Added to listYoung Adultwith 63 books.
Added to listDefies Categorizationwith 5 books.
Added to listClassicswith 62 books.
Added to listPoetrywith 13 books.
I have read the following poems included in this collection (listed with ratings):
I have read the following poems included in this collection (listed with ratings):
The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins
I have read the following poems by Gerard Manley Hopkins (listed below with ratings):
I have read the following poems by Gerard Manley Hopkins (listed below with ratings):
Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynarae
Summary: The speaker expresses his longing for a past love and says that he has been faithful to her in his own way, even though he has tried to drown the memory of her.
Summary: The speaker expresses his longing for a past love and says that he has been faithful to her in his own way, even though he has tried to drown the memory of her.
The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins
Added to listClassicswith 61 books.
Summary: In this poem, an old sailor tells the story of how he killed an albatross and then suffered all kinds of bad luck and strange occurrences at sea.
Summary: In this poem, an old sailor tells the story of how he killed an albatross and then suffered all kinds of bad luck and strange occurrences at sea.
Kubla Khan
Summary: This poem was the result of a dream that Samuel Taylor Coleridge had. It describes a place called Xanadu, where Kubla Khan lives. It goes on to describe a vision that the speaker had and then Kubla Khan himself.
Summary: This poem was the result of a dream that Samuel Taylor Coleridge had. It describes a place called Xanadu, where Kubla Khan lives. It goes on to describe a vision that the speaker had and then Kubla Khan himself.
Christabel
Added to listHorror & Gothic Fictionwith 24 books.
Christabel
Summary: This unfinished poem follows a young woman named Christabel. One night, she goes into the woods to pray and meets a woman named Geraldine who claims to have been the victim of a kidnapping. At first, Christabel believes her, but it soon becomes apparent that something is not quite right about Geraldine.
Summary: This unfinished poem follows a young woman named Christabel. One night, she goes into the woods to pray and meets a woman named Geraldine who claims to have been the victim of a kidnapping. At first, Christabel believes her, but it soon becomes apparent that something is not quite right about Geraldine.
Arthur Hugh Clough
I have read the following poems included in this book (listed with ratings below):
I have read the following poems included in this book (listed with ratings below):
Added to listPoetrywith 12 books.
I have read two poems included in Through the Looking Glass (listed and rated below):
I have read two poems included in Through the Looking Glass (listed and rated below):
The Poetical Works of Matthew Arnold
I have read the following poems by Matthew Arnold that can be found in this work (listed alphabetically with ratings):
“The Buried Life”: The speaker talks about the human inability to express the true inner self except in very rare occasions. A profoundly relatable piece of writing. Rating: 5/5
“Dover Beach”: A description of a beachfront that turns into a contemplation of reality, faith, and love. Rating: 2.5/5
“Growing Old”: The speaker offers a picture of what it means to grow old that is both profound and melancholy. Despite my disagreement with the poet about the nature of aging, I enjoy the poem’s depth. Rating: 4.5/5
“The Last Word”: The speaker notes his audience’s exhaustion with their striving but charges them to fight until the end. Rating: 4.5/5
“Memorial Verses”: This poem mourns the loss of William Wordsworth, whom Arnold considers to be “the last poetic voice.” The speaker praises Wordsworth’s ability to make his readers feel. Rating: 4/5
“Palladium”: The speaker considers the protection that the Palladium, a wooden image of Pallas Athena, protects the city of Troy, even if the citizens of the city don’t fully recognize it. Rating: 4.5/10
“Philomela”: Arnold draws on the myth of Philomela, who was raped by her sister’s husband and subsequently had her tongue cut out. She was able to communicate what had happened to her sister by weaving a tapestry, and her sister, Procne, killed and fed her own son to her husband. Before the husband could kill both women, all three people were turned into birds. In Arnold’s poem, the speaker sees one of the birds (whose identity is ambiguous; it could be Philomela or Procne) and reflects on its eternal sorrow. Rating: 2/5
“The Scholar-Gipsy”: This poem tells the story of a young man who left Oxford because he couldn’t afford it, joined a band of gypsies, and said that, once he had gained a full understanding of the “secret of their art,” he would share it with others. For many years, people report sighting the elusive young man. Rating: 4/5
“Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse”: The speaker visits a Catholic monastery and speaks about his loss of faith, the uselessness of the loud mourning of the poets before him, the quiet melancholy of his own age, and the glimmer of hope for the future. Rating: 4.5/5
“To Margarite—Continued”: The speaker notes the separation and aloneness that people feel, as well as the longing to end that separation. Rating: 4/5
I have read the following poems by Matthew Arnold that can be found in this work (listed alphabetically with ratings):
