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6 Books of Poetry电子书

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作       者:Bliss Carman

出  版  社:Seltzer Books

出版时间:2018-03-01

字       数:37.1万

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This collection includes the poetry books: Ballads of Lost Haven, Behind the Arras, Later Poems, More songs from Vagabondia, Sappho, and Songs from Vagabondia. According to Wikipedia: ""Bliss Carman (April 15, 1861 – June 8, 1929) was a Canadian poet who lived most of his life in the United States, where he achieved international fame. He was acclaimed as Canada's poet laureate during his later years. In Canada Carman is classed as one of the Confederation Poets, a group which also included Charles G.D. Roberts (his cousin), Archibald Lampman, and Duncan Campbell Scott. Of the group, Carman had the surest lyric touch and achieved the widest international recognition."
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BLISS CARMAN: 6 BOOKS OF POETRY

BALLADS OF LOST HAVEN, A BOOK OF THE SEA

A SON OF THE SEA

THE GRAVEDIGGER

THE YULE GUEST

THE MARRING OF MALYN

I. THE MERRYMAKERS

II. A SAILOR'S WEDDING

III. THE LIGHT ON THE MARSH

THE NANCY'S PRIDE

ARNOLD, MASTER OF THE SCUD

THE SHIPS OF ST. JOHN

THE KING OF YS

THE KELPIE RIDERS

I

II

III

IV

V

NOONS OF POPPY

LEGENDS OF LOST HAVEN

THE SHADOW BOATSWAIN

THE MASTER OF THE ISLES

THE LAST WATCH

OUTBOUND

BEHIND THE ARRAS, A BOOK OF THE UNSEEN

BEHIND THE ARRAS

FANCY'S FOOL

THE MOONDIAL

THE FACE IN THE STREAM

THE CRUISE OF THE GALLEON

A SONG BEFORE SAILING

IN THE WINGS

THE RED WOLF

THE FAITHLESS LOVER

I

II

THE CRIMSON HOUSE

THE LODGER

BEYOND THE GAMUT

THE JUGGLER

HACK AND HEW

THE NIGHT EXPRESS

THE DUSTMAN

THE SLEEPERS

AT THE GRANITE GATE

EXIT ANIMA

LATER POEMS

FRONTISPIECE

PUBLISHER'S NOTE

BLISS CARMAN: AN APPRECIATION BY R. H. HATHAWAY

VESTIGIA.

A REMEMBRANCE.

THE SHIPS OF YULE

THE SHIPS OF SAINT JOHN

THE GARDEN OF DREAMS

GARDEN MAGIC

IN GOLD LACQUER

APRILIAN

GARDEN SHADOWS

IN THE DAY OF BATTLE

TREES

THE GIVERS OF LIFE

I

II

III

IV

V

VI

A FIRESIDE VISION

A WATER COLOR

THRENODY FOR A POET

DUST OF THE STREET

TO A YOUNG LADY ON HER BIRTHDAY

THE GIFT

THE CRY OF THE HILLBORN

A MOUNTAIN GATEWAY

MORNING IN THE HILLS

A WOOD-PATH

WEATHER OF THE SOUL

HERE AND NOW

THE ANGEL OF JOY

THE HOMESTEAD.

"THE STARRY MIDNIGHT WHISPERS"

A LYRIC

"APRIL NOW IN MORNING CLAD"

NIKE

THE ENCHANTED TRAVELLER

SPRING'S SARABAND

TRIUMPHALIS

"NOW THE LENGTHENING TWILIGHTS HOLD"

