Women Romantic Poets
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Women Romantic Poets - Volume 2
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
read by Marie Blackmore, Evan Blackmore, Naomi Eklund-Fudge
Part 2 of the Women Romantic Poets series
L. E. L. was the pen-name of Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802–1838), a "wild and wayward girl" whose outspoken poems about love, hypocrisy, social injustice, religions, and death were discussed and debated avidly during her short life, but lost favor afterwards as Victorian notions of propriety became dominant. This wide-ranging collection includes 60 of her most characteristic poems. Introduction
Apologue
A Girl Burning a Love-Letter
Change
Maid Marian
Portrait of a Lady
Love Nursed by Solitude
A Girl at her Devotions
Juliet after the Masquerade 1827
Moon
Changes
The Spirit and the Angel of Death
The Lost Star
The Feast of Life
Mont Blanc
Venetian Bracelet - Epigraphs
Lines of Life
Poetical Portaits 5
Hurdwar
Benares
Christ Crowned with Thorns
Christ Blessing the Bread
The Flight into Egypt
Madonna and Child
Hagar and Ishmael
St John in the Wilderness
The Nativity
Judas Returning the Thirty Pieces
The Magdalen
The Infant Christ with Flowers
Nathan and David
The Incredulity of St Thomas
The Infant St John
Christ Blessing Little Children
Hindoo and Mahommedan Buildings
St Mawgan Church and Lanhern Nunnery
The Fairy of the Fountains 1
The Fairy of the Fountains 2
Durham Cathedral
Piccadilly
The Savoyard in Grosvenor Square
The City Churchyard
Oxford Street
The Death of Mrs Hemans
Rydal Water and Grasmere Lake
Ethel Churchill - Epigraphs
Louise, Duchesse of La Valliere
The Portrait of Lord Byron
Santa Rosalia
Ode to Retirement
audiobook
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Women Romantic Poets - Volume 3
by Lydia Huntley Sigourney
read by Marie Blackmore, Evan Blackmore
Part 3 of the Women Romantic Poets series
Lydia Huntley Sigourney (1791–1864) was perhaps the most popular and influential American poet of her time. Deeply concerned with social injustices of all kinds, she was already speaking out against such problems as slavery, war, and the persistent mistreatment of Native Americans as early as the 1820s. She was equally at home in comedy and tragedy, and continued to publish with unabated zest and incisiveness for half a century. In all, she is estimated to have written over 2,000 poems. Introduction
Victory
To the Moon
To a Wasp
Mene
To an Ancient Rocking Chair
Solitude
The Lost Sister
The Bridal Morning
To a Shred of Linen
The Milliners and Fishes
To a Fragment of Silk
The Last Supper
The Bride
Indian Names
Niagara 1835
Niagara 1845
Farewell to Niagara
Monody on Mrs Hemans
Death among the Trees
The Ancient Family Clock
Peace I leave with you
Prayer
To a Goose
To a Fragment of Cotton
Fallen Forests
What Could They Do Without Us?
The Lost Lily
February VIII
March X
June XIV
The Sewing Machine
Our Union (Thriving Family)
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