Coming of Good Luck -- The Silken Snake -- To Daisies, Not to Shut So Soon -- Upon Her Feet -- His Prayer to Ben Jonson -- To Fortune -- Lovers, How They Come and Part -- Upon Julia's Clothes -- Kisses Loathsome -- To His Book -- His Desire -- No Coming to God without Christ -- Of Common Devotion -- On Zacchaeus -- On Change of Weathers-- Sic Vita -- Sonnet ("Go, thou that vainly') -- Song ('We'll, placed in Love's triumphant chariot high') from The Humorous Lovers -- Love's Epitaph -- Sin -- Church Music -- Church Lock and Key -- Trinity Sunday -- Bitter-Sweet -- A Wreath -- Lips and Eyes -- A Lady's Prayer to Cupid -- Song to the Masquers ('Why do you dwell so long in clouds') from The Triumph of Peace -- Fie on Love -- On a Young Man and an Old Man -- On a Gentlewoman Walking in the Snow -- Occasioned by Seeing a Walk of Bay Trees -- In Praise of Fidelia -- In Obitum Ben. Jons. -- 'Come from thy palace' from The Conceited Pedlar -- A Song ('Music, thou queen of souls') -- 'From witty men and mad' -- Song ('The lark now leaves his watery nest') -- Song ('Where did you borrow that last sigh') from The Lost Lady -- To One Married to an Old Man -- To Chloris, Upon a Favour Received -- Nymph's Song ('Let us use it whilst we may') from Il Pastor Fido -- Song ('O'er the smooth enamelled green') from Arcades -- To My Nephew, J.B. -- On the Miracle of Multiplied Loaves -- To the Infant Martyrs -- On the Miracle of Loaves -- On the Blessed Virgin's Bashfulness -- On Our Crucified Lord, Naked and Bloody -- On Himself, Upon Hearing What Was His Sentence -- To My Dear and Loving Husband -- Seeing her Dancing -- Preface to the Progress of Learning -- One Desiring me to Read, but Slept It Out, Wakening -- To Lucasta, Going to the Wars -- Song ('In mine own monument I lie') -- The Dream -- 'The proud Egyptian queen' -- Invocation of Silence -- The Eclipse -- Soul and Body -- Of the Theme of Love -- Song ('Distil not poison in mine ears') -- Song of the Shepherd Boy from The Pilgrim's Progress -- Upon the Snail -- Song ("'Tis true our life is but a long dis-ease") -- Mercury's Song ('Fair Iris I love') from Amphitryon -- Momus' Song to Mars ('Thy sword within the scabbard keep') from The Secular Masque -- Chorus to the Gods ('all, all of a piece throughout') from The Secular Masque -- Meditation 8 -- Christian Ethics -- Nudus Redibo -- On Dorinda -- Ever Present -- The Old Man's Complaint -- A Thought on Human Life.
Song ('Kind lovers, love on') from Calisto -- To --- ('Let those with cost') -- To My More than Meritorious Wife -- Grecian Kindness -- Song ('Leave this gaudy gilded stage') -- A Rodomontade on His Cruel Mistress -- A Catch ('If all be true') -- The Choice -- To Her Lover's Complaint -- Song ('Ladies, though to your conquering eyes') from The comical revenge -- On Myself -- A Song ('The nymph in vain') -- To His False Mistress -- Phillis's Resolution -- Les Estreines -- Adriani Morientis ad Animam Suam -- The Lady Who Offers Her Looking-Glass to Venus -- Democritus and Heraclitus -- A Letter to the Honourable Lady, Miss Margaret Cavendish-Holles-Harley -- The Insatiable Priest -- 'Impatient with desire' -- Cloe -- Shall I Repine? -- Song ('See, see, she wakes') -- Song ('Pious Selinda') -- Lesbia -- Song ('False though she be') -- Fancy -- Trim's Song: The Fair Kitchen-Maid from The Funeral -- 'If it be true' -- Jealousy -- Song ('Can love be controlled by advice?') from The Beggar's Opera -- Song ('Before the barn-door crowing') from The Beggar's Opera -- Song('Think of dress in every light') from Achilles -- Written on a Window -- Modesty -- On Dullness -- On a Lady Who p-ssed at the Tragedy of Cato -- Upon a Girl of Seven Years Old -- A Hymn, Written in Windsor Forest -- Inscriptio -- Epigram ('When other ladies to the shades go down') -- To Mr. C, St. James's Place, London, October 22nd -- Epigram Engraved on the Collar of a Dog which I Gave to His Royal Highness -- On the Benefactions in the Late Frost, 1740 -- The Lady's Resolve -- The Monument -- On the Setting