Available in the collections, The Wild Girls Plus . . . and The Unreal and the Real.
Category: Poetry
Finding My Elegy — Ursula K. Le Guin
Wild Fortune Selected Poems, 1960-2005
From Wild Angels – 1960-1975
Offering
A Lament for Rheged
There
Ars Lunga
Song
Tao Song
From Hard Words – 1975-1980
Invocation
The Mind Is Still
The Marrow
The Writer to the Dancer
From the Dancing at Tillai
Middle
At Three Rivers, April ’80
Slick Rock Creek, September
Winter Downs
Peak
The Child on the Shore
Tui
From Wild Oats and Fireweed (1980-1987)
Wild Oats and Fireweed
From in the Red Zone: Mount St. Helens, October 1981
To Walk In Here
While the Old Men Make Ready to Kill
For the New House
The Maenads
Inventory
A Meditation on a Marriage
From Buffalo Gals and Other Animal Presences(1987)
The Crown of Laurel
From Going Out With Peacocks (1988-1994)
The Pacific Slope
Riding the “Coast Starlight”
Sleeping with Cats
Waking: Two Poems
The Vigil for Ben Linder
The Queen of Spain, Grown Old and Mad, Writes to the Daughter She Imagines She Had by Christopher Columbus
Song for a Daughter
The Hard Dancing
From No Boats (Chapbook, 1991)
From “McKenzie Voices”
At Cannon Beach
From Blue Moon Over Thurman Street (1993)
The Aching Air
From Sixty Odd (1994-1999)
Read at the Award Dinner, May 1996
Hexagram 45
When there aren’t any
Rodmell
For Gabriela Mistral
Hexagram 49
Infinitive
“The scarcity of rhinos” on the television
Field Burning Debated, Salmon Fate Discussed.
Morning Service
Late Dusk
A Blue Moon: June 30
Repulse Monkey
“Will the Circle Be Unbroken?”
From Incredible Good Fortune (2000-2006)
Incredible Good Fortune
April in San Jose
Mount Rainier from Amtrak
The Cactus Wren
A Book of Songs
The Old Lady
The Forsaken Shepherdess
Notes from a Cruise
Antigua: The Silence of the Mountain
Pelicans
Talk Shows
Here, There, at the Marsh
American Wars
The Lost Explorer
Ille
Invocation
Dance Song
English
Taking Courage
A Request
For Naomi
Learning Latin in Old Age
Futurology
Life Sciences New Poems, 2006-2010
I. Socioesthetics
Distance
Pretty Things
In England in the Fifties
The City of the Plain
Watching the Fractal Set
The Mistake
The Next War
The Crest
Soldiers
The Curse of the Prophetess
Every Land
The Elders at the Falls
An Old Yurok Basket
Almost and Always
Lieder Singer
Writers
After the Fire
Lorca’s Duende
Meters
Exegi monumentum aere perennius
She Remembers the Famous Poets
II. Botany and Zoology
Two Crow Poems
Learning the Name
The Greater Forest
Red Alders in March
Pinus Sabiniana
Creation of the Horse
The Clydesdale Mare
I think of them
Grace
Raksha
At the Clackamas County Fair
Extinction
III. Meteorology and Geography
Mendenhall Glacier
A Measure of Desolation
Coast Range Highway, November
Seasonal Quatrains
Morning in Joseph, Oregon
Hour of the Changes
Summer Morning on the Volcano
For My Traveling Companion
Up the Columbia
Navna: The River-running, by Intrumo of Sinshan
At Kishamish
IV. Developmental Ontology
At the Center
Early Memory: Jocken
The Merchant of Words
Stammersong
GPS
The House Is Soft
Seven Lines to Elisabeth
Final Destination
Ghazal at the Oasis of Mara
Travel
Pillowtalk
Low Barometer
My Birthday Present
The Arts of Old Age
Sometimes it seems
The Body of the World
When They Came
Hindsight
Body of Water
Aubade
Votum
V. Philosophy and Theology
Finding My Elegy
The Whirlwind
Intimations
Some Mornings
In the Borderlands
Jewel and Gravel
Science
Tout rêve . . .
