Junte-se a nós em uma viagem ao mundo dos livros!
Adicionar este livro à prateleira
Grey
Deixe um novo comentário Default profile 50px
Grey
Assine para ler o livro completo ou leia as primeiras páginas de graça!
All characters reduced
Selected Poems and Essays - cover

Sentimos muito, os direitos editoriais deste livro não permitem que o mesmo seja lido desde o pais que esta tentando se conectar.

Selected Poems and Essays

Alice Meynell

Editora: Carcanet Classics

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopse

Alice Meynell was a major British author of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This is the first anthology of her verse and prose to be published for over seventy-five years. Meynell was highly regarded both as a poet and as a writer of essays and was seriously proposed for the laureateship on two occasions. G.K. Chesterton said of her that she 'never wrote a line, or even a word, that does not stand like the rib of a strong intellectual structure; a thing with the bones of thought in it'.
The present selection includes the early romantic poems of yearning, full of poignant surprises, and the terser, less personal poems of her maturity. Also included is a broad sample of Meynell's literary essays, in each case a careful work of art. They include reflections on literature, culture and the natural world, nuanced observations on childhood, and moving defences (both specific and general) of women against trespasses on their dignity.
This selection is introduced by Alex Wong, who offers a poet's view of Meynell's distinctive artistic achievements and locates her within her literary contexts. It also includes an appreciative preface by the renowned feminist critic and theorist Laura Mulvey, who is the author's great-granddaughter.
Disponível desde: 28/08/2025.
Comprimento de impressão: 216 páginas.

Outros livros que poderiam interessá-lo

  • Poets on Poetry - The most artistic and creative form of writing we have a selection of poems from those artistic and creative minds about poetry itself - cover

    Poets on Poetry - The most...

    Matthew Arnold, Sarojini Naidu,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Who has not tried to write a poem?  The poetic form of words seems to be rather easy.  In its basic form, which we learn as children, the rhyming couplet is, in a child’s written and spoken words, pure joy - success!  In the hands of a Shakespeare it is magnificent with a reach and understanding that the rest of us enjoy but are far from even attempting.    
     
    As we listen to various poetic forms, schools and movements we can only react with wonder at how these innocent words are assembled to create symphonies of ideas, wonder and revelation.  The emotions they seek to invoke can be anything from happiness to sadness, from love to revulsion. 
     
    Arnold, Stevens, Keats, Akhmatova, Browning, Herrick, Hood, Killigrew are but a few of the roll-call of wordsmiths who with mere words create ravenous beauty that reveals tender lines and sensitive verse on how and why they are who they are. 
     
    01 - Poets on Poetry - An Introduction 
    02 - When I Write Poems by Anna Akhmatova 
    03 - Of My Poems by Thomas MacDonagh 
    04 - An Apology For Her Poetry by Duchess of Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish 
    05 - Sonnet 76 - Why is My Verse So Barren of New Pride by William Shakespeare 
    06 - The Austerity of Poetry by Matthew Arnold 
    07 - Of Modern Poetry by Wallace Stevens 
    08 - Poetry by Claude McKay 
    09 - The Poetry of Keats by George Meredith 
    10 - Future Poetry by Alice Meynell 
    11 - Sonnet 17 - Who Will Believe My Verse in Time to Come by William Shakespeare 
    12 - Poetic Eggs by Ezra Pound 
    13 - Poem by William Carlos Williams 
    14 - On the Grasshopper and Cricket by John Keats 
    15 - Ode on the Poetical Character by William Collins 
    16 - Introduction and Conclusion of a Long Poem by Alan Seeger 
    17 - A True Account of the Birth and Conception of a Late Famous Poem by Charles Sackville, Earl Of Dorset 
    18 - The Poem That Took the Place of a Mountain by Wallace Stevens 
    19 - The Poet and the Poem by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps 
    20 - Of English Verse by Edmund Waller 
    21 - Love, The Soul of Poetry by Anne Killigrew 
    22 - Why, If All Poets Crown Their Love with Verse by Emily Hickey 
    23 - Verse Making Was the Least of My Virtues by Robert Browning 
    24 - The Poet's Love-Song by Sarojini Naidu 
    25 - A Letter to a Brother of the Pen in Tribulation by Aphra Behn 
    26 - Not Every Day Fit for Verse by Robert Herrick 
    27 - On the Poetic Muse by George Moses Horton 
    28 - Sonnet - Written in Keats by Thomas Hood 
    29 - Sonnet 86 -Was It the Proud Full Sail of His Great Verse by William Shakespeare 
    30 - Song in Imitation of Shakespeare by James Beattie 
    31 - The High-toned Old Christian Woman by Wallace Stevens 
    32 - Poetry is a Destructive Force by Wallace Stevens 
    33 - To My Most Dearly Loved Friend Henry Reynolds Esquire of Poets and Poesie by Michael Drayton 
    34 - His Poetry His Pillar by Robert Herrick 
    35 - To Live Merrily and to Trust to Good Verses by Robert Herrick 
    36 - Poem for the End by Ivor Gurney
    Ver livro
  • Old Castle Road Trip - cover