Up Mr Butler's Monument in Westminster Abbey -- Upon an Ingenious Friend, Over-Vain -- Song ('Man's a poor deluded bubble') -- Ad Coelum -- On the Death of Squire Christopher, a Remarkably Fat Sportsman -- Lines Written on a Window at The Leasowes at a Time of Very Deep Snow -- Tophet -- Ode: Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 -- Sonnet ('When Phoebe formed a wanton smile') -- 'O Memory, thou fond deceiver' from The Captivity -- A Comparison -- A Moral Tetrastich: from the Persian -- 'If wishing for the mystic joys of love' -- My Birthday -- 'The Angel that presided' -- Infant Joy -- Infant Sorrow -- The Clod and the Pebble -- The Sick Rose -- Eternity -- 'Mock on, mock on' -- 'an old maid early' -- The Question Answered -- 'Great things are done' -- To the Accuser Who Is the God of this World -- Grace at Kirkudbright -- 'Twa bonny lads' -- On a Dog of Lord Eglinton's -- Parental Recollections -- 'Says Tweed to Till' -- 'Oh, England' -- 'As I walked by my self' -- 'I saw a peacock' -- 'How many miles to Babylon?' -- 'My mother said'.
'She dwelt among the untrodden ways' -- 'My heart leaps up' -- To a Child: Written in Her Album -- 'Look no thou' -- 'Youth! thou wear'st to manhood now' -- A Sunset -- Time, Real and Imaginary: An Allegory -- Apologia Pro Vita Sua -- Phantom -- On Imitation -- The Soldier's Wife: Dactylics -- 'Had we two met' -- Dirce -- Plays -- 'Ireland never was contented' -- 'Death stands above me' -- Venetian Air -- An Argument: To Any Phillis or Chloe -- Song ('When the heart's feeling') -- To Miss ---('With woman's form') -- To --- --- ('When I loved you') -- Beneath the Cypress Shade -- 'So we'll go no more a-roving' -- 'I would to Heaven' -- 'Remember thee! remember thee! -- Answer to ---'s Professions of Affection -- 'They say that Hope is happiness' -- A song ('Widow bird sate mourning') -- The Waning Moon -- Lines to a Reviewer -- To --- ('Music, when soft voices die') -- Field Path -- Lines Written on a Very Boisterous Day in may, 1844 -- Solitude -- Fragment ('Language has not the power') -- Birds' Nests -- 'This Living hand' -- Song ('Strew not earth') from The Second Brother -- Letters -- Days -- Character -- Quatrain: Poet -- Water -- Limits -- The Best -- All's Well -- 'From sorrow sorrow yet is born' -- The Eagle -- A Dedication -- 'I stood on a tower in the wet' -- 'Somebody being a nobody' -- Frater Ave Atque Vale -- Home Thoughts from the Sea -- Meeting at Night -- Parting at Morning -- Among the Rocks from James Lee's Wife -- 'When I vexed you' from Ferishtah's Fancies -- To Edward FitzGerald -- Appearances -- Bad Dreams -- 'Light-winged Smoke, Icarian bird' -- 'Each more melodious note I hear' -- On the Sun Coming Out in the Afternoon -- 'For though the eaves were rabbeted' -- 'They made me erect and lone' -- Fall, leaves, fall -- Darkness -- 'To spend uncounted years of pain' -- Sixty-Eighth Birthday -- Monody -- Fragments of a Lost Gnostic Poem of the Twelfth Century -- In the Pauper's Turnip-Field -- Are You the New Person Drawn Toward Me? -- Sometimes With One I Love -- Reconciliation -- A Noiseless Patient Spider -- The Last Invocation -- Ah Poverties, Wincings, and Sulky Retreats -- Old War-Dreams -- A Clear Midnight -- To the Pending Year -- Destiny -- 'Below the surface-stream' -- Heraclitus -- A Mill -- The Revelation -- The Spirit's Epochs -- Constancy Rewarded -- Magna Est Veritas -- Aspecta Medusa -- Memory -- 'I like a look of agony' -- 'I'm Nobody!' -- 'They say that time assuages' -- 'It dropped so low' -- 'I stepped from plank to plank' -- 'The stimulus beyond the grave' -- 'We miss a kinsman more' -- 'It sounded as if the streets were running' -- 'Drowning is not so pitiful' -- 'My life closed twice before its close' -- What Would I Give? -- The Last Wish -- The Power of Interval -- 'I Look Into My Glass' -- A Thunderstorm in Town -- The Peace-Offering -- The Pink Frock -- On Sturminster Foot-Bridge (Onomatopoeic) -- The Nettles -- The Fallow Deer at the Lonely House -- The Lodging-House Fuchsias.
