Lyrical BalladsPenguin UK, 2006-08-31 - 128 psl. Published in 1798, Lyrical Ballads is a dazzling collaboration containing twenty-three poems by close friends, William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) - two major figures of English Romanticism. The volume heralded a new approach to poetry and expresses the poets' reflections on mankind's relationship with the forces of the world. Coleridge's contribution includes the nightmarish vision of 'The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere', one of the works for which he became best known, as well as the fantastical conversational poem 'The Foster-Mother's Tale' and the melancholic 'The Nightingale'. Wordsworth's 'We are Seven' depicts a child's naïve optimism in the face of the cruel mortality, while 'Goody Blake and Harry Gill' and 'Simon Lee' celebrate the simplicity and strength he perceived in country people, and 'Tintern Abbey' explores the healing powers of nature. |
Turinys
The FosterMothers Tale | |
The Nightingale a Conversational Poem | |
The Female Vagrant | |
Goody Blake and Harry Gill | |
Lines written at a small distance from my House and sent by | |
Anecdote for Fathers | |
Lines written in Early Spring | |
The Last of the Flock | |
The Mad Mother | |
Lines written near Richmond upon the Thames at Evening | |
Old Man Travelling | |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Lyrical Ballads With a Few Other Poems (1798) Samuel Taylor Coleridge,William Wordsworth Ribota peržiūra - 2020 |