THE SOUL OF APRIL

AN APRIL MORNING

EARTH VOICES

I

II

III

IV

RESURGAM

EASTER EVE

NOW IS THE TIME OF YEAR

THE REDWING

THE RAINBIRD

LAMENT

UNDER THE APRIL MOON

THE FLUTE OF SPRING

SPRING NIGHT

BLOODROOT

DAFFODIL'S RETURN

NOW THE LILAC TREE'S IN BUD

WHITE IRIS

THE TREE OF HEAVEN

PEONY

THE URBAN PAN

THE SAILING OF THE FLEETS

'TIS MAY NOW IN NEW ENGLAND

IN EARLY MAY

FIREFLIES

THE PATH TO SANKOTY

OFF MONOMOY

IN ST. GERMAIN STREET

PAN IN THE CATSKILLS

A NEW ENGLAND JUNE

THE TENT OF NOON

CHILDREN OF DREAM

ROADSIDE FLOWERS

THE GARDEN OF SAINT ROSE

THE WORLD VOICE

SONGS OF THE GRASS

I. ON THE DUNES.

II. LORD OF MORNING.

III. THE TRAVELLER.

THE CHORISTERS

THE WEED'S COUNSEL

THE BLUE HERON

WOODLAND RAIN

SUMMER STORM

DANCE OF THE SUNBEAMS

THE CAMPFIRE OF THE SUN

SUMMER STREAMS

THE GOD OF THE WOOD

AT SUNRISE

AT TWILIGHT

MOONRISE

THE QUEEN OF NIGHT

NIGHT LYRIC

THE HEART OF NIGHT

PEACE

THE OLD GRAY WALL

TE DEUM

IN OCTOBER

BY STILL WATERS

LINES FOR A PICTURE

THE DESERTED PASTURE

AUTUMN

NOVEMBER TWILIGHT

THE GHOST-YARD OF THE GOLDENROD

BEFORE THE SNOW

WINTER

A WINTER PIECE

WINTER STREAMS

WINTER TWILIGHT

THE TWELFTH NIGHT STAR

A CHRISTMAS EVE CHORAL

CHRISTMAS SONG

THE WISE MEN FROM THE EAST

THE SENDING OF THE MAGI

THE ANGELS OF MAN

AT THE MAKING OF MAN

ST. MICHAEL'S STAR

THE DREAMERS

EL DORADO

ON THE PLAZA

A PAINTER'S HOLIDAY

MIRAGE

THE WINGED VICTORY

THE GATE OF PEACE

CONCLUSION

MORE SONGS FROM VAGABONDIA

JONGLEURS.

EARTH'S LYRIC.

THE WOOD-GOD.

A FAUN'S SONG.

QUINCE TO LILAC:

AN EASTER MARKET.

DAISIES.

THE MOCKING-BIRD.

KARLENE.

KARLENE.

CONCERNING KAVIN.

KAVIN AGAIN.

ACROSS THE TABLE.

BARNEY McGEE.

THE SEA GYPSY.

SPEECH AND SILENCE.

SECRETS.

THE FIRST JULEP.

A STEIN SONG.

THE UNSAINTING OF KAVIN.

IN THE WAYLAND WILLOWS.

WHEN I WAS TWENTY.

IN A SILENCE.

THE BATHER.

NOCTURNE: IN ANJOU.

NOCTURNE: IN PROVENCE.

JUNE NIGHT IN WASHINGTON.

A SONG FOR MARNA.

SEPTEMBER WOODLANDS.

NANCIBEL.

A VAGABOND SONG.

THREE OF A KIND.

WOOD-FOLK LORE.

AT MICHAELMAS.

THE MOTHER OF POETS.

A GOOD-BY.

IN A COPY OF BROWNING.

SHAKESPEARE HIMSELF:

AT THE ROAD-HOUSE:

VERLAINE.

DISTILLATION.

A FRIEND'S WISH.

LAL OF KILRUDDEN.

HUNTING-SONG:

BUIE ANNAJOHN.

MARY OF MARKA.

PREMONITION.

THE HEARSE-HORSE.

THE NIGHT-WASHERS.

MR. MOON:

HEM AND HAW.

ACCIDENT IN ART.

IN A GARDEN.

AT THE END OF THE DAY.