Heaven-Haven: A Nun takes the Veil -- Pied Beauty -- Peace -- 'How looks the night?' -- 'Repeat that, repeat' -- 'Not of all my eyes see' -- 'She schools the flighty pupils of her eyes' -- The Rainbow -- Triolet ('When first we met') -- April 1885 -- 'I am the Way' -- The Rainy Summer -- Maternity -- 'I am a hunchback' -- On a Wife -- The Night Has a Thousand Eyes -- Symphony in Yellow -- At Lord's -- Heaven and Hell -- The End of It -- Eight o'Clock -- 'The night is freezing fast' -- 'The fairies break their dances' -- Revolution -- 'Stars, I have seen them fall' -- 'Crossing alone the nighted ferry' -- 'Half-way, for one commandment broken' -- The Nurse's Lament -- 'We never said farewell' -- 'I saw a stable' -- Miniature -- 'Look, you have cast out Love!' from Plain Tales from the Hills ('Lisped') -- 'There is a tide' from Plain Tales from the Hills ('Kidnapped') -- A Dead Statesman from Epitaphs of War -- All Things Can Tempt Me -- Paudeen -- The Cold Heaven -- A Coat -- A Thought from Propertius -- Death -- Spilt Milk -- The Choice -- Consolation -- The Great Day -- Maquillage -- At The Cavour -- Isolation -- Venice -- Epigram ('Because I am idolatrous') -- Vitae Summa Brevis Spem Nos Vetat Incohare Longam -- Outcast -- Beside the Bed -- An Old Story -- Exit -- The Early Morning -- Discovery -- The False Heart -- 'In the desert' -- 'A god in wrath' -- 'A man said' -- On a Island -- Dread -- I Am the Poet Davies, William -- The Villain -- D is for Dog -- All in June -- The Bells of Heaven -- 'Reason has moons' -- Sidera Cadentia: On the Death of Queen Victoria -- Arrogance -- The Spotted Flycatcher -- The Owl -- Crazed -- 'Sir, say no more' -- Elegy in a Country Churchyard -- Ecclesiates -- In Neglect -- A Patch of Old Snow -- The Cow in Apple-Time -- The Line-Gang -- Dust of Snow -- Fireflies in the Garden -- The Armful -- Were I in Trouble -- A Mood Apart -- 'She had a name' -- Cock-Crow -- Thaw -- Tall Nettles -- 'By the ford' -- Cool Tombs -- The Leaden-Eyed -- What the Moon Saw -- Factory Windows Are Always Broken -- Anecdote of the Jar -- The Death of a Soldier -- Men Made Out of Words -- The Hounds -- A Glass of Beer -- The Embankment (The Fantasia of a Fallen Gentleman on a Cold, Bitter Night) -- Conversion -- A Sort of a Song -- The Hard Listener -- No Coward's Song -- Gift to a Jade -- Soul's Liberty -- Interior -- Let No Charitable Hope -- Cold-Blooded Creatures -- Piano -- I Am Like a Rose -- Glory -- What Would You Fight For? -- To Women, As Far As I'm Concerned -- Intimates -- In Teesdale -- A Dead Mole -- Ba Cottage -- The Garden: En robe de parade. Samain -- The Lake Isle -- Childhood -- All Souls' Night -- 'Blighters' -- Base Details -- The General -- Everyone Sang -- 'In me, past, present, future meet' -- Ave Caesar -- Eagle Valor, Chicken Mind -- Bells of Grey Crystal -- Poetry -- A Face -- I May, I Might, I Must -- A Jellyfish -- Cousin Nancy.
