Poetry New and Old2

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    POETRY NEW AND OLD

    Learning By Discovery

    Created by Ann Porter and Tina

    Kerr

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    Teams

    Teams will be comprised of three or four

    students.

    The members of the team will be chosen

    randomly as will the subject area.

    Each person in the team is responsible for

    their part of the work.

    Ultimately the goal is to share what you

    have learned, so take good notes!

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    TYPES OF POETRY

    1. War Poetry

    2. Canadian Poetry

    3. Sonnets

    4. Poetry in the 1600s 5. English Romantic Poets

    6. English Poets of the 1800s Part I

    7. English Poets of the 1800s Part II

    8. American Poetry of the 1800s 9. 20th Century Poets Part I

    10. 20th Century Poets Part II

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    WAR POETRY

    Crimean WarAlfred, Lord Tennyson:TheCharge of the Light Brigade

    WWI John McCrae: In Flanders Fields

    Wilfred Owen : Anthem for Doomed Youth,Dulce et Decorum Est, Greater Love

    Siegfried Sassoon: Attack, The General, TheGlory of Women

    Isaac Rosenberg: Break of Day in the Trenches WW II John Gillespie Magee: High Flight ; An

    Airmans Ecstasy

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    CANADIAN POETRY

    Charles G.D. Roberts: the Mowing

    Bliss Carman: Vagabond Song

    E.J. Pratt: The Shark

    Earle Birney: The Bear on the Delhi Road Irving Layton: The Bull Calf, The Fertile Muck

    Leonard Cohen: For Anne, What Im DoingHere, Suzanne Takes You Down

    Margaret Atwood: This is a Photograph of Me,The Animals in That Country

    Michael Ondaatje: King Kong Meets WallaceStevens, Spider Blues

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    THE SONNET

    William Shakespeare: 18, 29, 30, 71, 116

    Edmund Spenser One Day I Wrote Her Name

    Upon the Strand

    Sir Philip Sidney: Come Sleep! Oh Sleep theCertain Knot of Peace

    William Wordsworth: Upon Westminster Bridge

    Elizabeth Barrett Browning: How Do I loveThee? Let me Count the Ways

    Rupert Brooke: The Soldier

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    POETS OF THE 1600s

    Ben Johnson: To Celia, Come My Celia

    John Donne; Go and Catch a Falling Star,HolySonnet 10 Death Be Not Proud

    Robert Herrick: Delight in Disorder, To theVirgins to Make Much of Time

    George Herbert: Easter Wings, Love III

    Sir John Suckling: Why So Pale and Wan, FondLover?

    John Milton: When I Consider How My Light isSpent

    Andrew Marvell: To His Coy Mistress

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    THE ENGLISH ROMANTIC

    POETS

    William Blake; The Tyger

    William Wordsworth: The Daffodils, The Worldis To Much With Us, My Heart Leaps Up

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan

    George Gordon, Lord Byron: So Well Go NoMore A-Roving, She Walks in Beauty, When WeTwo Parted

    Percy Bysshe Shelley: Ozymandias, England in

    1819 John Keats: When I Have Fears, Bright Star, La

    Belle Dame Sans Merci

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    ENGLISH POETS OF THE 1800S :

    PART I

    Leigh Hunt: Abou Ben Adhem, Jenny Kissed

    Me

    Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Break, Break, Break,

    Crossing the Bar, Ulysses, The Eagle Robert Browning:, Meeting at Night , Home

    Thoughts From Abroad

    Edward Lear: The Owl and the Pussy Cat Matthew Arnold: Dover Beach

    George Meredith: Lucifer in Starlight

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    ENGLISH POETS OF THE 1800S

    PART II

    Christina Rossetti: When I am Dead My

    Dearest, Up-Hill

    Lewis Carroll: Jabberwocky, Father William

    Thomas Hardy: The Oxen, Neutral Tones

    Gerard Manley Hopkins: Gods Grandeur,

    Spring and Fall

    William Butler Yeats: The Lake Isle of Innisfree,When You Are Old

    Rudyard Kipling: Danny Deever

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    AMERICAN POETRY OF THE

    1800S

    Ralph Waldo Emerson: Concord Hymn, TheSnowstorm

    Edgar Allen Poe: Annabel Lee, The Haunted Palace

    Walt Whitman: A Noiseless Patient Spider, O Captain!

    My Captain, I Hear America SingingEmily Dickinson: A Bird Came Down the Walk, success

    is counted Sweetest, I Never Saw a Moor

    Eugene Field: The Duel; the Gingham Dog and Calico

    CatEdwin Arlington Robinson: Richard Cory

    Paul Laurence Dunbar: We Wear the Mask

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    20TH CENTURY POETS

    Langston Hughes: Harlem, Theme for English B

    Stevie Smith: Not Waving but Drowning

    Louis MacNeice: The Sunlight on the Garden, Stargazer

    Theodore Roethke: The Waking, Wish for a Young Wife

    Dylan Thomas: The Force That Through the GreenForce Drives the Flower, Do Not Go Gentle into ThatGood Night

    Gwendolyn Brooks: Kitchenette Building, We Real Cool

    Allen Ginsberg: A Supermarket in California

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    20th Century Poets II

    Walter de la Mare: Silver, The Listeners

    Robert Frost: The Road Not Taken, Stopping byWoods on a Snowy Evening,Design

    Carl Sandburg: Chicago, FogWilliam Carlos Williams: The Red Wheelbarrow

    Archibald MacLeish:Callypsos

    Edna St. Vincent Millay: Euclid Alone HasLooked on Beauty Bare

    E.E. Cummings: next to of course god america,anyone lived in a pretty how town