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The Faber poetry list, originally founded in the 1920s, was shaped
by the taste of T.S.Eliot, who was its guiding light for nearly
forty years. Each passing decade has seen it grow with the addition
of poets who are arguably the finest of their generation. In recent
years the creation of anthologies has further broadened the scope
of the Faber poetry list by including the work of great poets from
the past, chosen by the contemporary poets they have inspired. This
Liberty Faber Poetry Journal contains a selection of new and
classic poems and over a hundred lined pages for the reader to fill
as they wish. To My Dear and Loving Husband by Anne Bradstreet
(1612-1672) Postscript by Mary Jean Chan (b. 1990) April from
Prologue to The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1340s -
1400) Bumbarrel's Nest by John Clare (1793-1864) Heronkind by Julia
Copus (b.1969) On First Looking into Chapman's Homer by John Keats
(1795-1821) Preludes IV by T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) Green by D.H.
Lawrence (1885-1930) Philanthropy by Daljit Nagra (b.1966) A
Birthday by Christina Rossetti (1830-1894) A Wet Winter from A
Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare (1564-1616) It Rains
by Edward Thomas (1878-1917)
Poems of the Decade 2011-2020 celebrates the thirtieth anniversary
of the Forward Prizes for Poetry. Gathering one hundred poems by
writers and performers who have drawn new audiences to the artform,
it highlights poetry as a space for fresh powerful language,
feeling and thought. It includes poems by Raymond Antrobus, Simon
Armitage, Fiona Benson, Liz Berry, Caroline Bird, Vahni Capildeo,
Alice Oswald and Claudia Rankine.
This is poetry for our times. The Forward Book of Poetry is the
indispensable annual guide to contemporary poetry. In bringing
together the best new work published in the UK and Ireland, as
chosen by the jury of the annual Forward Prizes, this anthology
offers a vital overview of the literary landscape to seasoned
poetry lovers and new readers alike.
The Second World War has shaped the modern world more than any
other single event. This generous and haunting selection of
English-language and translated poems includes verse written by
servicemen who participated in the war - Keith Douglas, Alun Lewis,
Randall Jarrell - as well as by survivors and witnesses of the
Holocaust - Primo Levi, Nelly Sachs, Paul Celan - and civilians
across Europe and beyond. It features work by important women poets
- Elizabeth Bishop, H.D., Anna Akhmatova - exiles such as W. H.
Auden and Berthold Brecht, and writers reporting from London,
Paris, Warsaw, Moscow and New York, dealing with the terrifying
impact and legacy of the conflict. Presented with a historical
critical introduction and biographical notes, the result is a vital
lyric testimony to the tragic global theatre of the war.
BBC Radio 4's Poetry Please is the longest-running broadcast of
verse anywhere in the world. First aired in 1979, the programme, a
request show which broadcasts to two million listeners a week, has
become a unique record of the country's best-loved poems over the
decades since its inception. The BBC has looked back through its
rich archive of recordings to produce a poll of the most asked for
and most broadcast pieces ever: it is those poems that this
anthology brings together here. A showcase, in effect, for the
nation's favourite verse, Poetry Please is a treasure trove for our
most requested and most listened to poems of all time. It is a
compelling invitation for readers of all ages and backgrounds to
celebrate the verse that we care so much about: from new readers to
old, from schools to reading groups, this a book for giving, a book
for cherishing.
Poetry lovers – those who enjoy reading it and those who are
compelled to write it – will find in this collection a truly
splendid experience of the country’s soul. So much of the ineffable
human spirit and experience that usually remains untold is gently
lifted above the surface with care, attention and honesty. This is
the fifth annual Sol Plaatje European union poetry anthology, and
is a compendium of the poems long-listed for the 2015 Sol Plaatje
EU poetry award. Every year South African poets, young and old,
debut or previously published, are invited to submit up to three of
their poetic efforts to the award, in any of the country’s 11
official languages. The anthology seeks to publish voices in as
many difference languages as possible, and be one of the spaces in
which these tongues are given equal space and respect. The
anthology is a truly democratic as well as creative effort, in
keeping with the spirit of the legendary intellectual giant, Sol
Plaatje, the activist, linguist, translator, novelist, journalist
and leader.
The Forward Book of Poetry is the indispensable annual guide to
contemporary poetry. In bringing together the best new work
published in the UK and Ireland, as chosen by the jury of the
annual Forward Prizes, this anthology offers vital overview of the
literary landscape to seasoned poetry lovers and new readers alike.