Emily Hardcastle, Spinster -- After War -- On the Night -- The Escape -- Moments -- Never May the Fruit Be Plucked -- To a Young Poet -- The True Encounter -- One of the Principal Causes of War -- Arms and the Boy -- Be Frugal -- 'Buffalo Bill's' -- 'may my heart always' -- 'no time ago' -- 'Me up at does' -- Good Appetite -- Flying Crooked -- At First Sight -- On Dwelling -- The Beach -- Cat-Goddesses -- In Her Only Way -- She Is No Liar -- In Perspective -- Departure -- Black Tambourine -- Pitcher -- Fishing Boats in Martigues -- No Mean City -- Postscript to a Pettiness -- The Murderer -- The Lads of the Village -- Love Me! -- Lady 'Rogue' Singleton -- Where Are the War Poets? -- For a Lamb -- She and I -- The Compassionate Fool -- Forgive Me, Sire -- Shepherdess -- The Temptations of Saint Anthony -- The Adversary -- Trinity Place -- Leave Them Alone -- Old Triton Time -- Gnome -- Death of King George V -- Remorse -- Let It Go -- Snow -- The Ear -- Night Club -- Precursors -- Figure of Eight -- Gare du Midi -- Epitaph on a Tyrant -- 'Base words are uttered' 'Behold the manly mesomorph' -- At the Party -- August1968 -- The Bed -- Old Florist -- Dolor -- Night Crow -- Wish for a Young Wife -- Words -- War-Time -- The Lovers -- The Stone Gentleman -- The Double Autumn -- Things to Come -- Entreaty -- Stars and Planets -- Casabiance -- In Innocence -- 'I had gone broke' -- Interview with Doctor Drink -- During a Bombardment by V-Weapons -- Memorial Poem: N.S. 1888-1949 -- The Hittites -- The Wind in the Tree -- 'The village coddled in the valley' -- Epitaph for the Poet -- 'Not in the poet' -- Ire -- 'On no work of words' -- Twenty-Four Years -- The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner -- A War -- Well Water -- Fox -- He Resigns -- KingDavid Dances -- Weather Ear -- Invasion Summer -- Money -- Easter -- Portrait -- Families -- Plea -- Ending -- A 14-Year-Old Convalescent Cat in the Winter -- Lady Ralegh's Lament -- American Primitive -- Faith and Works.
Iambic Feet Considered as Honorable Scars -- The Monuments of Hiroshima -- Development -- An Old Picture -- A Negro Cemetery Next to a White One -- The Death of God -- Casting -- O Sheriffs -- King Lot's Envoys -- Epistemology -- Parable -- Piazza di Spagna, Early Morning -- Mind -- The Proof -- Avarice -- Home Is So Sad -- Water -- Days -- As Bad as a Mile -- Memories of Verdun -- I Know a Man -- Answers -- A Renewal -- In a Parlor Containing a Table -- When the War Is Over -- To My Daughter -- Nude Descending a Staircase -- Last Child: for Daniel -- Cat and Mouse -- Thistles -- Full Moon and Little Frieda -- Water -- Praying -- Frog Autumn -- Barren Woman -- Riddle -- Upon Shaving Off One's Beard -- A Birthday Poem: for Rachel -- Sous-Entendu -- The Demolition -- Mother of the Groom -- Tractatus: for Aidan Higgins.
Kavanagh, P. J. (Patrick Joseph), 1931-
Michie, James.
