Jubilate Agno
Title | Jubilate Agno PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Smart |
Publisher | |
Pages | 171 |
Release | 1969 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry
Title | For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Smart |
Publisher | Atheneum Books |
Pages | 32 |
Release | 1984-01-01 |
Genre | Cats |
ISBN | 9780689310263 |
Enumerates all the special qualities of Jeoffry the cat.
My Cat Jeoffry
Title | My Cat Jeoffry PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Smart |
Publisher | |
Pages | 35 |
Release | 2013 |
Genre | Cats |
ISBN |
Presenting Poetry
Title | Presenting Poetry PDF eBook |
Author | Howard Erskine-Hill |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 300 |
Release | 1995-06-08 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780521473606 |
The presentation of poetry to auditor and reader from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries.
Jeoffry
Title | Jeoffry PDF eBook |
Author | Oliver Soden |
Publisher | The History Press |
Pages | 111 |
Release | 2020-10-06 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0750995939 |
Jeoffry was a real cat who lived 250 years ago, confined to an asylum with Christopher Smart, one of the most visionary poets of the age. In exchange for love and companionship, Smart rewarded Jeoffry with the greatest tribute to a feline ever written. Prize-winning biographer Oliver Soden combines meticulous research with passages of dazzling invention to recount the life of the cat praised as 'a mixture of gravity and waggery'. The narrative roams from the theatres and bordellos of Covent Garden to the cell where Smart was imprisoned for mania. At once whimsical and profound, witty and deeply moving, Soden's biography plays with the genre like a cat with a toy. It tells the story of a poet and a poem, while setting Jeoffry's life and adventures against the roaring backdrop of eighteenth-century London.
Like
Title | Like PDF eBook |
Author | A. E. Stallings |
Publisher | Macmillan + ORM |
Pages | 114 |
Release | 2018-09-25 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 0374719187 |
A Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry A stunning new collection by the award-winning young poet and translator Like, that currency of social media, is a little word with infinite potential; it can be nearly any part of speech. Without it, there is no simile, that engine of the lyric poem, the lyre’s note in the epic. A poem can hardly exist otherwise. In this new collection, her most ambitious to date, A. E. Stallings continues her archeology of the domestic, her odyssey through myth and motherhood in received and invented forms, from sonnets to syllabics. Stallings also eschews the poetry volume’s conventional sections for the arbitrary order of the alphabet. Contemporary Athens itself, a place never dull during the economic and migration crises of recent years, shakes off the dust of history and emerges as a vibrant character. Known for her wry and musical lyric poems, Stallings here explores her themes in greater depth, including the bravura performance Lost and Found, a meditation in ottava rima on a parent’s sublunary dance with daily-ness and time, set in the moon’s Valley of Lost Things.
Mania and Literary Style
Title | Mania and Literary Style PDF eBook |
Author | Clement Hawes |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 259 |
Release | 1996-01-26 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 052155022X |
This highly original study of the 'manic style' in enthusiastic writing of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries identifies a literary tradition and line of influence running from the radical visionary and prophetic writing of the Ranters and their fellow enthusiasts to the work of Jonathan Swift and Christopher Smart. Clement Hawes offers a counterweight to recent work which has addressed the subject of literature and madness from the viewpoint of contemporary psychological medicine, putting forward instead a stylistic and rhetorical analysis. He argues that the writings of dissident 'enthusiastic' groups are based in social antagonisms; and his account of the dominant culture's ridicule of enthusiastic writing (an attitude which persists in twentieth-century literary history and criticism) provides a powerful and daring critique of pervasive assumptions about madness and sanity in literature.