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Honors English 10 Honors The goal is to provide students with a contextual framework for the study of literature by introducing students to significant literary works that also serve to reveal the world view of the four major epochs in Western and World Civilization. This foundation will allow students to have a reference when teachers address contextual elements, such as the influence of literary movements, in the thematic units taught in American Literature, World Literature, AP English Language, and AP English Literature. These works could also serve as the content outcome element of the Common Final. The four units could be implemented (assuming one unit per “quarter”) over a one year or two year period. York Cycle Plays – The Bakers’ Play – The Fall of the Angels -- http://www.reed.utoronto.ca/yorkplays/York01.html Middle English version -- http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=cme;cc=cme;rgn=div1;view=text;idno=York;node=York%3A1 horace - his odes catullus - his poetry livy - his history, easily excerpted ovid - his metamorphosis, not quite as easily excerpted cicero - his speeches suetonius - his caesars sophocles/euripedes/aristophanes - their plays Basic Model --- Elements of Drama, Poetry. Short Stories – with extra works Thematic Model Longman – Kennedy Text – Perhaps My Favorite Text Two Critical Casebooks: Author / Stories in Depth 12 Stories for Further Reading Chinua Achebe n Dead Men’s Path Sherman Alexie n This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona Margaret Atwood n Happy Endings Toni Cade Bambara n The Lesson Ambrose Bierce n An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge T. Coraghessan Boyle n Greasy Lake 4 Willa Cather n Paul’s Case Kate Chopin n The Story of an Hour Sandra Cisneros n The House on Mango Street Ralph Ellison n Battle Royal Zora Neale Hurston n Sweat James Joyce n Araby Jamaica Kincaid n Girl Jhumpa Lahiri n Interpreter of Maladies D. H. Lawrence n The Rocking-Horse Winner **David Leavitt n A Place I’ve Never Been Naguib Mahfouz n The Lawsuit Bobbie Ann Mason n Shiloh Joyce Carol Oates n Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? Tim O’Brien n The Things They Carried ** Daniel Orozco n Orientation Tobias Wolff n The Rich Brother Virginia Woolf n A Haunted House 29 Recognizing Excellence Anonymous n O Moon, when I gaze on thy beautiful face Emily Dickinson n A Dying Tiger – moaned for Drink Emily Dickinson - Sentimentality Rod McKuen n Thoughts on Capital Punishment Recognizing Excellence William Butler Yeats n Sailing to Byzantium Arthur Guiterman n On the Vanity of Earthly Greatness Percy Bysshe Shelley n Ozymandias **Robert Hayden n Frederick Douglass Elizabeth Bishop n One Art **John Keats n Ode to a Nightingale Walt Whitman n O Captain! My Captain! Dylan Thomas n In My Craft or Sullen Art Paul Laurence Dunbar n We Wear the Mask Emma Lazarus n The New Colossus Edgar Allan Poe n Annabel Lee Cultural and Historical Contexts: Women in Turn-of-the-Century America 1. KATE CHOPIN, The Story of an Hour 2. CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, The Yellow Wallpaper 3. SUSAN GLASPELL, A Jury of Her Peers 4. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Settings: Historical Contexts 1. JOHN MILTON, On the Late Massacre in Piedmont 2. MATTHEW ARNOLD, Dover Beach 3. JOHN BETJEMAN, In Westminster Abbey Settings: In the Morning 1. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Full many a glorious morning have I seen] 2. JOHN DONNE, The Good-Morrow 3. SYLVIA PLATH, Morning Song 4. BILLY COLLINS, Morning 5. AUGUST KLEINZAHLER, Aubade on East 12th Street 6. JONATHAN SWIFT, A Description of the Morning 7. JAMES DICKEY, Cherrylog Road Two Carpe Diem Poems 1. 