Poems of Sidney Lanier

Priekinis viršelis
University of Georgia Press, 1999-05-01 - 272 psl.
The poems of Sidney Lanier continue to find an admiring audience more than a century after his death. Though his poetry evokes both the landscape and the romantic spirit of the Old South, his concerns for the natural world, spirituality, and the character of society offer universal appeal. This anthology includes Lanier's best-known and most celebrated works--"Sunrise," "The Song of the Chattahoochee," "A Song of Love," and "The Marshes of Glynn." These and the other poems presented in the collection reveal Lanier's interest in the welfare and preservation of nature and society and his opposition to southern industrialization. The memorial by William Hayes Ward and the afterword by John Hollander illumine Lanier's ideas for a new generation, offering glimpses into Lanier's life and introducing us to the soldier, lawyer, teacher, lecturer, talented musician, and amazingly gifted writer who captured the South's landscape and character through unforgettable poetry.

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THE MOCKINGBIRD
27
Lippincotts Magazine January 1876
83
A SONG OF LOVE
97
TO BEETHOVEN
98
THE DOVE
105
TO DR THOMAS Shearer
112
AT FIRST
139
TO MY CLASS
146
A FLORIDA Ghost
153
Nine from Eight
177
JONESS PRIVAte Argyment
183
UNREVISED EARLY POEMS
189
THE GOLDEN WEDDING
215
THE RAVEN Days
221
103
254
THE CENTENNIAL MEDITATION OF COLUMBIA 17761876
259

ON VIOLETS Wafers
147

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Apie autorių (1999)

Sidney Lanier (1842-1881) was born in Macon, Georgia. After serving in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, he held a variety of jobs and traveled widely throughout the northern and southern states. In addition to earning success as a poet, Lanier received praise as a professional flutist with the Peabody Symphony Orchestra in Baltimore before he died of tuberculosis in 1881.

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