
Sonnets From Dante to the Present
by HOLLANDER, JOHN-
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Summary
Author Biography
Mr. Hollander attended Columbia and Indiana Universities and was a Junior Fellow of the Society of Fellows of Harvard University. He has taught at Connecticut College and Yale, and was a professor of English at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. He is currently Sterling Professor emeritus of English at Yale. In 1990 he received a MacArthur Fellowship .
Table of Contents
Foreword | p. 17 |
He Compares All Things with His Lady, and Finds Them Wanting | p. 23 |
A Rapture Concerning His Lady | p. 24 |
Broken Thougths | p. 25 |
May | p. 26 |
June | p. 27 |
Sonnet 88 Used as Troilus' Complaint | p. 28 |
Love the Tyrant | p. 29 |
A Night Piece | p. 30 |
To Giovanni da Pistoja: On the Painting of the Sistine Chapel | p. 31 |
To Vittoria Colonna: The Model and the Statue | p. 32 |
The Impeachment of Night | p. 33 |
Winged Thoughts | p. 34 |
The Portrait of a Lady | p. 35 |
Farewell to Love | p. 36 |
Hands Off? | p. 37 |
Spring, But | p. 38 |
Under House Arrest in Windsor | p. 39 |
Cassandra's Beauty | p. 40 |
Life's Roses | p. 41 |
Love's Wounding | p. 42 |
Home | p. 43 |
Ruined Rome | p. 44 |
Closing Day | p. 45 |
Her World | p. 46 |
Her Jewels | p. 47 |
Visions of the Absent | p. 48 |
Cats | p. 49 |
... And More Cats | p. 50 |
Paradoxes | p. 51 |
Restoring Life | p. 52 |
Loves of the Stars | p. 53 |
Burning Together | p. 54 |
Pride of the Fourth and Liquid Element | p. 55 |
Dressing Cupid | p. 56 |
Water Never the Same | p. 57 |
Astrophel Would Write of Stella | p. 58 |
Hit by Love | p. 59 |
Poetry's Source | p. 60 |
Yes, But | p. 61 |
Asking the Moon About Love | p. 62 |
This Nothing Seen | p. 63 |
Benighted | p. 64 |
A Hard Audience | p. 65 |
Doing and Undoing | p. 66 |
Her Portrait | p. 67 |
Eternizing Her | p. 68 |
Repaying a Debt | p. 69 |
Care-charmer Sleep | p. 70 |
He Can Write Only of Her | p. 71 |
Timeliness | p. 72 |
My Smithy | p. 73 |
Love's Farewell | p. 74 |
A Sonnet to the Noble Lady, the Lady Mary Wroth | p. 75 |
The World | p. 76 |
Rescuing Cupid | p. 77 |
Thinking of Love | p. 78 |
Sonnet No. 30 | p. 79 |
Sonnet No. 53 | p. 80 |
Sonnet No. 73 | p. 81 |
Sonnet No. 94 | p. 82 |
Sonnet No. 106 | p. 83 |
Sonnet No. 107 | p. 84 |
Sonnet No. 116 | p. 85 |
Sonnet No. 121 | p. 86 |
Sonnet No. 129 | p. 87 |
Sonnet No. 138 | p. 88 |
Sonnet No. 146 | p. 89 |
Sonnet to Black It Self | p. 90 |
Jubilate Deo | p. 91 |
Alpha and Omega | p. 92 |
Microcosm | p. 93 |
Death Rebuked | p. 94 |
The Soul to Her Rescuer | p. 95 |
A Sonnet Sent Home from College | p. 96 |
Prayer | p. 97 |
Redemption | p. 98 |
The Dream | p. 99 |
Clocks of Wheels, of Sand and of Sun | p. 100 |
On Reaching Age 23 | p. 101 |
On His Blindness | p. 102 |
On the Late Massacre in Piedmont | p. 103 |
A Dream of a Dead Wife | p. 104 |
To Mr. Henry Lawes, on His Airs | p. 105 |
On Hope | p. 106 |
To Her Self-Portrait | p. 107 |
Sonnet on a Family Picture | p. 108 |
Sonnet on the Death of Mr. Richard West | p. 109 |
Written at Stonehenge | p. 110 |
Sonnet to William Wilberforce, Esquire | p. 111 |
Emblem, Alas! | p. 112 |
To the Insect of the Gossamer | p. 113 |
To the Evening Star | p. 114 |
To the Sun-Dial | p. 115 |
At Dover Cliffs, July 20, 1787 | p. 116 |
Netley Abbey | p. 117 |
To Oxford | p. 118 |
Composed Upon the Beach near Calais, August, 1802 | p. 119 |
Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September, 3, 1802 | p. 120 |
Mutability | p. 121 |
The World is too Much with Us | p. 122 |
Steamboats, Viaducts and Railways | p. 123 |
The the River Duddon | p. 124 |
To the River Otter | p. 125 |
The Bosses of Rome | p. 126 |
On the Group of the Three Angels Before the Tent of Abraham, by Raffaelle, in the Vatican | p. 127 |
The the Mocking-Bird | p. 128 |
The Nile | p. 129 |
To the Grasshopper and the Cricket | p. 130 |
On the Grasshopper and Cricket | p. 131 |
The Human Seasons | p. 132 |
What the Thrush Seemed to Say | p. 133 |
On First Looking into Chapman's Homer | p. 134 |
Bright Star | p. 135 |
Fears That I May Cease to Be | p. 136 |
Ozymandias | p. 137 |
