The Flight of Icarus
Massi Cricco
critique photo view portfolio (175 images) **************************************************
Massi Cricco
critique photo view portfolio (175 images) **************************************************
Greatest Poems Ever Written
- On the Idle Hill of Summer - A. E. Housman
- Ode: Of Wit - Abraham Cowley
- from The Rape of the Lock, from Canto 1 - Alexander Pope
- Ode on Solitude - Alexander Pope
- rom Essay on Man, Epistle II - Alexander Pope
- from Essay on Criticism [“But most by Numbers”] - Alexander Pope
- from The Lotos-Eaters - Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- Tears, Idle Tears - Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The Charge of the Light Brigade - Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The Lady of Shalott - Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The Kraken - Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- A London Thoroughfare. 2 A.M. - Amy Lowell
- The Gallery - Andrew Marvell
- To His Coy Mistress - Andrew Marvell
- The Rights of Woman - Anna Laetitia Barbauld
- The Author to Her Book - Anne Bradstreet
- The Prologue - Anne Bradstreet
- To My Dear and Loving Husband - Anne Bradstreet
- The Introduction - Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
- Adam Posed - Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
- A Nocturnal Reverie - Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
- from Everyman - Anonymous
- My Picture Left in Scotland - Ben Jonson
- The Hourglass - Ben Jonson
- X Mon. December [1744] hath xxxi days. - Benjamin Franklin
- Chicago - Carl Sandburg
- Fog - Carl Sandburg
- The Sea View - Charlotte Smith
- from Goblin Market - Christina Rossetti
- A Birthday - Christina Rossetti
- A Daughter of Eve - Christina Rossetti
- In an Artist's Studio - Christina Rossetti
- The Passionate Shepherd to His Love - Christopher Marlowe
- from Dr. Faustus, Scene 12 - Christopher Marlowe
- from The Divine Comedy, from The Inferno - Dante Alighieri
- Jury Duty - Deena Linett
- The Tiger in the Driveway - Deena Linett
- The City in the Sea - Edgar Allan Poe
- The Raven - Edgar Allan Poe
- The Bells -Edgar Allan Poe
- Annabel Lee - Edgar Allan Poe
- Doc Hill - Edgar Lee Masters
- Seth Compton -Edgar Lee Masters
- from Amoretti: Sonnet 67 - Edmund Spenser
- from The Faerie Queene, from The First Booke - Edmund Spenser
- Recuerdo - Edna St. Vincent Millay
- First Fig - Edna St. Vincent Millay
- Second Fig - Edna St. Vincent Millay
- from The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám of Naishápúr - Edward FitzGerald
- The Owl and the Pussy-Cat - Edward Lear
- Miniver Cheevy - Edwin Arlington Robinson
- The House on the Hill - Edwin Arlington Robinson
- from Sonnets from the Portuguese - Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Sonnet 43 - Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Stars - Emily Brontë
- 348 - Emily Dickinson
- 712 - Emily Dickinson
- 254 - Emily Dickinson
- 303 - Emily Dickinson
- 328 - Emily Dickinson
- The New Colossus - Emma Lazarus
- In a Station of the Metro - Ezra Pound
- I Write My Mother a Poem - Fleda Brown
- The Women Who Loved Elvis All Their Lives - Fleda Brown
- The Billion Heartbeats of the Mammal - Gary Fincke
- The Magpie Evening: A Prayer - Gary Fincke
- from The Canterbury Tales, from The Wife of Bath's Prologue - Geoffrey Chaucer
- She walks in beauty - George Gordon, Lord Byron
- So, we’ll go no more a roving - George Gordon, Lord Byron
- And Thou Art Dead, As Young and Fair - George Gordon, Lord Byron
- Man - George Herbert
- God's Grandeur - Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Pied Beauty - Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Spring and Fall - Gerard Manley Hopkins
- [Carrion Comfort] - Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Athletes - Grace Cavalieri
- Dates - Grace Cavalieri
- The Retreat - Henry Vaughan
- They Are All Gone into the World of Light! - Henry Vaughan
- The Fire of Drift-Wood - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- America -Herman Melville
- Book 1, No. 5 (“To Pyrrha”) - Horace
- Death, be not proud (Holy Sonnet 10) - John Donne
- The Baite - John Donne
- The Flea -John Donne
- Song [Go and catch a falling star] -John Donne
- To the Memory of Mr. Oldham -John Dryden
- Burning Drift-Wood - John Greenleaf Whittier
- Ichabod! -John Greenleaf Whittier
- Ode on a Grecian Urn - John Keats
- On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer - John Keats
- La Belle Dame sans Merci - John Keats
- from Paradise Lost, Book I - John Milton
- When I Consider How My Light Is Spent - John Milton