2. JOHN DONNE, The Flea ANDREW MARVELL, To His Coy Mistress W. B. Yeats: An Album American Regionalism and Sense of Place: The American West A Conversation on Writing with Dagoberto Gilb *Dagoberto Gilb, Love in L.A. (1993) John Steinbeck (1902–1968) The Chrysanthemums (1938) Leslie Marmon Silko (b. 1948) The Man to Send Rain Clouds (1969) The American South William Faulkner (1897–1962) Barn Burning (1939) Flannery O’Connor (1925–1964) A Good Man Is Hard to Find (1955) Ralph Ellison (1914–1994) Battle Royal (1952) 11. Spaces and Places: The World We Live in / Imagining Places Robert Smithson, Spiral Jetty Eudora Welty, A Worn Path Raymond Carver, Cathedral Sherman Alexie, This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona Robert Frost, Mending Wall Edgar Allan Poe, The Cask of Amontillado William Faulkner, A Rose for Emily Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper Paul Laurence Dunbar, Sympathy Robert Browning, My Last Duchess Henrik Ibsen, A Doll’s House Malcolm X, fromThe Autobiography of Malcolm X Innocence and Experience Innocence and Experience James Joyce, Araby Toni Cade Bambara, The Lesson Thomas Bulfinch, The Myth of Daedalus and Icarus Ralph Ellison, Battle Royal Joyce Carol Oates, Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? John Updike, A&P ----------------William Blake, London William Wordsworth, Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 William Blake, The Chimney Sweeper (From Songs of Innocence) The Chimney Sweeper (From Songs of Experience) A. E. Housman, When I Was One-and-Twenty Alberto Rios, In Second Grade Miss Lee I Promised Never to Forget You and I Never Did Edwin Arlington Robinson, Richard Cory Stephen Crane, The Wayfarer Seamus Heaney, Mid-Term Break ----------------Judith Ortiz Cofer, I Fell in Love, or My Hormones Awakened David Sedaris, The Learning Curve ----------------William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark FICTION NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, Young Goodman Brown JAMES JOYCE, Araby POETRY WILLIAM BLAKE, London A.E. HOUSMAN, When I Was One and Twenty COUNTEE CULLEN, Incident SEAMUS HEANEY, Mid-Term Break DRAMA WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Hamlet ESSAYS LANGSTON HUGHES, Salvation MAYA ANGELOU, Graduation in Stamps 14. LIFE’S JOURNEY – Childhood & Adolescence – Innocence to Experience - Death James Joyce Araby ZZ Packer Brownies Nathanial Hawthorne Young Goodman Brown Flannery O’Connor A Good Man Is Hard to Find Roots, Identity, and Culture Culture and Identity José Armas, EI Tonto del Barrio Kate Chopin, Désirée’s Baby William Faulkner, A Rose for Emily Jamaica Kincaid, Girl Thomas King, Borders Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World Tahira Naqvi, Brave We Are Alice Walker, Everyday Use ----------------W. H. Auden, The Unknown Citizen Paul Laurence Dunbar, We Wear the Mask T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock Shirley Geok-lin Lim, Learning to Love America William Butler Yeats, The Lake Isle of Innisfree ----------------Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal Luis Valdez, Los Vendidos ----------------Richard Rodriguez, Workers Marge Piercy, To Be of Use Frederick Douglass, Learning to Read and Write Martin Luther King, Jr., I Have a Dream Henry David Thoreau, From Civil Disobedience Langston Hughes, From The Big Sea The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain The Negro Speaks of Rivers I, Too The Weary Blues One Friday Morning Theme for English B Claude McKay, America Countee Cullen, Yet Do I Marvel FICTION RICHARD WRIGHT, The Man Who Was Almost a Man JAMES BALDWIN, Sonny’s Blues RAYMOND CARVER, Cathedral JOSE ARMAS, El Tonto del Barrio TONI CADE BAMBARA, The Lesson POETRY PAUL LAWRENCE DUNBAR, We Wear the Mak LUCILLE CLIFTON, Quilting CATHY SONG, The Youngest Daughter JUDITH ORTIZ COFER, Latin Women Pray DRAMA Joyce Carol Oates Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? Somerset Maugham An Appointment in Samarra Wilhelm and Jakob Grimm Godfather Death Chinua Achebe Dead Men’s Path Franz Kafka The Metamorphosis ------------William Blake London Countee Cullen Incident Judith Ortiz Cofer Quinceañera Thomas Hardy The Ruined Maid A. E. Housman When I was one-and-twenty Elizabeth Bishop One Art Dylan Thomas Do not go gentle into that good night John Keats When I have fears that I may cease to be Sylvia Plath Lady Lazarus John Donne Death be not proud Emily Dickinson Because I