“The Buried Life”: The speaker talks about the human inability to express the true inner self except in very rare occasions. A profoundly relatable piece of writing. Rating: 5/5
“Dover Beach”: A description of a beachfront that turns into a contemplation of reality, faith, and love. Rating: 2.5/5
“Growing Old”: The speaker offers a picture of what it means to grow old that is both profound and melancholy. Despite my disagreement with the poet about the nature of aging, I enjoy the poem’s depth. Rating: 4.5/5
“The Last Word”: The speaker notes his audience’s exhaustion with their striving but charges them to fight until the end. Rating: 4.5/5
“Memorial Verses”: This poem mourns the loss of William Wordsworth, whom Arnold considers to be “the last poetic voice.” The speaker praises Wordsworth’s ability to make his readers feel. Rating: 4/5
“Palladium”: The speaker considers the protection that the Palladium, a wooden image of Pallas Athena, protects the city of Troy, even if the citizens of the city don’t fully recognize it. Rating: 4.5/10
“Philomela”: Arnold draws on the myth of Philomela, who was raped by her sister’s husband and subsequently had her tongue cut out. She was able to communicate what had happened to her sister by weaving a tapestry, and her sister, Procne, killed and fed her own son to her husband. Before the husband could kill both women, all three people were turned into birds. In Arnold’s poem, the speaker sees one of the birds (whose identity is ambiguous; it could be Philomela or Procne) and reflects on its eternal sorrow. Rating: 2/5
“The Scholar-Gipsy”: This poem tells the story of a young man who left Oxford because he couldn’t afford it, joined a band of gypsies, and said that, once he had gained a full understanding of the “secret of their art,” he would share it with others. For many years, people report sighting the elusive young man. Rating: 4/5
“Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse”: The speaker visits a Catholic monastery and speaks about his loss of faith, the uselessness of the loud mourning of the poets before him, the quiet melancholy of his own age, and the glimmer of hope for the future. Rating: 4.5/5
“To Margarite—Continued”: The speaker notes the separation and aloneness that people feel, as well as the longing to end that separation. Rating: 4/5
I read one of the essays in this book ("Roots of Honor"). In this essay, John Ruskin calls into question the theory of political economy, which asserts that people should get as much out of their workers for as little pay and energy as possible. Instead, Ruskin suggests (with respect to the manufacturing field) that masters treat their workers with kindness, that wages and employment be constant, and that “merchants” take part in their business selflessly.
I read one of the essays in this book ("Roots of Honor"). In this essay, John Ruskin calls into question the theory of political economy, which asserts that people should get as much out of their workers for as little pay and energy as possible. Instead, Ruskin suggests (with respect to the manufacturing field) that masters treat their workers with kindness, that wages and employment be constant, and that “merchants” take part in their business selflessly.
Added to listNonfiction of the Philosophical, Political, and Theoretical Varietywith 2 books.
I read a single chapter of this book ("Of Individuality") in an anthology. The chapter argues in favor of personal liberty and freedom to express one’s individuality. Mill gives several reasons that freedom and individuality should be allowed to flourish.
I read a single chapter of this book ("Of Individuality") in an anthology. The chapter argues in favor of personal liberty and freedom to express one’s individuality. Mill gives several reasons that freedom and individuality should be allowed to flourish.
I Have a Dream: In his most iconic speech, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inspires his audience to continue to fight for racial equality and to hope for a better future.
Letter from a Birmingham Jail: ”: In this open letter, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. responds to a public statement made by several religious leaders expressing the sentiment that Dr. King’s efforts to advance civil rights in Birmingham are “unwise and untimely.” With exceeding rhetorical skill, Dr. King argues in defense of the kind of public nonviolent resistance characterized his activism.
I Have a Dream: In his most iconic speech, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inspires his audience to continue to fight for racial equality and to hope for a better future.
Letter from a Birmingham Jail: ”: In this open letter, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. responds to a public statement made by several religious leaders expressing the sentiment that Dr. King’s efforts to advance civil rights in Birmingham are “unwise and untimely.” With exceeding rhetorical skill, Dr. King argues in defense of the kind of public nonviolent resistance characterized his activism.
Summary: In his most iconic speech, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inspires his audience to continue to fight for racial equality and to hope for a better future.
Summary: In his most iconic speech, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inspires his audience to continue to fight for racial equality and to hope for a better future.