- A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General - Jonathan Swift
- from On the Equality of the Sexes, Part I - Judith Sargent Murray
- On the Welch Language - Katherine Philips
- in the morning - Kenneth Carroll
- Riding Shotgun -Kenneth Carroll
- The List of Most Difficult Words - Len Roberts
- Birthday Song - Leon Markowicz
- Call Out - Leon Markowicz
- Jabberwocky -Lewis Carroll
- The Walrus and the Carpenter -Lewis Carroll
- The Poetess’s Hasty Resolution - Margaret Cavendish
- Dover Beach - Matthew Arnold
- The Last Leaf - Oliver Wendell Holmes
- The Chambered Nautilus - Oliver Wendell Holmes
- Hélas - Oscar Wilde
- Metamorphosis VII, 611 – 724 - Ovid
- Sympathy - Paul Laurence Dunbar
- We Wear the Mask - Paul Laurence Dunbar
- Ozymandias - Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Ode to the West Wind - Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Hymn to Intellectual Beauty - Percy Bysshe Shelley
- To a Sky-Lark - Percy Bysshe Shelley
- from The House of Night - Philip Freneau
- To a Lady on the Death of Her Husband - Phillis Wheatley
- To S. M., a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Works - Phillis Wheatley
- [The doubt of future foes exiles my present joy] - Queen Elizabeth I
- Concord Hymn - Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Brahma - Ralph Waldo Emerson
- To Lucasta, Going to the Wars - Richard Lovelace
- To Althea, from Prison - Richard Lovelace
- My Last Duchess - Robert Browning
- To a Mouse - Robert Burns
- Auld Lang Syne - Robert Burns
- A Red, Red Rose - Robert Burns
- Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening - Robert Frost
- Nothing Gold Can Stay - Robert Frost
- The Road Not Taken - Robert Frost
- The Shivering Beggar - Robert Graves
- To Virgins, to Make Much of Time - Robert Herrick
- The Argument of His Book - Robert Herrick
- To Find God -Robert Herrick
- Recessional - Rudyard Kipling
- If— - Rudyard Kipling
- The Soldier - Rupert Brooke
- Frost at Midnight - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- The Eolian Harp - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Kubla Khan - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- To Atthis - Sappho
- I Am Not Yours - Sara Teasdale
- To Mr. Stuart - Sarah Wentworth Morton
- Out upon It! - Sir John Suckling
- from Astrophil and Stella - Sir Philip Sidney
- A Vision upon the Fairy Queen - Sir Walter Raleigh
- The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd - Sir Walter Raleigh
- The Lie - ir Walter Raleigh
- from War Is Kind - Stephen Crane
- The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock - T. S. Eliot
- Now Winter Nights Enlarge - Thomas Campion
- A Song [Ask me no more where Jove bestows] - Thomas Carew
- The Spring - Thomas Carew
- Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard -Thomas Gray
- The Convergence of the Twain - Thomas Hardy
- Hap - Thomas Hardy
- The Darkling Thrush - Thomas Hardy
- I Remember, I Remember - Thomas Hood
- Dirge - Thomas Lovell Beddoes
- The time I’ve lost in wooing - Thomas Moore
- Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms - Thomas Moore
- They Flee from Me - Thomas Wyatt
- If You're Anxious for to Shine in the High Aesthetic Line - W. S. Gilbert
- The Emperor of Ice-Cream - Wallace Stevens
- Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird - Wallace Stevens
- from Song of Myself - Walt Whitman
- from Passage to India - Walt Whitman
- A Noiseless, Patient Spider - Walt Whitman
- When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer - Walt Whitman
- Anthem for Doomed Youth - Wilfred Owen
- Little Lamb - William Blake
- The Tyger - William Blake
- Love’s Secret - William Blake
- The Chimney-Sweeper - William Blake
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree - William Butler Yeats
- When You Are Old - William Butler Yeats
- The Second Coming -William Butler Yeats
- Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven - William Butler Yeats
- Invictus - William Ernest Henley
- from Piers Plowman - William Langland
- Sonnet 29 - William Shakespeare
- Sonnet 55 - William Shakespeare
- Sonnet 18 - William Shakespeare
- Sonnet 116 - William Shakespeare
- Sonnet 130 - William Shakespeare
- All the World’s a Stage - William Shakespeare
- Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey - William Wordsworth
- The Tables Turned - William Wordsworth
- I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud - William Wordsworth
- Expostulation and Reply - William Wordsworth
- We Are Seven - William Wordsworth
- Ode on Intimations of Immortality . . . - William Wordsworth
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