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Pause For PoetryPause For PoetryThe Rose and the Bee by Sara Teasdale | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 19A short and sweet poem to end our first season of Pause For Poetry. Sara Teasdale was a leading female voice in American poetry at the beginning of the 20th Century, won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1917 and saw much critical and popular success.https://mypoeticside.com/show-classic-poem-30442We're taking a little break over summer but will be back with more poetry very soon in Season 2.Find out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-08-0502 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryA Dead Rose by Elizabeth Barrett Browning | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 19A sort of elegy written for a flower, this poem uses the image of the dead rose as a reflection of the fragiliy of life. Barrett Browning was an incredibly successful and talented poet who, through her marriage to poet Robert Browning, became very well-known in her lifetime.https://allpoetry.com/A-Dead-RoseFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-08-0303 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryAssurances by Walt Whitman | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 18Whitman discusses the inevitabilty of death and finds peace in those assurances of the title. A hugely influential figure in American poetry and American culture, Whitman wrote mostly in free verse and much of his work addresses the ideals of humanism. Leaves of Grass, the collection from which Assurances is taken, was revised multiple times by Whitman throughout his life.https://www.bartleby.com/142/202.htmlFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-2903 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryA Birthday by Christina Georgina Rossetti | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 17A wonderful example of a poem actually about being in love (rather than unrequited love or loss etc.), Rossetti uses the celebration of a birthday to celebrate her love with some glorious natural imagery in the second stanza. Rossetti wrote some incredible poetry - we'll definitely be featuring more soon.https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44992/a-birthdayFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-2702 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetrySonnet 1: To My Brother George by John Keats | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 16Keats wrote this poem after his beloved brother George left England for America in 1818. The sonnet uses fantastical imagery of nature which Keats then undermines in the last couplet by implying that they mean little without George there with him to appreciate them. During this time Keats contracted tuberculosis and he died at the age of 25. George went on to outlive his brother for another 20 years and his eight children now have hundreds of descendents in the US.  https://www.bartleby.com/126/14.htmlFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-2202 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryThe Two Trees by William Butler Yeats | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 15The two long stanzas in this poem represent The Tree of Knowledge and the Tree of Life from the Garden of Eden. The sumptuous imagery in this poem seem to celebrate creativity and life, and the clever parallels between the two stanzas heighten the links Yeats is making between the joys and fragility of life.  https://www.poetry-archive.com/y/the_two_trees.htmlFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-2003 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryBy The Sea by Emily Elizabeth Dickinson | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 14Dickinson's work was never published in her lifetime but has come to be appreciated as some of the finest of American poetry. The very grounded initial image of walking a dog by the beach quickly morphs into a fantastical adventure with mermaids, pearls and personifiation of the sea itself.  https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50976/i-started-early-took-my-dog-656Find out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-1502 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryKubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 13... or A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment. This poem was written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1797 after a (possibly opium-influenced) dream and was published in 1816. Supposedly Coleridge woke up from his dream with th intention of writing hundreds of lines of poetry but was interrupted by an infamous 'person from Porlock' (Porlock is a small village in Somerset, UK). We'll never know if there really was a person that interrupted Coleridge, but 'Person from Porlock' has since become a term for someone that interrupts an artist's creativity. https...2021-07-1304 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryOn the death of my first son by Ben Jonson | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 12An elegy written for his son who died of the Plague in 1603. Full of anguish, Jonson eschews the traditional form of an elegy and offers little in the way of hope or an end to his emotional suffering. Jonson's comparison between his son and his poems is particularly moving, intrinsically linking Jonson's identiy as an author, his 'fathership' of his poems and his perceived 'authorship' of his son. What can this poem tell us about grief in comparison to other elegies? https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44455/on-my-first-son  F...2021-07-0802 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryOzymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 11One of the best-known sonnets in the English language, Shelley's Ozymandias is a masterful study of timelessness, power and vanity. What does it mean to leave a legacy? Might Shelley's poem even outlast the legacy of Ozymanidas? https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46565/ozymandiasFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-0602 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetrySo we'll go no more a-roving by George Gordon, Lord Bryon | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 10A slightly regretful vow to mature, this poem was written by Byron in 1817 and published in 1830 after his death. An elegy-of-sorts to a wild youth, Byron shares Donne's skill in sometimes not-so-subtle sexual imagery and playfulness in language. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43845/so-well-go-no-more-a-rovingFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-07-0101 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryRemembrance by Emily Jane Brontë | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 9Written as an imagined elegy from a wife to a husband, Remembrance was published as part of a collection of the Brontë sisters' poetry in 1846, one year before the publication of Wuthering Heights - her only novel - and just two years before her death in 1848. The poetry collection was called 'Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell', the sisters' all using pseudonyms to disguise the fact that they were women. Despite supposedly only selling two copies at the time, the collection contains some of the finest English poetry of the period, so make sure y...2021-06-2903 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryTo a Skylark by William Wordsworth | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 8Wordsworth was very fond of an Ode (an ode is a poem written celebrating something or someone) - this wasn't even the only ode he wrote to a skylark! We'll hopefully perform his other skylark poem soon. William Wrodsworth is widely renkowned as one fo the finest English poets so his work will no-doubt become a regular feature on this podcast. Make sure you subscribe so you get every episode as it's released! https://www.bartleby.com/333/330.htmlFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com...2021-06-2402 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryLook not thou on beauty’s charming by Sir Walter Scott | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 7Also known as Lucy Ashton's Song, this short but impactful poem was written as part of the Scottish writer's novel The Bride of Lammermoor. (Is a Scot called Scott a type of nominitive determinism?) https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/lucy-ashtons-song/Find out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-2201 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryLines 1-54 from Auguries of Innocence by William Blake | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 6While largely ignored during his lifetime, Blake in many ways epitomises British Romanticism. He was a talented poet, painter and printmaker and wrote this poem around 1803, although it wasn't published until 60 years later. An augury is another name for an omen. Subscribe to Pause For Poetry to make sure you catch the next part of this huge poem later in the year!https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43650/auguries-of-innocenceFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-1703 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryIn The Days When We Are Dead by Henry Lawson | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 5This poem was written in 1908 by Australian Henry Lawson. Lawson is regarded as one of the finest Australian poets of his time and was the first writer to be given a state funeral on his death in 1922. http://www.ironbarkresources.com/henrylawson/InTheDaysWhenWeAreDead.htmlFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-1503 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryFringford Brook by Violet Jacob | Pause For Poetry Season 1, Episode 4Fringford Brook, as well as being quite difficult to say (yes these are edited!), is, along with Hethe, a pretty village in rural Oxfordshire, UK. Violet Jacob was a Scottish novelist and poet, pehaps best known for her novel Flemington.If you have any recommendations of other female poets for us to read (must have died more than 70 years ago to be out of copyright) then please send us an email at hello@airglowaudio.com.http://www.public-domain-poetry.com/violet-jacob/fringford-brook-21360Find out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-1003 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryThe Character of a Happy Life by Sir Henry Wotton | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 3Diplomat (and spy?) Sir Henry Wotton wrote several well-known poems which were first published in the posthumous collection Reliquiae Wottonianae.  Do you think he manages to capture the character of a happy life? How different is having a happy life today compared to being an aristocrat in Elizabethan times?https://poets.org/poem/character-happy-lifeFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-0802 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryAnonymous, 1603 | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 2Today's poem, often simply referred to by its first line, is an Elizabethan ballad from 1603 that is attributed to contemporary court lute player (or is that lutist? Luter?) John Dowland. The true author of the poem is unknown.https://allpoetry.com/Weep-You-No-More,-Sad-FountainsFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp 2021-06-0302 minPause For PoetryPause For PoetryA Valediction: Forbidding Mourning by John Donne | Pause for Poetry Season 1, Episode 1The ever-fascinating John Donne wrote this poem some time around 1611 for his wife Anne before leaving her to go on a trip to Europe. A valediction is an evocative term for a farewell and the first recorded usage of the term in English dates back to around the time Donne wrote this poem.https://allpoetry.com/A-Valediction:-Forbidding-MourningFind out more about Pause for Poetry at http://airglowaudio.com/pfp2021-06-0103 min