Poems That Make Grown Women Cry
eBook - ePub

Poems That Make Grown Women Cry

  1. 352 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Poems That Make Grown Women Cry

About this book

'A deep and valuable collection that you could rely upon in your time of need' The Times Following the success of their anthology Poems That Make Grown Men Cry, father-and-son team Anthony and Ben Holden, working with Amnesty International, have asked the same revealing question of 100 remarkable women: w hat poem has moved you to tears? The poems chosen range from the eighth century to today, fromRumi andShakespeare to Sylvia Plath, W. H. Auden to Carol Ann Duffy, Pablo Nerudaand Derek Walcott toImtiaz Dharker and Warsan Shire. Their themes range from love and loss, through mortality and mystery, war and peace, to the beauty and variety of nature. From Yoko Ono to Judi Dench, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie to Elena Ferrante, Carol Ann Duffy to Meera Syal, and Joan Baez to Olivia Colman, this unique collection delivers private insights into the minds of women whose writing, acting and thinking are admired around the world.

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Yes, you can access Poems That Make Grown Women Cry by Anthony Holden,Ben Holden in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Poetry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-title page
  3. Title page
  4. Copyright page
  5. Contents
  6. Prefaces by Anthony Holden and Ben Holden
  7. ‘Donal Og’ by Anonymous
  8. ‘Isn’t That Something?’ by Rumi
  9. ‘Bani Adam’ by Sa’adi
  10. ‘The Angels at the Tavern Door’ by Hafiz
  11. ‘Grief fills the room up’ from King John by William Shakespeare
  12. Extract from The Duchess of Malfi by John Webster
  13. ‘On My First Son’ by Ben Jonson
  14. ‘Clerk Saunders’ by Anonymous
  15. ‘Frost at Midnight’ by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  16. ‘I loved the Boy . . .’ by William Wordsworth
  17. ‘So, we’ll go no more a roving’ by Lord Byron
  18. ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ by John Keats
  19. Extract from The Masque of Anarchy by Percy Bysshe Shelley
  20. ‘Ulysses’ by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  21. ‘Abou Ben Adhem’ by Leigh Hunt
  22. ‘I Am’ by John Clare
  23. ‘Sonnets from the Portuguese: XXVIII’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  24. ‘Say not the struggle naught availeth’ by Arthur Hugh Clough
  25. ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’ by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  26. ‘Facing West from California’s Shores’ by Walt Whitman
  27. ‘After great pain, a formal feeling comes – ’ by Emily Dickinson
  28. ‘I took my Power in my Hand’ by Emily Dickinson
  29. ‘The World – feels Dusty’ by Emily Dickinson
  30. ‘The Walrus and The Carpenter’ by Lewis Carroll
  31. ‘Life is but a Dream’ by Lewis Carroll
  32. ‘When You are Old’ by W. B. Yeats
  33. ‘The Song of Wandering Aengus’ by W. B. Yeats
  34. ‘To a Fat Lady Seen from the Train’ by Frances Cornford
  35. ‘Tenebris Interlucentem’ by James Elroy Flecker
  36. ‘Listen!’ by Else Lasker-Schüler and ‘No Solace Here’ by Gottfried Benn
  37. ‘Adlestrop’ by Edward Thomas
  38. ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ by T. S. Eliot
