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The Times Book of English Verse
The Times Book of English Verse | Edward Leeson
3 posts
The most comprehensive survey of English Verse available, covering seven centuries, from Chaucer to Heaney, and including longer poems -- such as Paradise Lost and The Prelude -- in their entirety. Seven centuries of English Verse, attractively laid out and lightly annotated: from anonymous medieval lyrics to the finest contemporary poets, and also embracing ballads, dialect poems and important translations. Compiled by one of Britain's leading anthologists, this is the poetry collection for all the family. From the Introduction by Harold Bloom: 'The full range of English poetry is extraordinary, both in its diversity and in its splendor. This anthology remarkably is able to suggest something of both that variety and that magnificence... And yet one might assert that the special excellence of the English tradition in poetry transcends the linguistic instrument. Whatever the theology or the metaphysics or the aesthetics of individual poets, there is an enduring capacity in most of the major figures for what Blake termed Vision. Vision, in this sense, is the gift of seeing the objects of sense perception charged with a higher degree of spiritual intensity than normally is available t
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quietlycuriouskate
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I've challenged myself to learn a poem by heart each week. Here's the first!

I'm fond of this anthology but it entertains some powerful delusions about itself: "The most comprehensive survey of English verse available..." and it flatters itself to mirror "the full range of English poetry" which is "extraordinary both in its diversity and in its splendour". Hmmm... the index of poets is the usual roll call of glorious dead white chaps.

readordierachel What lovely idea! 5y
Cathythoughts Beautiful to do this .... love this poem ❤️ (edited) 5y
MayJasper I think "live alone in a bee-loud glade" sounds wonderfully romantic 5y
batsy @MayJasper I was drawn to that line, too! 5y
quietlycuriouskate @readordierachel @Cathythoughts @MayJasper @batsy It's an old favourite of mine! I listened to an episode of Poetry Extra on BBC Sounds recently where they had three contemporary Irish poets spend a night in tents on Inishfree and then write a poem in response to the experience. I was most envious! 5y
42 likes5 comments
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quietlycuriouskate
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Lord Byron
Well, the lady may be lovely but I've always found Byron himself to be insufferably #vain.
#poetrymatters @LazyDays

In other news, did you know that Vin Diesel is into cake and crochet? It must be so as "he" has followed my Instagram. What is it with people?! Actually I get creeped out by the unfathomable follows, one of the reasons why I don't post much on social media. Note I don't consider Litsy social media: Littens are friends. ❤

CatLass007 I like Vin Diesel even more now. He crochets! 6y
45 likes1 comment
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quietlycuriouskate
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John Donne: The #Sun Rising
(A day late, as I had a migraine most of yesterday.)
I've never been able to get past the line "She is all states, and all princes I": in other words, woman = land, to be conquered by jumped-up "princes". I've always secretly hoped she was pretending to be asleep, overheard the lot and made him suffer for it later!
#poetrymatters @LazyDays