Anonymous (13th and 14th centuries) / Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?-1400) / Anonymous (15th and early 16th centuries) / John Skelton (1460?-1529) / Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542) / William Baldwin (c.1515-1563) / Anonymous (c.1550) / George Turbervile (1540?-1610) / Sir Edward Dyer (c.1545-1607) / Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford (1550-1604) / Sir Walter Ralegh (1552?-1618) / Sir Philip Sidney (1554- 1586) / Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke (1554-1628) / George Peele (1558?-1597) / George Chapman (1559?-1634) / Anonymous (printed 1599-1610) / Sir John Harington (1561-1612) / William Shakespeare(1564-1616) / John Davies of Hereford (1566-1601) / Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex (1566-1601) / Thomas Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex (1566-1601) / Thomas Bastard (1566-1618) / Thomas Nashe (1567-1601) / Thomas Campion (1567-1620) / Thomas Middleton (1570?-1627) / Samuel Rowland (1570?-1630?) / The Faithful Shepherdess -- John Fletcher with Francis Beaumont (1584-
Robert Herrick (1591-1674) / Francis Quarles (1592-1644) / Henry King (1592-1669) / William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle (1592-1676) / George Herbert (1593-1633) / Thomas Carew (1595-1639) / James Shirley (1596-1666) / Edward May (fl. 1633) / William Strode (1602-1645) / Mildmay Fane, Earl of Westmorland (1602-1665) / Thomas Randolph (1605-1635) / Sir William Davenant (1606-1668) / Sir William Berkeley (1606?-1677) / Edmund Waller (1606-1687) / Sir Richard Fanshawe (1608-1666) / John Milton (1608-1674) / Clement Barksdale (1609-1687) / Richard Crashaw (1612?-1649) / James Graham, Marquis of Montrose (1612-1650) / Anne Bradstreet (1612?-1672) / Robert Heath (fl. 1650) / Sir John Denham (1615-1669) / George Daniel (1616-1657) / Richard Lovelace (1618-1658) / Sir Edward Sherburne (1618-1702) / Richard Flecknoe (?-1678) / Henry Vaughan (1622-1695) / Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle (1624-1674) / John Hall (1627-1656) / John Bunyan (1628-1688) / Katherine Philips (1631-1664) / John Dryden (1631-1700) / Philip Pain (?-1666) / Thomas Traherne (1637-1674) / Thomas Flatman (1637-1688) / Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset (1638-1706) / Philip Ayres (1638-1712) / Anonymous (late 17th century)
John Crowne (1640?-1703?) / Thomas Rymer (1641-1713) / John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680) / Henry Aldrich (1647-1710) / Nahum Tate (1652-1715) / Jane Barker (fl. 1688) / Sir George Etherege (1653-1691) / Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661?-1720) / William Walsh (1663-1708) / Matthew Prior (1664-1721) / George Granville, Lord Lansdowne (1667-1735) / Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) / William Congreve (1670-1729) / Jonathan Smedley (1671-1729?) / Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729) / Esther Johnson (1681-1728) / John Gay (1685-1732) / Aaron Hill (1685-1750) / Alexander Pope (1688-1744) / Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762) / Samuel Wesley (1691-1739) / Anonymous (attr. Samuel Wesley) / Thomas Fitzgerald (1695?-1752) / Robert Dodsley (1703-1764) / William Pattison (1706-1727) / John Wigson (c.1711-?) / William Shenstone (1714-1763) / Thomas Gray (1716-1771) / William Collins (1721-1759) / Oliver Goldsmith (1730-1774) / William Cowper (1731-1800) / Sir William Jones (1746-1794) / Thomas Chatterton (1752-1770) / George Crabbe (1754-1832) / William Blake (1757-1827) / Robert Burns (1759-1796) / Mary Lamb (1765-1847) with Charles Lamb/ Anonymous (?-19th century)
William Wordsworth (1770-1850) / Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) / Samuel Taylor Coleridge 91772-1834) / Robert Southey (1774-1843) / Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864) / Thomas Moore (1779-1852) / Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866) / George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) / Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822) / John Clare (1793-1864) / John Keats (1795-1821) / Thomas Lovell Beddoes (1803-1849) / Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1849) / Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861) / John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) / Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892) / Robert Browning (1812-1889) / Henry Thoreau (1817-1862) / Emily Brontë (1818-1848) / Arthur Hugh Clough (1819-1861) / James Russell Lowell (1819-1891) / Herman Melville (1819-1891) / Walt Whitman (1819-1892) / Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) / William Cory (1823-1892) / William Allingham (1824-1889) / Coventry Patmore (1825-1896) / Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) / Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) / Christina Rossetti (1830-1894) / Edward Bulwer, Earl of Lytton (1831-1891) / John Warren, Lord de Tabley (1835-1895) / Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)
Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889) / Robert Bridges (1844-1930) / Alice Meynell (1847-1922) / Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) / Francis Coutts (1852-1923) / Francis William Bourdillon (1952-1921) / Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) / Francis Thompson (1859-1907) / A.E. Housman (1859-1936) / Mary Coleridge (1861-1907) / Eden Phillpotts (1862-1960) / Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) / W.B. Yeats (1865-1939) / Arthur Symons (1865-1945) / Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) / George Russell (AE) (1867-1935) / Charlotte Mew (1869-1928) / Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935) / Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953) / Stephen Crane (1871-1900) / J.M. Synge (1871-1909) / W.H. Davies (1871-1940) / Ralph Hodgson (1871-1962) / Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939) / Walter de la Mare (1873-1956) / Trumbull Stickney (1874-1904) / G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) / Robert Frost (1874-1963) / Edward Thomas (1878-1917) / Carl Sandburg (1878-1967) / Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931) / Wallace Stevens (1879-1955) / John Freeman (1880-1929) / James Stephens (1882-1950) / T.E. Hulme (1883-1917) / William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) / James Elroy Flecker (1884-1916) / Anna Wickham (1884-1947) / Sir John Squire (1884-1958) / Elinor Wylie (1885-1928) / D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930) / Andrew Young (1885-1971) / Ezra Pound (1885-1972) / Frances Cornford (1886-1960) / Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967) / Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962) / Edith Sitwell (1887-1964) / Marianne Moore (1887-1972) / T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
John Crowe Ransom (1888-1974) / Ivor Gurney (1890-1937) / Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950) / Hugh MacDiarmid (1892-1978) / Wilfred Owen (1893-1918) / Richard Church (1893-1972) / E.E. Cummings (1894-1962) / Mark van Doren (1894-1972) / Robert Graves (1895- ) / Edmund Blunden (1896-1974) / Hart Crane (1899-1932) / Robert Francis (1901- ) / Roy Campbell1902-1957) / Patrick MacDonogh (1902-1961) / A.S.J. Tessimond (1902-1962) / Stevie Smith (1902-1971) / C. Day Lewis (1904-1972) / Richard Eberhart (1904-1953) / Norman Cameron (1905-1953) / Phyllis Mcginley (1905-1978) / Patrick Kavanagh (1906-1967) / Vernon Watkins (1906-1967) / Samuel Beckett (1906- ) / John Betjeman (1906-1984) / William Empson (1906-1984) / Louis Macneice (1907-1963) / W.H. Auden (1907-1973) / A.D. Hope (1907- ) / Theodore Roethke (1908-1963) / W.R. Rodgers (1909-1969) / James Reeves (1909-1978) / Robert Fitzgerald (1910-1985) / Norman MacCaig (1910- ) / Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) / J.V. Cunningham (1911- ) / Roy Fuller (1912- ) / F.T. Prince (1912- ) / George Barker (1913- ) / R.S. Thomas (1913- ) / Dylan Thomas (1914-1953) / Randall Jarrell (1914-1965) / Clifford Dyment (1914-1971) / John Berryman (1914-1972) / Norman Nicholson (1914-1982) / Laurie Lee (1914- ) / C.H. Sisson (1914- ) / Judith Wright (1915- ) / Thomas Blackburn (1916-1977) / John Ciardi (1916- ) / Gavin Ewart (1916- ) / Robert Lowell (1917-1977) / William Jay Smith (1918- ) / Muriel Spark (1918- )
William Meredith (1919- ) / D.J. Enright (1920- ) / Howard Nemerov (1920- ) / Drummond Allison (1921-1943) / Richard Wilbur (1921- ) / Anthony Hecht (1922- ) / Philip Larkin(1922- ) / Alan Dugan (1923- ) / Robert Creeley (1926- ) / Elizabeth Jennings (1926- ) / James Merrill (1926- ) / Galway Kinnell (1927- ) / W.S. Merwin (1927- ) / James Michie (1927- ) / X.J. Kennedy (1929- ) / Ted Hughes (1930- ) / P.J. Kavanagh (1931- ) / Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) / Adrian Mitchell (1932- ) / John Updike (1932- ) / James Simmons (1933- ) / Anne Stevenson(1933- ) / Seamus Heaney (1939- ) / Derek Mahon (1941- )
chosen and edited by P.J. Kavanagh and James Michie.
1985
The Oxford book of short poems
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