SAPPHO: ONE HUNDRED LYRICS

INTRODUCTION

NOW TO PLEASE MY LITTLE FRIEND

I. Cyprus, Paphos, or Panormus

II. What shall we do, Cytherea?

III. Power and beauty and knowledge,--

IV. O Pan of the evergreen forest,

V. O Aphrodite,

VI. Peer of the gods he seems,

VII. The Cyprian came to thy cradle,

VIII. Aphrodite of the foam,

IX. Nay, but always and forever

X. Let there be garlands, Dica,

XI. When the Cretan maidens

XII. In a dream I spoke with the Cyprus-born,

XIII. Sleep thou in the bosom

XIV. Hesperus, bringing together

XV. In the grey olive-grove a small brown bird

XVI. In the apple boughs the coolness

XVII. Pale rose leaves have fallen

XVIII. The courtyard of her house is wide

XIX. There is a medlar-tree

XX. I behold Arcturus going westward

XXI. Softly the first step of twilight

XXII. Once you lay upon my bosom,

XXIII. I loved thee, Atthis, in the long ago,

XXIV. I shall be ever maiden,

XXV. It was summer when I found you

XXVI. I recall thy white gown, cinctured

XXVII. Lover, art thou of a surety

XXVIII. With your head thrown backward

XXIX. Ah, what am I but a torrent,

XXX. Love shakes my soul, like a mountain wind

XXXI. Love, let the wind cry

XXXII. Heart of mine, if all the altars

XXXIII. Never yet, love, in earth's lifetime,

XXXIV. "Who was Atthis?" men shall ask,

XXXV. When the great pink mallow

XXXVI. When I pass thy door at night

XXXVII. Well I found you in the twilit garden,

XXXVIII. Will not men remember us

XXXIX. I grow weary of the foreign cities,

XL. Ah, what detains thee, Phaon,

XLI. Phaon, O my lover,

XLII. O heart of insatiable longing,

XLIII. Surely somehow, in some measure,

XLIV. O but my delicate lover,

XLV. Softer than the hill-fog to the forest

XLVI. I seek and desire,

XLVII. Like torn sea-kelp in the drift

XLVIII. Fine woven purple linen

XLIX. When I am home from travel,

L. When I behold the pharos shine

LI. Is the day long,

LII. Lo, on the distance a dark blue ravine,

LIII. Art thou the top-most apple

LIV. How soon will all my lovely days be over,

LV. Soul of sorrow, why this weeping?

LVI. It never can be mine

LVII. Others shall behold the sun

LVIII. Let thy strong spirit never fear,

LIX. Will none say of Sappho,

LX. When I have departed,

LXI. There is no more to say now thou art still,

LXII. Play up, play up thy silver flute;

LXIII. A beautiful child is mine,

LXIV. Ah, but now henceforth

LXV. Softly the wind moves through the radiant morning,

LXVI. What the west wind whispers

LXVII. Indoors the fire is kindled;

LXVIII. You ask how love can keep the mortal soul

LXIX. Like a tall forest were their spears,

LXX. My lover smiled, "O friend, ask not

LXXI. Ye who have the stable world

LXXII. I heard the gods reply:

LXXIII. The sun on the tide, the peach on the bough,

LXXIV. If death be good,

LXXV. Tell me what this life means,

LXXVI. Ye have heard how Marsyas,

LXXVII. Hour by hour I sit,

LXXVIII. Once in the shining street,

LXXIX. How strange is love, O my lover!

LXXX. How to say I love you:

LXXXI. Hark, love, to the tambourines

LXXXII. Over the roofs the honey-coloured moon,

LXXXIII. In the quiet garden world,

LXXXIV. Soft was the wind in the beech-trees;

LXXXV. Have you heard the news of Sappho's garden,

LXXXVI. Love is so strong a thing,

LXXXVII. Hadst thou, with all thy loveliness, been true,

LXXXVIII. As, on a morn, a traveller might emerge

LXXXIX. Where shall I look for thee,

XC. A sad, sad face, and saddest eyes that ever

XCI. Why have the gods in derision

XCII. Like a red lily in the meadow grasses,

XCIII. When in the spring the swallows all return,

XCIV. Cold is the wind where Daphne sleeps,

XCV. Hark, where Poseidon's

XCVI. Hark, my lover, it is spring!

XCVII. When the early soft spring wind comes blowing

XCVIII. I am more tremulous than shaken reeds,

XCIX. Over the wheat-field,

C. Once more the rain on the mountain,

EPILOGUE

SONGS FROM VAGABONDIA

VAGABONDIA.

A WAIF.

THE JOYS OF THE ROAD.

EVENING ON THE POTOMAC.

SPRING SONG.

THE FAUN. A FRAGMENT.

A ROVER'S SONG.

DOWN THE SONGO.

I.

II.

III.

IV.

THE WANDER-LOVERS.

DISCOVERY.

A MORE ANCIENT MARINER.

A SONG BY THE SHORE.

A HILL SONG.

AT SEA.

ISABEL.

CONTEMPORARIES.

THE TWO BOBBIES.

A TOAST.

THE KAVANAGH.

A CAPTAIN OF THE PRESS-GANG.

THE BUCCANEERS.

THE WAR-SONG OF GAMELBAR.

THE OUTLAW.

THE KING'S SON.

LAURANA'S SONG.

LAUNA DEE.

THE MENDICANTS.

THE MARCHING MORROWS.

IN THE WORKSHOP.

THE MOTE.

IN THE HOUSE OF IDIEDAILY.

RESIGNATION.

COMRADES.

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