This new anthology of poems, favourites from the nation's
longest-running and best-loved request programme for verse, moves
with the seasons, following the turning year from John Clare's
'pale splendour of the winter sun' to John Keats's 'Season of mists
and mellow fruitfulness', by way of Larkin's 'young-leafed June'
and Gerard Manley Hopkins' 'glassy peartree leaves and blooms' when
'Nothing is so beautiful as Spring'. As the year changes, so we
change with it. Since time out of mind our daily lives have been
shaped and directed by the seasons, and it is here that we find
poems about harvest and hardship, growth and new life, the warmth
of the life-giving sun, Christmas and the closing of the year.
Poetry Please: Seasonal Poems is a vital and generous gathering to
treasure.
'What will survive of us is love.' In this new anthology poets from
across the ages lead us on a journey of love in its many forms.
From Shakespeare to Rossetti, Keats to Auden, Byron to Browning an
beyond, as well as a host of contemporary voices including Wendy
Cope, Simon Armitage and Carol Ann Duffy, this new gathering of
timeless love poems speaks to the heart about this most universal
of themes. Whether in marriage or heartbreak, friendship or
infatuation, whether in pursuit of the unattainable ideal or else
settling down together for life, whether in love or out of it, you
will find poems here to touch the heart. A vital assembly of our
most treasured and enduring love poems.
James Fenton, a Whitbread-winning poet praised for his own love
poetry, gathers together the best lyric poems originating in the
English language. Ranging from the sixteenth century to the present
day, The New Faber Book of Love Poems contains a fantastic mix of
classics and popular favourites, as well as blues lyrics, American
folk poetry, Elizabethan lyrics and Broadway songs. There are poems
by men about women, women about men, men about men and women about
women - in short, something for everyone, and a must-have for
everyone's bookshelf.
The seventh volume in this series anthologises the best entries for
the 2017 Sol Plaatje European Union Poetry Award. The anthology is
a truly democratic as well as creative effort, in keeping with the
spirit of the legendary intellectual giant, Sol Plaatje; activist,
linguist, translator, novelist, journalist and leader. The poems
offer readers sensibilities, observations and responses to the
complex, nuanced and uncomfortable realities of life in our country
- past, present and future. Written in Afrikaans, English, Sepedi,
Sesotho, Setswana, isiXhosa and isiZulu and accompanied by English
translations where relevant, they reflect the diversity of our
nation. The poems are important. Chair of the judging panel,
Professor Mongane Wally Serote, says: "These South African poets
have understood something. They hold the present by the scruff and
threaten it. If this nation has not revolted, it is evolving to
revolt, the poets say. The present cannot hold, the poets keep
saying. Like healers, they sing, beat the drums and dance to the
rhythm of their tongues." Each year the Jacana Literary Foundation
(JLF) invites South African poets, young and old, debut or
previously published, to submit for consideration up to three works
in any of the official languages of South Africa. Athol Williams,
Goodenough Mashigo, Wally Serote, Pieter Odendaal and Kholeka
Putuma are on this year's judging panel. Judging blind, they select
a long-list of poems for publication in the anthology. The project
is funded by the European Union.
Sometimes it's hard to keep looking up at the stars when the gutter
we're in seems so full of sh*t. But isn't that why we need poetry?
Oscar Wilde wrote some of his best poetry when he was in prison for
'the love that dare not speak its name'. Nelson Mandela held fast
to his 'unconquerable soul' on Robben Island with the help of the
words a poet wrote about his battle with tuberculosis a century
before. So maybe it's not inconceivable that the words in this
little book could help you put some of the sh*t in perspective, get
all the important bits of your life - like sleep, work, food,
travel, love and learning - in some kind of balance, so you can go
back to star-gazing again . . . Taking as its starting point the
classic 'wheel of balance' life-coach model, this beautifully
packaged collection of extracts and short poems gathers wisdom old
and new in a perfect gift for anyone who needs comfort in this
f**ked up world of ours. 'This is not a poetry book as you know it,
this is a life raft.' Emerald Street on Poems for a World Gone to
Sh*t.
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Ink Spills (Paperback)
Yourhearts Anthology, Various Poets
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R203
Discovery Miles 2 030
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A beautiful collection of poetry, from some of the freshest and
best Poets on IG. A collection featuring every emotion and feeling,
written in so many wondrous ways.
DISCOVER THE AMAZING POWER OF POETRY TO MAKE EVEN THE MOST F**KED
UP TIMES FEEL BETTER A beautiful little book of short, simple,
classic and contemporary poems to dip into, to make life feel
better. From Shakespeare and Shelley to Lemn Sissay and Kate
Tempest, poets have always been the best at showing us we're not
alone, however sh*t things might seem. Funny, reflective, romantic
and life-affirming - here is an anthology of poems to remind you to
keep on looking at the stars: from that first 'what the f*ck'
moment to empowering you to do something about this sh*t and
ultimately realising that life is still beautiful after all.
Rediscover old favourites and find some new treasures - you might
be surprised just how much poetry can help. For fans of The Poetry
Pharmacy, The Reading Cure and The Emergency Poet.
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