  39. ‘Papyrus’ by Ezra Pound
  40. ‘Fallen’ by Alice Corbin
  41. ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ by Wilfred Owen
  42. ‘Suicide in the Trenches’ by Siegfried Sassoon
  43. ‘Does It Matter?’ by Siegfried Sassoon
  44. ‘Strange Meeting’ by Wilfred Owen
  45. ‘Medusa’ by Louise Bogan
  46. ‘Bells for John Whiteside’s Daughter’ by John Crowe Ransom
  47. ‘I Explain A Few Things’ by Pablo Neruda
  48. ‘Hurt Hawks’ by Robinson Jeffers
  49. ‘Funeral Blues’ by W. H. Auden
  50. ‘In Memory of Sigmund Freud’ by W. H. Auden
  51. Requiem by Anna Akhmatova
  52. Excerpt from Four Quartets: ‘No 4. Little Gidding’ by T. S. Eliot
  53. ‘The Peasants’ by Alun Lewis
  54. Excerpt from The Lost Son: 5. ‘It was beginning winter’ by Theodore Roethke
  55. ‘If You Forget Me’ by Pablo Neruda
  56. ‘Timothy Winters’ by Charles Causley
  57. ‘Sestina’ by Elizabeth Bishop
  58. ‘Of Mere Being’ by Wallace Stevens
  59. ‘Waking in the Blue’ by Robert Lowell
  60. ‘Edge’ by Sylvia Plath
  61. ‘Unknown Girl in the Maternity Ward’ by Anne Sexton
  62. ‘The Bean Eaters’ by Gwendolyn Brooks
  63. Extract from Let Us Believe in the Beginning of a Cold Season by Forugh Farrokhzad
  64. ‘Those Winter Sundays’ by Robert Hayden
  65. ‘Dublinesque’ by Philip Larkin
  66. ‘Walls’ by Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali
  67. ‘Little Sleep’s-Head Sprouting Hair in the Moonlight’ by Galway Kinnell
  68. ‘Diving into the Wreck’ by Adrienne Rich
  69. ‘One Art’ by Elizabeth Bishop
  70. ‘Verses from My Room’ by Susanna Tomalin
  71. ‘Sonny’s Lettah (Anti-Sus Poem)’ by Linton Kwesi Johnson
  72. ‘Grow Old With Me’ by John Lennon
  73. Extract from Ten Cheremiss (Mari) Songs by Anselm Hollo
  74. ‘The Kaleidoscope’ by Douglas Dunn
  75. ‘On Squaw Peak’ by Robert Hass
  76. ‘Perfection Wasted’ by John Updike
  77. ‘Clearances’ by Seamus Heaney
  78. ‘Nullipara’ by Sharon Olds
  79. ‘When Death Comes’ by Mary Oliver
  80. ‘Late Fragment’ by Raymond Carver
  81. ‘Minority’ by Imtiaz Dharker
  82. ‘Michael’s Dream’ (from Atlantis) by Mark Doty
  83. ‘Daylight Robbery’ by Paul Henry
  84. ‘Epiphany’ (from Birthday Letters) by Ted Hughes
  85. ‘I Am Selling My Daughter for 100 Won’ by Jang Jin-sung
  86. Extracts from Battalion 101 by Micheal O’Siadhail
  87. ‘The Last Part’ by Deborah Keily
  88. ‘Our Neighbours’ by Felix Dennis
  89. ‘Revenge’ by Taha Muhammad Ali
  90. ‘To A’ by Harold Pinter
  91. ‘Road Signs’ by Caroline Bird
  92. ‘Small Comfort’ by Katha Pollitt
  93. ‘Home’ by Warsan Shire
  94. ‘for women who are difficult to love’ by Warsan Shire
  95. ‘Sixty Years After’ by Derek Walcott
  96. ‘John, this is the sea’ (from Something Like the Sea) by Philip Gross
  97. ‘The Ballad of True Regret’ by Sebastian Barker
  98. ‘This Skin That Carry My Worth’ by Earl Mills
  99. ‘An Unseen’ by Carol Ann Duffy
  100. ‘City Horse’ by Henri Cole
  101. ‘Vigil’ by Jeremy Robson
  102. ‘Sentenced to Life’ by Clive James
  103. Afterword by Sebastian Faulks
  104. Amnesty International: ‘Why Amnesty thinks this book is important’ by Nicky Parker
  105. Acknowledgements
  106. Index of Contributors and Poets
  107. Index of Titles of Poems
  108. Index of First Lines
  109. Credits, Copyrights and Permissions