could not stop for Death Robert Frost The Road Not Taken Robert Frost Acquainted with the Night Robert Frost Fire and Ice Robert Frost Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening ------------James Baldwin Notes of a Native Son George Orwell Shooting an Elephant ------------Tennessee Williams A Glass Menagerie Terrence McNally Andre’s Mother Suggestions for Writing: Drama About Life Passages Further Suggestions for Writing: Literature About Life’s Journey ATHOL FUGARD, “Master Harold”…and The Boys ESSAYS CHIEF SEATTLE, My People FREDERICK DOUGLASS, Learning to Read and Write 15. THE INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIETY – Conformity, Rebellion, & Dissent – The Individual vs Authority Shirley Jackson The Lottery Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Harrison Bergeron Ursula K. Le Guin The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas Ha Jin Saboteur Ernest Hemingway A Clean Well-Lighted Place Ralph Ellison Battle Royal John Cheever The Swimmer ------------Allen Ginsberg A Supermarket in California Anne Sexton Her Kind Pablo Neruda Muchos Somos / We Are Many Walt Whitman I Hear America Singing Paul Laurence Dunbar Sympathy Robert Frost Mending Wall W. H. Auden The Unknown Citizen Emily Dickinson I’m Nobody! Who are you? Emily Dickinson The Soul selects her own Society Emily Dickinson This is my letter to the World Emily Dickinson Much Madness is divinest Sense Emily Dickinson Some keep the Sabbath going to Church ------------Martin Luther King Jr. Letter from Birmingham Jail Henry David Thoreau On Civil Disobedience Maxine Hong Kingston No Name Woman ------------Sophocles Antigonê Further Suggestions for Writing: Literature About the Individual and Society 16. PERSONAL IDENTITY Charlotte Perkins Gilman The Yellow Wallpaper Sherman Alexie This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona John Steinbeck The Chrysanthemums Raymond Carver Cathedral Jhumpa Lahiri Interpreter of Maladies ------------Sylvia Plath Metaphors Denise Levertov The Ache of Marriage Francisco X. Alarcon The X in My Name Paul Laurence Dunbar We Wear the Mask Shirley Geok-lin Lim Learning to Love America Langston Hughes The Negro Speaks of Rivers Langston Hughes I, Too Langston Hughes Weary Blues Langston Hughes Theme for English B Langston Hughes Dream Boogie Langston Hughes Mother to Son ------------Frederick Douglass Learning to Read and Write Virginia Woolf What If Shakespeare Had a Sister? ------------Henrik Ibsen A Doll’s House Love and Hate Families Nature FICTION CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, The Yellow Wallpaper EDITH WHARTON, Roman Fever Family and Friends Connecting Through Comparison: Sibling Relationships James Baldwin, Sonny’s Blues Louise Erdrich, The Red Convertible Chinua Achebe, Marriage Is a Private Affair Amy Tan, Two Kinds ----------------Julia Alvarez, Dusting Janice Mirikitani, For My Father Theodore Roethke, My Papa’s Waltz Cathy Song, The Youngest Daughter Margaret Atwood, Siren Song Robert Frost, Mending Wall Seamus Heaney, Digging Li-Young Lee, The Gift ----------------Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun Fiction *STEPHEN CRANE, The Open Boat EUDORA WELTY, A Worn Path *LESLIE MARMON SILKO, The Man to Send Rain Clouds Poetry SAPPHO, To Me He Seems Like a God WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Let me not to the marriage of true minds JOHN DONNE, The Sun Rising ANDREW MARVELL, To His Coy Mistress APHRA BEHN, The Willing Mistress CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love SIR WALTER RALEIGH, The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd Drama HENRIK IBSEN, A Doll’s House *SUSAN GLASPELL, Trifles Essays C.S. LEWIS, We Have No “Right to Happiness" *JOAN DIDION, Marrying Absurd 13. LOVE Margaret Atwood Happy Endings O. Henry The Gift of the Magi Alice Munro How I Met My Husband William Faulkner A Rose for Emily Zora Neale Hurston Sweat Flannery O’Connor Parker’s Back Kate Chopin The Story of an Hour Kate Chopin The Storm ------------Anne Bradstreet To My Dear and Loving Husband Elizabeth Barrett Browning