Selected Poems

Portada
Penguin, 2000 - 400 páginas

John Clare produced some of English poetry's most poignant and glorious lyrics. Writing not as an observer of nature but from an intimate knowledge of the wheatfields, hedgerows, and ditches of his village in Northamptonshire, he described animals, insects, trees, rivers, sunlight, and clouds with sublime sensitivity. But as enclosures and "improvements" came in the early nineteenth century, dismembering the rural landscape, his later poems became infused with a sense of disorientation and loss, and scattered with threads of madness. Clare's genius has been rediscovered by fellow poets in every generation since his death, from Dylan Thomas to Ted Hughes to Seamus Heaney.

First time in Penguin Classics Landmark edition based on Clare's original manuscripts Includes introduction, explanatory notes, and glossary
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Contenido

IV
29
V
31
VI
32
VIII
33
IX
39
XI
44
XII
45
XIV
46
CVIII
169
CIX
172
CX
178
CXI
179
CXIII
180
CXIV
193
CXV
195
CXVI
198

XV
47
XVII
48
XIX
49
XXI
51
XXII
52
XXIII
54
XXV
55
XXVI
56
XXVIII
57
XXX
61
XXXI
62
XXXIII
69
XXXIV
71
XXXVI
72
XXXVII
73
XXXVIII
74
XL
75
XLI
76
XLII
77
XLIII
78
XLIV
80
XLVI
81
XLVIII
82
L
83
LI
86
LII
87
LIV
88
LV
89
LVII
90
LIX
91
LXI
92
LXII
93
LXIII
98
LXIV
99
LXVI
100
LXVIII
101
LXX
102
LXXI
103
LXXII
104
LXXIII
105
LXXIV
106
LXXV
107
LXXVI
108
LXXVII
111
LXXVIII
114
LXXIX
115
LXXX
116
LXXXI
117
LXXXIII
118
LXXXIV
119
LXXXV
120
LXXXVI
121
LXXXVII
123
LXXXVIII
125
LXXXIX
126
XC
129
XCI
131
XCII
132
XCIII
135
XCIV
142
XCV
143
XCVII
146
XCVIII
148
C
149
CII
152
CIII
155
CIV
158
CV
161
CVI
163
CVII
167
CXVII
205
CXVIII
208
CXIX
211
CXX
212
CXXI
214
CXXIV
222
CXXVI
266
CXXVII
268
CXXVIII
269
CXXIX
272
CXXXI
273
CXXXII
274
CXXXIII
275
CXXXV
276
CXXXVIII
277
CXXXIX
278
CXLI
279
CXLII
280
CXLIII
281
CXLIV
282
CXLVI
310
CXLVII
311
CXLIX
312
CL
313
CLII
314
CLIV
316
CLV
319
CLVI
320
CLVII
321
CLVIII
323
CLIX
324
CLXI
325
CLXII
326
CLXIII
328
CLXV
329
CLXVI
330
CLXVII
331
CLXVIII
332
CLXIX
333
CLXX
334
CLXXI
335
CLXXII
337
CLXXIII
338
CLXXIV
339
CLXXV
340
CLXXVI
341
CLXXVII
342
CLXXVIII
343
CLXXX
344
CLXXXI
345
CLXXXII
346
CLXXXIV
348
CLXXXVI
349
CLXXXVII
350
CLXXXVIII
351
CXCI
352
CXCII
353
CXCIII
354
CXCIV
355
CXCV
356
CXCVII
357
CXCIX
358
CC
359
CCI
360
CCII
361
CCIV
362
CCV
378
CCVI
391
CCVII
397
Derechos de autor

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Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2000)

John Clare (1793 - 1864), the son of a Northamptonshire labourer, worked variously as a ploughboy, reaper, and thresher. He began writing verse at the age of 13 and had his first book of poems published in 1820. His suffered from severe bouts of melancholy and died in Northamptonshire Lunatic Asylum.Geoffrey Summerfield teaches English at New York University. He has spent many years working on the texts of Clare's poetry and is a leading authority on the poet.

Información bibliográfica