    Old Castle Road Trip

    Amanda Daire

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Best friends, Elanna and Khrista, go on a last-minute road trip to reunite grumpy old Gerard with his long-lost love and to find--or lose--themselves along the way. 
    An elderly man with a second shot at finding love. 
    A mom of three teens seeking solace from a husband whose problematic behaviors threaten to shatter the image she so carefully cultivated. 
    A best friend searching for answers to her career questions. 
    A weekend in the city turns into a cross-country road trip, with plenty of bumps along the way. 
    On their quest to reunite Gerard with his old flame, will Elanna and Khrista be able to weather all the storms in their path?
    Ver livro
  • Rhyme A Dozen A - London - 12 Poets 12 Poems 1 Topic - cover

    Rhyme A Dozen A - London - 12...

    William Blake, Amy Levy,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    ‘A dime a dozen’ as known in America, is perhaps equal to the English ‘cheap as chips’ but whatever the lingua franca of your choice in this series we hereby submit ‘A Rhyme a Dozen’ as 12 poems on many given subjects that are a well-rounded gathering, maybe even an essential guide, from the knowing pens of classic poets and their beautifully spoken verse to the comfort of your ears. 
     
    01 - A Rhyme A Dozen - 12 Poems, 12 Poets, 1 Topic - London - An Introduction 
    02 - A Ballad of London by Richard Le Gallienne 
    03 - Dear Old London by Eugene Field 
    04 - London by William Blake 
    05 - Impression de Nuit (London) by Lord Alfred Douglas 
    06 - London in July by Amy Levy 
    07 - West London by Matthew Arnold 
    08 - London After The Great Fire 1666 by John Dryden 
    09 - Composed Upon Westminster Bridge by William Wordsworth 
    10 - London Snow by Robert Seymour Bridges 
    11 - The Call to London by Radclyffe Hall 
    12 - Farewell to London in the Year 1715 by Alexander Pope 
    13 - His Return to London by Robert Herrick
    Ver livro
  • Icelight - cover

    Icelight

    Ranjit Hoskote

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Icelight, Ranjit Hoskote's eighth collection of poems, enacts the experience of standing at the edge—of a life, a landscape, a world assuming new contours or going up in flames. Yet, the protagonists of these poems also stand at the edge of epiphany. In the title poem, we meet the Neolithic cave-dweller who, dazzled by a shapeshifting nature, crafts the first icon. The 'I' of these poems is not a sovereign 'I'. A questing, questioning voice, it locates itself in the web of life, in relation to the cosmos. In 'Tacet', the speaker asks: "What if I had/ no skin/ Of what/ am I the barometer?" Long committed to the Japanese mono no aware aesthetic, Hoskote embraces talismans, premonitions, fossils: active residues from the previous lives of people and places. Icelight is a book about transitions and departures, eloquent in its acceptance of transience in the face of mortality. AubadeRumours of wind, banners of cloud.The low earth shakes but the stormhas not arrived. You packfor the journey, look up, look throughthe doors at trees shedding their leavestoo soon, a track on which silk shoeswould be wasted, a moonstill dangling above a boat.Wearing your salt mask, you facethe mulberry shadows.The valley into whichyou're rappellingis you.
    Ver livro
  • What The House Taught Us - Poems - cover