England in 1819 | p. 138 |
Winter Walk | p. 139 |
Gipsies | p. 140 |
To A. W. von Schlegel | p. 141 |
A Lock of Hair | p. 142 |
To an American Painter Departing for Europe | p. 143 |
Silence | p. 144 |
To Tartar, a Terrier Beauty | p. 145 |
By the Swanannoa | p. 146 |
Hiram Powers' Greek Slave' | p. 147 |
El Desdichado | p. 148 |
To Science | p. 149 |
Silence | p. 150 |
Old Ruralities | p. 151 |
Shadows Off the Coast | p. 152 |
A Nasty Sonnet | p. 153 |
The Later Rain | p. 154 |
The Photograph | p. 155 |
Mezzo Cammin | p. 156 |
The Harvest Moon | p. 157 |
The Cross of Snow | p. 158 |
Night | p. 159 |
Failure | p. 160 |
Correspondences | p. 161 |
The Owls | p. 162 |
West London | p. 163 |
A Forgery | p. 164 |
In His Garden | p. 165 |
The House Stands Vacant | p. 166 |
A Match with the Moon | p. 167 |
On the Road to Waterloo: 17 October | p. 168 |
Barren Spring | p. 169 |
Silent Noon | p. 170 |
Body's Beauty | p. 171 |
Remember | p. 172 |
From Sunset to Star Rise | p. 173 |
In an Artist's Studio | p. 174 |
From Modern Love | p. 175 |
Lucifer in Starlight | p. 176 |
October | p. 177 |
Crossed Threads | p. 178 |
Hap | p. 179 |
In the Cemetery | p. 180 |
The Sea and the Skylark | p. 181 |
The Windhover | p. 182 |
No Worst | p. 182 |
The Tomb of Poe | p. 184 |
Lead | p. 185 |
Night Scene | p. 186 |
1492 | p. 187 |
The New Colossus | p. 188 |
Long Island Sound | p. 189 |
Vowels | p. 190 |
Impressions de Voyage | p. 191 |
April in Town | p. 192 |
The Lights of London | p. 193 |
On a Piece of Tapestry | p. 194 |
Accident in Art | p. 195 |
Leda and the Swan | p. 196 |
The Trevi Foundatain, Rome | p. 197 |
Sunium | p. 198 |
Mount Lykaion | p. 199 |
Near Helikon | p. 200 |
The Pity of the Leaves | p. 201 |
Reuben Bright | p. 202 |
Verlaine | p. 203 |
How Annandale Went Out | p. 204 |
The Sheaves | p. 205 |
White Cats | p. 206 |
Never Again Would Birds' Song Be the Same | p. 207 |
The Oven Bird | p. 208 |
The Silken Tent | p. 209 |
Putting in the Seed | p. 210 |
Design | p. 211 |
Archaic Torso of Apollo | p. 212 |
Unicorn | p. 213 |
February Afternoon | p. 214 |
Autumn Refrain | p. 215 |
Self-Portrait | p. 216 |
Sonnet Reversed | p. 217 |
The Soldier | p. 218 |
Piazza Piece | p. 219 |
Compass | p. 220 |
The Lynching | p. 221 |
Anthem for Doomed Youth | p. 222 |
Bluebeard | p. 223 |
The Poet Talks on the Phone with His Love | p. 224 |
Apollo and Daphne | p. 225 |
From the Dark Tower | p. 226 |
The Novelist | p. 227 |
Luther | p. 228 |
Paradise Saved | p. 229 |
Sonnet | p. 230 |
Lie Still, Sleep Becalmed | p. 231 |
Caring for Surfaces | p. 232 |
O | p. 233 |
To Failure | p. 234 |
Naming the Animals | p. 235 |
At Night | p. 236 |
A Sonnet | p. 237 |
From The Broken Home | p. 238 |
High Fidelity | p. 240 |
A Theory of Waves | p. 241 |
Requiem for the Plantagenet Kings | p. 242 |
From Kilim | p. 243 |
Its Origin | p. 247 |
Its Length | p. 248 |
Its Enclosure | p. 249 |
Its History | p. 250 |
Its Constraints | p. 251 |
Its Functions | p. 252 |
Acknowledgments | p. 253 |
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
Excerpts
William Shakespeare
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments: love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove.
Oh no! It is an ever-fixèd mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass come;
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
October
Helen Hunt Jackson
Bending above the spicy woods which blaze,
Arch skies so blue they flash, and hold the sun
Immeasurably far; the waters run
Too slow, so freighted are the river-ways
With gold of elms and birches from the maze
Of forests. Chestnuts, clicking one by one,
Escape from satin burs; her fringes done,
The gentian spreads them out in sunny days,
And, like late revelers at dawn, the chance
Of one sweet, mad, last hour, all things assail,
And conquering, flush and spin; while, to enhance
The spell, by sunset door, wrapped in a veil
Of red and purple mists, the summer, pale,
Steals back alone for one more song and dance.
Excerpted from Sonnets: From Dante to the Present
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
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