How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways Andrew Marvell To His Coy Mistress John Donne The Flea Fiction ALICE WALKER, Everyday Use Poetry THEODORE ROETHKE, My Papa’s Waltz SYLVIA PLATH, Metaphors ROBERT HAYDEN, Those Winter Sundays Drama SOPHOCLES, Oedipus Rex Essays *RAYMOND CARVER, My Father's Life *JUDITH ORTIZ COFER, A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood 12. FAMILIES Amy Tan A Pair of Tickets William Faulkner Barn Burning Luke Parable of the Prodigal Son Alice Walker Everyday Use James Baldwin Sonny’s Blues Poetry Haiku Moritake, Fallen Petals Rise So Kan, If Only We Could Meisetsu, City People Kyoshi, The Snake *WILLIAM BLAKE, The Tyger WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, The World Is Too much With Us *JOHN KEATS, La Belle Dame Sans Merci ELIZABETH BISHOP, The Fish Drama *JOHN MILLINGTON SYNGE, Riders to the Sea Essays BARRY HOLSTUN LOPEZ, Landscape and Narrative *ANNIE DILLARD, The Deer at Providencia *VIRGINIA WOOLF, The Death of a Moth 17. NATURE AND THE ENVIRONMENT, Humanity versus Nature Jack London To Build a Fire Stephen Crane Open Boat T. Coraghessan Boyle Greasy Lake Ursula K. Le Guin She Unnames Them Leslie Marmon Silko The Man to Send Rain Clouds Aesop The Grasshopper and the Ant Bidpai The Camel and His Friends Chuang Tzu Independence ------------William Blake To see a world in a grain of sand Walt Whitman When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer William Butler Yeats The Lake Isle of Innisfree Edna St. Vincent Millay What lips my lips have kissed William Shakespeare Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? William Shakespeare Let me not to the marriage of true minds William Shakespeare My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun T. S. Eliot The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ------------Paul 1 Corinthians 13 Cynthia Ozick Lovesickness Judith Ortiz Cofer I Fell in Love, or My Hormones Awakened Mike Ives Would Hemingway Cry? ------------David Ives Sure Thing William Shakespeare Othello, the Moor of Venice Romantic Love: An Album 1. EZRA POUND, The River-Merchant’s Wife: A Letter 2. W. H. AUDEN, [Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone] 3. ANNE BRADSTREET, To My Dear and Loving Husband 4. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Let me not to the marriage of true minds] 5. SHARON OLDS, Last Night 6. JOHN DONNE, The Sun Rising 7. EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY, [Women have loved before as I love now] 8. 1. [I, being born a woman and distressed] 9. ROBERT BROWNING, Porphyria’s Lover 10. MARGARET CAVENDISH, DUCHESS OF NEWCASTLE, Of the Theme of Love *Romantic Love: An Album 1. EZRA POUND, The River-Merchant’s Wife: A Letter 2. W. H. AUDEN, [Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone] 3. ANNE BRADSTREET, To My Dear and Loving Husband 4. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Let me not to the marriage of true minds] 5. SHARON OLDS, Last Night 6. JOHN DONNE, The Sun Rising 7. EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY, [Women have loved before …] 8. 1. [I being born a woman] Eudora Welty Why I Live at the P.O. ----------Robert Hayden Those Winter Sundays Theodore Roethke My Papa’s Waltz Sylvia Plath Daddy Sharon Olds Rite of Passage Seamus Heaney Digging Julia Alvarez By Accident Li-Young Lee The Gif ------------Raymond Carver My Father’s Life Annie Dillard An American Childhood ------------Sophocles Oedipus the King (Translated by Dudley Fitts and Robert Fitzgerald) 9. Me and You: The World Closest to Us / Families Flannery O’Connor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find James Baldwin, Sonny’s Blues Alice Walker, Everyday Use Robert Hayden, Those Winter Sundays **Rita Dove, Daystar William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Jamaica Kincaid, Girl James Joyce, Araby John Updike, A & P **Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm, Little Red Cap Anne Sexton, Red Riding Hood Agha Shahid Ali, The Wolf’s Postscript to “Little Red Riding Hood” Gary Soto, Behind Grandma’s House John Steinbeck, The Chrysanthemums William Shakespeare, How oft, when thou, my music, music play’st (Sonnet 128) William Shakespeare, Let me not to the marriage of true minds (Sonnet 116) William Shakespeare, When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes (Sonnet 29) John Donne, The Flea Edgar Allan Poe, Annabel Lee T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock 1. 