Morning Star
Uncaged
A God I Know
January Night Prayer
The Conference
Index of First Lines
Ursula’s Page
#poetry #ursulakleguin
Complete Works of Jonathan Swift — Jonathan Swift
The Satires
A Tale of a Tub
The Battle of the Books
The Bickerstaff-Partridge Papers
The Swearer’s Bank
Gulliver’s Travels – 1726
Gulliver’s Travels – 1735
A Modest Proposal
An Examination of Certain Abuses
A Complete Collection of Genteel and Ingenious Conversation
Directions to Servants
Minor Satires
The Sermons
Three Sermons
Brotherly Love and Other Sermons
Other Religious Works
List of Religious Works
The Political Works
Drapier’s Letters
List of Political Works
The Historical Works
The History of the Four Last Years of the Queen
An Abstract of the History of England
Remarks on the Characters of the Court of Queen Anne
Remarks on Lord Clarendon’s “History of the Rebellion”
Remarks on Bishop Burnet’s “History of His Own Time”
Note on the “Freeholder”
The Journalism
Contributions to “The Tatler”
Contributions to “The Examiner”
Contributions to “The Spectator”
Contributions to “The Intelligencer”
The Poetry Collection
The Poems of Jonathan Swift
The Poems
List of Poems in Chronological Order
List of Poems in Alphabetical Order
The Memoir
A Journal to Stella
The Biographies
Sketch of the Life of Dr. Jonathan Swift — R. Phillips
Dean Swift — James McGee
Jonathan’s Page
#delphicompleteworks #poetry #jonathanswift
When We Were Very Young — A. A. Milne
Now We Are Six — A. A. Milne
Citizen — Claudia Rankine
A rather different way of saying the things that need to be said, containing a mixed bag of poetry, prose, vignettes, etc., detailing what it’s like to be perpetually on the receiving end of racism, from micro-agressions to extremely overt racism.
Maybe, instead of forcing children to read Shakespeare and Dickens at school, we should be encouraging them to read books like this and encouraging them to engage in constructive dialogue with each other about the issues raised and the experiences of those on the receiving end of racism and other bigotry. Racist is not something people are born, it’s something people are taught, and its very clearly up to schools and educators to start stepping up and making much more effort with the young minds in their care.
In the UK “Citizenship” and “Relationship” education is not on the curriculum until after 11 years of age: this is far, far too late. How our societies are peopled — our citizens — and how we relate to those other citizens within our societies should be permanently on the curriculum from the very first day of school, not be left in the hands of young people’s peers, bad television, bad websites, and ignorant parents who read nothing but vile, tabloid drivel. A child who has been nurtured badly up to the age of 11 is highly unlikely to respond to positive nuturing by over-worked, underpaid, stressed-out teachers after the age of 11.
Claudia’s Page
#poetry #claudiarankine
Leda — Aldous Huxley
Another early book of Aldous’ poems. I think this is the last of the poetry, which i’m quite glad about as i can say, without any doubt, that i much, much prefer Aldous’ prose.
Like the previous books of poetry by Aldous, not really my thing: other’s mileage may vary though, so don’t let me put you off if you enjoy this style of overly-done, Victorian-upper-class poetry.
Aldous’ Page
#poetry #aldoushuxley
The Defeat Of Youth And Other Poems — Aldous Huxley
And so continues my chronological journey through Aldous’ bibliography.
Although a fair few of the poems were as way beyond me as most were in The Burning Wheel, this did seem a little bit more accessible. I have no idea how much of that is me becoming used to the lexicon and style, or if Aldous has began to write a little more accessibly.
Anyway, another book of poetry that some of you may find enjoyable if you’re into early 1900’s poetry.
To be honest i’ll be glad to finally finish reading Aldous’ poetry and get onto things more enjoyable.
Aldous’ Page
#poetry #aldoushuxley
The Pied Piper of Hamelin — Robert Browning
A delightful, long poem telling the full story of the Pied Piper. Great for reading out loud to children. And much, much better than the Brothers Grimm version.
Best of all, it’s free. So why not download and give it a read today.
Fairy Tales and Folklore Robert’s Page
#viclit #poetry #fairytale #fantasy #robertbrowning
The Burning Wheel — Aldous Huxley
Aldous started out writing as a poet and this is his first ever book.
While there were a couple of poems in this that i could get my head around, for the most part it was all a bit too much above my 21st century head: mostly not my kind of poetry. I would class Aldous’ early poetry as very much ringing the death knell of the Victorian upper classes.
For those of us who have been enamoured by Aldous’ later writing, it’s quite interesting to come back to the very beginning and do Aldous chronologically.
Final thoughts: not my cup of tea but you might enjoy it if you’re into pretentious poetry with lots of words that you have to look up.