Poetry for Students
162 Poetry for Students so much out of her control that she believes that it is no longer a part of her. Her heart feels to her ...
Volume 24 163 in the seventeenth century and include John Donne (1572–1631), Andrew Marvell (1621–1628), Henry Vaughn (1621–1695 ...
164 Poetry for Students Timesarticle, “Recognition at Last for a Poet of Elegant Complexity,” written by Dinitia Smith. “A Marie ...
Volume 24 165 speaker has seen this performance or attitude be- fore. She has experienced these emotions in the past, so the sur ...
166 Poetry for Students free. She must love living her life through her emo- tions, in other words. But she just cannot stand to ...
Volume 24 167 title, True Minds,came from a Shakespearean son- net about ideal commitment. He treasured Walt Whitman; she, Emily ...
168 Poetry for Students against developers and politicians, but it’s clear what she’s talking about. She notes how even a poet e ...
Volume 24 169 Native New Yorker Marie Ponsot is one of the most venerated poets writing in America today. Her collection of new ...
170 Poetry for Students and Giroux, 1999) and it’s not dreaming, it’s better than dreaming! It’s imagining. I believe it’s the l ...
Volume 24 171 Ponsot’s poem defines as a special punchiness, a kind of unprecedented zing. Now in her seventies, Ponsot is the N ...
172 Poetry for Students Magic dame, cut knot, your ancient wood would reach back to teach her if it could. Spring rain. Through ...
Volume 24 173 It is perhaps this sense of haunting that gives Zychlinsky’s voice such testimonial purity, an in- tensity of perc ...
174 Poetry for Students Sun-flush slides rosily off the wall. Dusk dawns. Cats want out. Deer nose out of the woodlot. Bats scou ...
Volume 24 175 “Living room” The window’s old & paint-stuck in its frame. If we force it open the glass may break. Broken win ...
Our Side Carol Muske-Dukes’s poem “Our Side,” published in 2003, is about the loss of a lover. Many of the poems in Sparrow, the ...
Volume 24 177 column called “Poets Corner.” Muske-Dukes is the author of several fiction and nonfiction books, but she is best k ...
178 Poetry for Students dead. The speaker begins by describing the “newly dead” as “disoriented” because they have crossed over ...
Volume 24 179 the newly dead will not meet at the port again. The poem continues “this bright uneasy harbor where we never / com ...
180 Poetry for Students however, continues to long for the impossible. In the next line, however, some of the speaker’s ra- tion ...
Volume 24 181 that love, there would be no longing, there would be no “endless calling,” and there would be no living lover call ...
«
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
»
Free download pdf