Sunday, April 15, 2012

Poetry Section

Literature An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing 10th Edition


The most popular introductory anthology of its kind, Kennedy/Gioia’s Literature continues to inspire students with engaging insights on reading and writing about stories, poems, and plays.
Download from here

http://ul.to/g7rmo3q5/Literature An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing 10th Ed By Kennedy and Gioia.part1.rar

http://ul.to/se3rrhm6/Literature An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing 10th Ed By Kennedy and Gioia.part2.rar




In Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry




This impressive four-CD set of 79 poets reading their work begins with an 1890 recording of Walt Whitman's ''America,'' the first of many pieces forming an enchanting audio-mosaic. A labor of love, In Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry suffers only in its omissions (T.S. Eliot, Elizabeth Bishop). Considered individually or as a whole, these 122 poems poignantly remind us that a poet, as W.H. Auden once said, is a person passionately in love with language.

Download Link
http://www.wupload.com/file/128220000/ACORPS370.rar
or
http://www.uploadstation.com/file/yDDUdxu/ACORPS370.rar



  81 Famous Poems

01. Anonymous Early Song: The Cuckoo Song
02. Sir Thomas Wyatt: Whoso List to Hunt
03. Sir Walter Raleigh: The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd
04. Sir Walter Raleigh: The Passionate Man's Pilgrimage
05. Sir Philip Sidney: Sonnet 1 from Astrophel and Stella
06. Christopher Marlowe: The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
07. William Shakespeare: Sonnet 18 - Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
08. William Shakespeare: Sonnet 29 - When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes
09. William Shakespeare: Sonnet 116 - Let me not to the marriage of true minds
10. William Shakespeare: Sonnet 129 - Th'expense of spirit in a waste of shame
11. Thomas Campion: When to Her Lute Corina Sings
12. Thomas Campion: Rose-cheeked Laura
13. Thomas Campion: There is a Garden in Her Face
14. John Dunne: Song - Go and catch a falling star
15. John Dunne: The Sun Rising
16. John Dunne: Sonnet 10 from Holy Sonnets - Death, be not proud
17. Ben Johnson: Song: To Celia
18. Robert Herrick: The Argument of His Book
19. Robert Herrick: Delight in Disorder
20. Robert Herrick: To the Virgins to Make Much of Time
21. Robert Herrick: Upon Julia's Clothes
22. George Herbert: The Collar
23. George Herbert: The Pulley
24. George Herbert: Love (III)
25. John Milton: When I Consider How My Light Is Spent (a.k.a. On His Blindness)
26. John Suckling: Song - Why so pale and wan, fond lover?
27. John Suckling: Out upon It! (aka The Constant Lover)
28. Richard Lovelace: To Althea, from Prison
29. Andrew Marvell: To His Coy Mistress
30. Andrew Marvell: The Definition of Love
31. Henry Vaughan: The Retreat
32. John Dryden: A Song for St. Cecilia's Day
33. Thomas Gray: Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
34. William Blake: from Poetical Sketches, Song
35. William Blake: from Songs of Innocence, Introduction
36. William Blake: from Songs of Innocence, The Lamb
37. William Blake: from Songs of Experience, The Tyger
38. Robert Burns: To Mouse
39. Robert Burns: A Red, Red Rose
40. William Wordsworth: She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways
41. William Wordsworth: Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802
42. William Wordsworth: My Heart Leaps Up
43. William Wordsworth: The World Is Too Much With Us
44. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan CD-2
01. George Gordon, Lord Byron: She Walks in Beauty
02. George Gordon, Lord Byron: When We Two Parted
03. Percy Bysshe Shelley: Ozymandias
04. Percy Bysshe Shelley: Ode to the West Wind
05. Percy Bysshe Shelley: To a Skylark
06. Percy Bysshe Shelley: Adonais (stanzas 1, 39, 54, and 55)
07. John Keats: On First Looking into Chapman's Homer
08. John Keats: Ode on a Grecian Urn
09. John Keats: Bright Star
10. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Concord Hymn
11. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The Rhodora
12. Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Sonnets from the Portuguese: 1, 43
13. Edgar Allan Poe: To Helen
14. Edgar Allan Poe: The City in the Sea
15. Edgar Allan Poe: Annabel Lee
16. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Break, Break, Break
17. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Songs from The Princess, The Splendor Falls
18. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Tears, Idle Tears
19. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
20. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: The Eagle
21. Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Crossing the Bar
22. Robert Browning: My Last Duchess
23. Robert Browning: Home-Thoughts from Abroad
24. Walt Whitman: Song of Myself (parts 1, 6, 21 and 31)
25. Walt Whitman: O Captain! My Captain!
26. Matthew Arnold: Dover Beach
27. Emily Dickinson: 303 - The Soul selects her own Society
28. Emily Dickinson: 986 - A narrow Fellow in the Grass
29. Christina Rossetti: Up-Hill
30. Algernon Charles Swinburne: The Garden of Proserpine
31. Thomas Hardy: The Darkling Thrush
32. Gerard Manley Hopkins: Pied Beauty
33. Alfred Edward Housman: Lovliest of Trees, the Cherry Now
34. Alfred Edward Housman: With Rue My Heart Is Laden
35. William Butler Yeats: The Lake Isle of Innisfree
36. William Butler Yeats: The Wild Swans at Coole 
and many more

Source:-
http://www.ebooksdownloadfree.com/Languages-and-Culture/81-Famous-Poems-BI3531.html


Download from here
http://freebooksearcher.info/downloadbook.php?id=11373


The Plump Jack Speech (Henry IV), William Shakespeare

One of the best scenes in any Shakespeare play. Young Prince Harry (The future King Henry V) and old Jack Falstaff are coming to the end of their friendship and they both know it. Only Falstaff doesn't see the writing on the wall on how sad it will end for him. This scene is of young Harry playing his father King Henry IV questioning his eldest son Prince Harry (played by Falstaff) on the bad company he keeps, including one "Plump Jack". As young Harry (Falstaff) answers his father and king (prince H) about the tumultuous old Jack, he gives his father kind words on the old man. It is very,very funny too "watch" the back and forth between these two.

For Audio Link 

http://archive.org/details/audio_poetry 

George Albon & Stephen Vincent poetry

George Albon's books include Empire Life (Littoral Books, 1998); Thousands Count Out Loud (lyric& press, 2000); Brief Capital of Disturbances (Omnidawn, 2003); Step (Post-Apollo Press, 2006); and from this year, Momentary Songs (Krupskaya). Work of his has appeared in Hambone, O Anthology 4, New American Writing, 26, The New Review of Literature, and the anthologies The Gertrude Stein Awards in Innovative American Poetry, Blood and Tears: Poems for Matthew Shepard, and Bay Poetics. His essay "The Paradise of Meaning" was the George Oppen Memorial Lecture for 2002. He lives in San Francisco.
Stephen Vincent's most recent poetry books include Triggers, a Shearsman ebook

For Audio Link
http://archive.org/details/GeorgeAlbon_StephenVincent072208

Guesthouse, Rumi
http://archive.org/details/audio_poetry_88_2006


I Come and Stand at Every Door, Nazim Hikmet
http://archive.org/details/audio_poetry_123_2006

 Sonnet To Liberty, Oscar Wilde 

http://archive.org/details/audio_poetry_124_2006

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