Edited
By P.M. Oliver, John Donne
June 28, 2002
Whether sharing his anxieties about his writing, consoling bereaved friends, complaining about the meanness of a patron or defending himself against malicious gossip, John Donne reveals himself in his letters with a directness that can be found nowhere else in his writings. These letters ...
Edited
By C.H. Sisson, Christina Rossetti
June 03, 2014
First published in 2002. This is a collection of poems, songs and couplets by Christina Rossetti, including Maude: A Story For Girls, Christina's Maude is undoubtedly a self-portrait, and a highly critical one-but critical with standards of scrupulosity. The place of Christina's birth was 38 ...
Edited
By Clive Wilmer, Dante Gabriel Rossetti
April 12, 2002
For critics like John Ruskin and Walter Pater, Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1892) was one of the great creative figures of the day, a painter and a poet of major stature. Yeats and the young Pound regarded him as an exemplary figure of solitary dedication to art and beauty. He called the sonnet ...
Edited
By Hardiman Scott, Sir Thomas Wyatt
March 28, 2003
First published in 2003. Sir Thomas Wyatt stands at a crossroads in English poetry. He inherits the best of a medieval lyric tradition and, at the same time, points forward to the achievement of the Elizabethans. For the reader of today he is a modern poet before his time. This is a collection of ...
By Victor Hugo
April 12, 2002
This generous, varied selection of poems by one of France's best-loved and most reviled poets is presented with facing originals, detailed notes, and a lively introduction to the author's life and work. Steven Monte presents more than eighty poems in translation and in the original French, taken ...
Edited
By Stevie Davies, Anne Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, Emily Jane Bronte
April 12, 2002
Although the Brontës have long fascinated readers of fiction and biography, their poetry was all too little known until this pioneering selection by Stevie Davies, the novelist and critic. Charlotte (1816-1855) is certainly a competent poet, and Anne (1820-1849) developed a distinctive voice,...
By Arthur Hugh Clough, Shirley Chew
November 21, 2003
This book presents a selection of the full range of Arthur Hugh Clough's poetry, which explores the tensions of a time of radical changes in the religious, political, and literary landscape. It also includes a detailed introduction and annotations by Shirley Chew....
By Arthur Symons, Roger Holdsworth
November 20, 2003
Arthur William Symons (1865-1945) is a haunting poet of the modern city, catching its dangerous, complex beauty in works that first introduced the imagery of the urban underworld into English poetry. He was a champion of the French Symbolists. Yeats, Pound and Eliot acknowledged their debt to him ...
Edited
By James Reed, Anonymous
November 20, 2003
First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
By Charles Lamb, J. E. Morpurgo
November 20, 2003
Charles Lamb (1775-1834), essayist, poet, humorist, critic and letter-writer, has an enduring reputation for his early "Tales from Shakespeare" (1807), written in collaboration with his sister Mary, and his " Essays of Elia," first published in the "London Magazine." This thematic selection of ...
Edited
By Judith Willson, Charlotte Smith
November 20, 2003
This book presents an ideal introduction to the full range of the works of Charlotte Smith, whose Romantic sensibility is an expression of a specifically female experience, from her influential sonnets and poems for children to extracts from her French Revolution poem....
Edited
By C.H. Sisson, Lucretius
November 20, 2003
First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....