Winged Words: An Anthology of Victorian Women's Poetry and VerseCatherine W. Reilly Enitharmon, 1994 - 174 pages Victorian women poets have been constantly overshadowed by their male counterparts, but now Catherine Reilly has redressed the balance with this meticulously researched and richly varied anthology of poems by sixty-eight Victorian women. Alongside such famous names as Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Emily Brontë and Christina Rossetti are dozens of fine but unfamiliar poets whose work touches on birth and death, love and friendship, family relationships, work and leisure, peace and war, nature and the seasons, the country and the town. |
Contents
Introduction by Catherine Reilly | 1 |
LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON | 7 |
Often Rebukeď | 14 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
beauty became better birds blow Born break bright brown buds child close cold comes dark daughter dead dear death deep died dreams earth educated eyes face fair fall father feel feet flowers garden George Girl give green grief grow hand head hear heart heaven hold hope hour Italy keep Lady leaves light literary lived London look Lullaby married Mary mind morning mother moved never night once pain pass past poems poet poetry poor published rain rest rose round sing sister smile snow soft Song sorrow soul spent Spring stand street strong summer sweet tears tell thee things thou thought tree turn verse voice weep wild wind wing winter women writing wrote young