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John Clare: Poet to Poet

Autor John Clare Editat de Paul Farley
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 apr 2007
John Clare (1793-1864), the 'peasant poet', worked as an agricultural labourer in Northamptonshire until a deterioration in his mental health saw him committed to an insane asylum.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780571234639
ISBN-10: 0571234631
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 118 x 198 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:Main - Poet to Poet
Editura: FABER & FABER
Seria Poet to Poet

Locul publicării:United Kingdom

Recenzii

`This is a good looking book, nicely presented in a clear readable type, and in a handy size both to slip in a pocket and not to overface a new reader. It presents an accurate text ...' - John Clare Society Journal

`Clare's poems and prose are available in a dozen editions, but none ... has the value of the Williams' Introduction.' - Times Education Supplement

Cuprins

Introduction JOHN CLARE: SELECTED POETRY AND PROSE Helps tone 'I was born at Helpstone' Noon The harvest morning The lamentations of Round-Oak Waters from Summer evening My Mary 'Grammar' Summer Proposals for building a cottage Langley Bush The woodman Childish recollections Written in November The gipseys camp 'My first attempts at poetry' from The village minstrel Helpston Green Noon (sonnet) from Rural evening 'Going for a soldier' from The fate of genius A prophet is nothing in his own country from Winter The last of March To a fallen elm from A Sunday with shepherds and herdboys from The autobiography The mores The lament of Swordy Well from The progress of ryhme from The parish 'Prologue' 'Village patriots' 'The parish council' 'The workhouse' To the snipe The woodman (sonnet) The cottager from The shepherd's calendar from June November from Childhood 'Memories of childhood' from Summer images from The summer shower The flood Mist in the meadows Emmonsails Heath in winter England, 1830 Schoolboys in winter The foddering boy Winter evening Sand martin The thrushes nest The pettichaps nest The yellowhammers nest 'Snakes' Hedge sparrow from The flitting Remembrances The fens The ragwort The mouse's nest Sheep in winter 1Wild bees' nest Stone pit Wild duck's nest The green woodpecker's nest Woodpecker's nest The puddock's nest The groundlark The marten The fox The badger The hedgehog The vixen The water lilies The gipsy camp London versus Epping Forest 'Byron's funeral' Vll Don Juan A poem Journey out of Essex from Child Harold Tis Martinmas from rig to rig Lord hear my prayer when trouble glooms Mary Song Song last day Look through the naked bramble and black thorn lam The crow There is a charm in solitude that cheers The peasant poet Lines on 'Cowper' The winters come Fragment To John Clare Letter to James Hipkins Birds nests Critical commentary

Notă biografică

John Clare (1793–1864),the "peasant poet", worked as an agricultural laborer in Northamptonshire until a deterioration in his mental health saw him committed to an insane asylum. He published four volumes of verse, including Poems, Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820), and The Shepherd's Calendar (1827).

Paul Farley was born in Liverpool in 1965. He has published three collections of poetry, The Boy from the Chemist is Here to See You, The Ice Age and, most recently, Tramp in Flames.