Life of Lord Byron. Occasional pieces. Hebrew melodies. Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte. Monody on the death of the Right Hon. R.B. Sheridan. The lament of Tasso. Poems. The prisoner of Chillon. The island. Hours of idleness. Translations and imitations. Fugitive pieces. English bards and Scotch reviewers. Hints from Horace. The curse of Minerva. The waltz. The age of bronze. The version of judgement

Life of Lord Byron. Occasional pieces. Hebrew melodies. Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte. Monody on the death of the Right Hon. R.B. Sheridan. The lament of Tasso. Poems. The prisoner of Chillon. The island. Hours of idleness. Translations and imitations. Fugitive pieces. English bards and Scotch reviewers. Hints from Horace. The curse of Minerva. The waltz. The age of bronze. The version of judgement PDF

Author: George Gordon Byron Baron Byron

Publisher:

Published: 1863

Total Pages: 542

ISBN-13:

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The Patriot Poets

The Patriot Poets PDF

Author: Stephen J. Adams

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2018-11-30

Total Pages: 471

ISBN-13: 0773555951

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Since before the Declaration of Independence, poets have shaped a collective imagination of nationhood at critical points in American history. In The Patriot Poets Stephen Adams considers major odes and "progress poems" that address America's destiny in the face of slavery, the Civil War, imperialist expansion, immigration, repeated financial boom and bust, gross social inequality, racial and gendered oppression, and the rise of the present-day corporate oligarchy. Adams elucidates how poets in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries addressed political crises from a position of patriotic idealism and how military interventions overseas in Cuba and in the Philippines increasingly caused poets to question the actions of those in power. He traces competing loyalties through major works of writers at both extremes of the political spectrum, from the radical Republican versus Confederate voices of the Civil War, through New Deal liberalism versus the lost-cause propaganda of the defeated South and the conservative isolationism of the 1930s, and after the Second World War, the renewed hope of Black leaders and the existential alienation of Allen Ginsberg's counter-culture. Blazing a new path of critical discourse, Adams questions why America, of all nations, has appeared to rule out politics as a subject fit for poetry. His answer draws connections between familiar touchstones of American poetry and significant yet neglected writing by Philip Freneau, Sidney Lanier, Archibald MacLeish, William Vaughn Moody, Muriel Rukeyser, Genevieve Taggard, Allen Tate, Henry Timrod, Melvin B. Tolson, and others. An illuminating and pioneering work, The Patriot Poets provides a rich understanding of the ambivalent relationship American poets and poems have had with nation, genre, and the public.