Selected PoemsPenguin, 1996 - 830 páginas Debate as to the nature and influence of his poetry continues, and in making their selection for this volume the editors have chosen poems that defined Byron for the nineteenth century and poems less well known then but of particular interest to today's readers. This Penguin Classic, based on the landmark Murray edition of 1832-4, is the only widely available selection to include Byron's own notes on the same page as the poetic texts, and to present the poems in the sequence of composition and/or first publication, thus providing a sense of Byron's developing career. It contains the complete texts of many longer works not readily available in their entirety, including Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, all but one of the 'Eastern tales', and the historical drama Sardanapalus, now regarded as a key text in the modern re-evaluation of Romanticism. |
Contenido
A Fragment When to their airy hall my fathers voice | 1 |
The Cornelian | 2 |
To Caroline You say you love and yet your eye | 3 |
A Satire | 6 |
Lines to Mr Hodgson Written on Board the Lisbon Packet | 49 |
Maid of Athens ere we part | 51 |
Written after Swimming from Sestos to Abydos | 53 |
To Thyrza Without a stone to mark the spot | 54 |
When we two parted | 391 |
Fare thee well | 392 |
Prometheus | 394 |
Sonnet on Chillon | 397 |
Darkness | 412 |
A Romaunt Canto III | 415 |
Epistle to Augusta My sister my sweet sister c | 456 |
Lines On Hearing that Lady Byron was III | 460 |
A Romaunt Cantos III | 56 |
To lanthe | 59 |
Canto the First | 61 |
Canto the Second | 94 |
Appendix to Canto the Second | 128 |
An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill | 153 |
Lines to a Lady Weeping | 154 |
An Apostrophic Hymn | 155 |
Remember Thee Remember Thee | 166 |
A Fragment of a Turkish Tale | 167 |
THE BRIDE OF ABYDOS A Turkish Tale | 209 |
A Tale | 248 |
Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte | 308 |
Stanzas for Music | 314 |
She walks in beauty | 315 |
A Tale | 316 |
The Destruction of Sennacherib | 355 |
Napoleons Farewell From the French | 356 |
From the French Must thou go my glorious Chief | 357 |
THE SIEGE OF CORINTH | 359 |
A Dramatic Poem | 463 |
A Romaunt Canto IV | 508 |
Epistle from Mr Murray to Dr Polidori Dear Doctor I have read your play | 570 |
A Venetian Story | 573 |
Epistle to Mr Murray My dear Mr Murray | 599 |
MAZEPPA | 602 |
Stanzas to the Po | 627 |
The Isles of Greece | 629 |
Francesca of Rimini From the Inferno of Dante Canto the Fifth | 632 |
Stanzas When a man hath no freedom | 634 |
A Tragedy | 635 |
Who killd John Keats? | 735 |
A Literary Eclogue | 736 |
THE VISION OF JUDGMENT | 749 |
On This Day I Complete My ThirtySixth Year | 780 |
Notes | 782 |
821 | |
827 | |
829 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Selected Poems George Gordon Byron Baron Byron,Lord George Gordon Byron Sin vista previa disponible - 2005 |
Selected Poems of Lord George Gordon Byron Lord George Gordon Byron Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |
Términos y frases comunes
Albania ARBACES Athens aught bard beauty behold BELESES beneath blood breast breath brow Byronic hero Canto CHAMOIS cheek Childe Harold Childe Harold's Pilgrimage dare dark dead death deeds dost doth dread earth Edinburgh Review fair fame fate fear feel fix'd foes Francesca of Rimini gaze Giaour glory Greece Greek hand hast hate hath hear heard heart heaven hope hour INKEL king Lady land Lara Lara's less lips live look look'd Lord Byron MANFRED mortal mountains Murray MYRRHA ne'er never night o'er once palace PANIA pass'd passion perchance poem published Review SALEMENES SARDANAPALUS satraps scarce scene seem'd shore sigh sire slave smile song soul spirit stanzas sword tale tears thee thine things thou art thought throne TRACY turn'd twas Venice voice walls waves Whate'er wild words youth ZARINA Zuleika