    What The House Taught Us - Poems

    Anne Bailey

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    You never know how things really are in other people's families, in other people's homes. There's the public face and the private truths – the personal griefs and tragedies, whether festering or resting in peace. In her wry, engagingly strange poems, Anne Bailey takes the door off the latch and lets us inside.
    She shows us loss and disappointment, as well as hardness and resilience, particularly through the eyes of a daughter, wife and mother. We see the domestic sphere in such close-up detail that it becomes bizarre, an uncanny dimension that nonetheless rings horribly, weirdly true.
    "So you've put a picture on the lovely blank wall
    
    that used to go pink in the sun
    
    and feel like an ice cream.
    
    A wall on which I used to rest my eyes
    
    in pleasant contemplation."
    
    - from 'Domestic'
    Ver livro
  • The Poetry of Aleister Crowley - Poems from the controversial black magic master of the counter culture - cover

    The Poetry of Aleister Crowley -...

    Aleister Crowley

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edward Alexander Crowley was born on 12th October 1875 to wealthy parents in Royal Leamington Spa in Warwickshire. 
     
    He was educated at Malvern College, Tonbridge School, Eastbourne College and finally Trinity College, Cambridge where he focused on his passions of mountaineering and poetry and published several volumes. 
     
    Life for Crowley was to abandon his parents’ Christian faith and instead to inject himself into Western esotericism.  In 1898, he joined the esoteric Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and was trained in ceremonial magic before studying both Hindu and Buddhist practices in India. 
     
    On his Egyptian honeymoon in 1904 he claimed contact with an entity―Aiwass―who gave him the sacred Book of the Law which served as the basis for the Thelema religion where he identified as its prophet.  During the Great War, which he spent in the United States, he claimed to be working for British Intelligence but by the 1920s he had decamped to pursue a libertine lifestyle in Sicily, and in the ensuing scandals was evicted by the Italian Government. 
     
    He divided the following two decades between France, Germany, and England, and the continuing promotion of Thelema. 
     
    During his life he gained widespread notoriety for his drug use, his bisexuality, and his alarming views on society.  In short, polite society frowned on his ways, his thoughts and his influence but to many others his stance had much of value.  Even after death he was a darling for the 60’s counterculture but his influence has since waned.   
     
    His literary works were both prolific and covered many topics.  In the early part of his career he published many poetry books, even plays, before his darker and more forceful works came to dominate his output. 
     
    Aleister Crowley died on 1st December 1947 at Hastings in England. He was 72. 
     
    1 - The Poetry of Aleister Crowley - An Introduction 
    2 - The Wizard Way by Aleister Crowley 
    3 - Hymn to Lucifer by Aleister Crowley 
    4 - The Pentagram by Aleister Crowley 
    5 - Hymn to Pan by Aleister Crowley 
    6 - A Birthday by Aleister Crowley 
    7 - The Quest by Aleister Crowley 
    8 - Boo to Buddha by Aleister Crowley 
    9 - All Night by Aleister Crowley 
    10 - Necrophilia by Aleister Crowley 
    11 - Mathilde by Aleister Crowley 
    12 - Ballade de la Jolie Marion by Aleister Crowley 
    13 - Rondels by Aleister Crowley 
    14 - Man's Hope by Aleister Crowley 
    15 - A Jealous Lover by Aleister Crowley 
    16 - Long Odds by Aleister Crowley 
    17 - Power by Aleister Crowley 
    18 - Optimist by Aleister Crowley 
    19 - Dumb by Aleister Crowley 
    20 - The Titanic by Aleister Crowley 
    21 - The Buddhist by Aleister Crowley 
    22 - The Mantra-Yoga by Aleister Crowley 
    23 - The Poet by Aleister Crowley
    Ver livro