2. *Family: An Album 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. GALWAY KINNELL, After Making Love We Hear Footsteps EMILY GROSHOLZ, Eden LI-YOUNG LEE, Persimmons ROBERT HAYDEN, Those Winter Sundays JIMMY SANTIAGO BACA, Green Chile H. D. Storm Elizabeth Bishop The Fish William Blake The Tyger Lewis Carroll Jabberwocky John Keats Ode to a Nightingale Thomas Hardy The Darkling Thrush Gerard Manley Hopkins God’s Grandeur Gerard Manley Hopkins Pied Beauty Gerard Manley Hopkins The Windhover Gerard Manley Hopkins Spring and Fall ------------- John Muir A Wind-Storm in the Forests Wallace Stegner Wilderness Letter Rachel Carson The Shape of Ancient Seas 12. Nature, Cities, and the Environment: The World We Share Toni Cade Bambara, The Lesson Allen Ginsberg, A Supermarket in California Ezra Pound, In a Station of the Metro Langston Hughes, Theme for English B Basho, Four haiku Richard Wright, Haiku Elizabeth Bishop, The Fish Walt Whitman, When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer Langston Hughes, The Negro Speaks of Rivers 6. 7. 8. 9. War and Power Fiction AMBROSE BIERCE, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge FRANK O’CONNOR, Guests of the Nation TIM O’BRIEN, The Things They Carried Poetry *PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY, Ozymandias *WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS, The Second Coming THOMAS HARDY, The Man He Killed WILFRED OWEN, Dulce et Decorum Est RANDALL JARRELL, Gunner CAROLYN FORCHE, The Colonel Drama SOPHOCLES, Antigone Essays ANDREW LAM, Goodbye, Saigon, Finally BARBARA KINGSOLVER, And Our Flag Was Still There 18. WAR AND PEACE / Crime & Punishment Tim O’Brien The Things They Carried Ambrose Bierce An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge Mary Yukari Waters Shibusa Andre Dubus A Father’s Story Edgar Allan Poe The Cask of Amontillado Guy de Maupassant Mother Savage ------------Richard Lovelace To Lucasta Carl Sandburg Grass Henry Reed The Naming of Parts Richard Eberhart The Fury of Aerial Bombardment R. S. Gwynn Body Bags William Blake A Poison Tree Wilfred Owen The Pity of War (prose introduction) Wilfred Owen Dulce et Decorum Est Wilfred Owen Anthem for Doomed Youth Wilfred Owen Futility Suggestions for Writing: Wilfred Owen’s Poetry ------------Abraham Lincoln Second Inaugural Address Mohandas Gandhi Non-Violence—the Greatest Force Leo Tolstoy from The Kingdom of God Is Within You ------------William Shakespeare “Band of Brothers”: Speech from Henry V (Act 4, Scene 3) KELLY CHERRY, Alzheimer’s ANDREW HUDGINS, Begotten SIMON J. ORTIZ, My Father’s Song *CHARLES R. FELDSTEIN, Gravity Technology and Ethics Fiction *NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, The Birthmark KAY BOYLE, The Astronomer’s Wife Poetry *EMILY DICKINSON, I like to see it lap the Miles *WALT WHITMAN, When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer *WILLIAM JAY SMITH, Galileo Galilei *ADRIENNE RICH, Power *MARGARET ATWOOD, The City Planners Drama *MARGARET EDSON,Wit Essays *REBECCA MEAD, Eggs for Sale Death Fiction EDGAR ALLAN POE, The Black Cat KATHERINE ANNE PORTER, The Jilting of Granny Weatherall WILLIAM FAULKNER, A Rose for Emily ALICE WALKER, To Hell with Dying Poetry JOHN DONNE, Death Be Not Proud EMILY DICKINSON, Apparently With No Surprise EMILY DICKINSON, I heard a fly buzz—when I died— EMILY DICKINSON, The Bustle in a House A.E. HOUSMAN, To An Athlete Dying Young e.e. cummings, Buffalo Bill's LANGSTON HUGHES, Night Funeral in Harlem THEODORE ROETHKE, Elegy for Jane Drama HARVEY FIERSTEIN, On Tidy Endings Essays ELIZABETH KUBLER-ROSS, On the Fear of Death BARBARA HUTTMAN, A Crime of Compassion Faith and Doubt Raymond Carver, Cathedral Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried Flannery O’Connor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find ----------------John Donne, Death, Be Not Proud John Keats, When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be Mary Oliver, When Death Comes Matthew Arnold, Dover Beach Robert Frost, Fire and Ice Walt Whitman, Song of Myself Thomas Hardy, Hap Connecting Through Comparison: The Impact of War Thomas Hardy, The Man He Killed Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est A. E. Housman, To an Athlete Dying Young Pablo Neruda, The Dead Woman Dylan Thomas, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night ----------------David Mamet, Oleanna John Millington Synge, Riders to the Sea William Shakespeare “Discretion is the better part of valor”: Speech from Henry IV, Part I (Act 5, Scene 4) Anton Chekhov, The Swan Song John Galsworthy, The Sun ----------------Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus Plato, The Allegory of the Cave 14. LIFE’S JOURNEY – Childhood & Adolescence – Innocence to Experience - Death James Joyce Araby ZZ Packer Brownies Nathanial Hawthorne Young Goodman Brown Flannery O’Connor A Good Man Is Hard to Find Joyce Carol Oates Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? Somerset Maugham An Appointment in Samarra Wilhelm and Jakob Grimm Godfather Death Chinua Achebe Dead Men’s Path Franz Kafka The Metamorphosis ------------William Blake London Countee Cullen Incident Judith Ortiz Cofer Quinceañera Thomas Hardy The Ruined Maid A. E. Housman When I was one-and-twenty Elizabeth Bishop One Art Dylan Thomas Do not go gentle into that good night John Keats When I have fears that I may cease to be Sylvia Plath Lady Lazarus John Donne Death be not proud Emily Dickinson Because I could not stop for Death Robert Frost The Road Not Taken Robert Frost Acquainted with the Night Robert Frost Fire and Ice Robert Frost Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening ------------James Baldwin Notes of a Native Son George Orwell Shooting an Elephant ------------Tennessee Williams A Glass Menagerie Terrence McNally Andre’s Mother Suggestions for Writing: Drama About Life Passages Further Suggestions for Writing: Literature About Life’s Journey Connections: Art and Poetry RANDALL JARRELL, The Knight, Death, and the Devil Albrecht Durer’s Knight, Death, and the Devil ANNE SEXTON, The Starry Night Latin American Fiction Jorge Luis Borges n The Gospel According to Mark**** Gabriel García Márquez n A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings **Isabel Allende n The Judge’s Wife*** 15. THE INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIETY – Conformity, Rebellion, & Dissent – The Individual vs Authority Shirley Jackson The Lottery Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Harrison Bergeron Ursula K. Le Guin The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night Pieter Breughel the Elder’s Landscape with the Fall of Icarus W.H. AUDEN, Musee des Beaux Arts Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks SAMUEL YELLEN, Nighthawks DONALD HALL, The Scream Edvard Munch’s The Scream NATALIE SAFIR, Matisse’s Dance Henri Matisse’s Dance WALLACE STEVENS, The Man With the Blue Guitar Pablo Picasso’s The Old Guitarist PATRICIA HAMPL, Woman Before an Aquarium Henri Matisse’s Woman Before an Aquarium ADAM ZAGAJEWSKI, Edgar Degas: The Millinery Shop Edgar Degas’s The Millinery Shop JON STALLWORTHY, Toulouse-Lautrec at the Moulin Rouge Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, At the Moulin Rouge *MARTHA HOLLANDER, The Phantom Cart Salvador Dali, The Phantom Cart Edward Hopper, Rooms by the Sea *JOHN HOLLANDER, Rooms By the Sea *KARL KIRCHWEY, Dialogue Albert Giacometti, Hands Holding the Void *MARILYN CHANDLER McENTRYRE, Jesus and theWoman at the Well Rembrant van Rijn, Christ and the Woman of Samaria Making Connections with Painting and Poetry Pieter Brueghel the Elder: Landscape with the Fall of Icarus W. H. Auden: Musée des Beaux Arts Alan Devenish: Icarus Again Lun Yi Tsai Disbelief Lucille Clifton--tuesday 9/11/01 Edward Hopper: Nighthawks Samuel Yellen: Nighthawks Vincent van Gogh: Starry Night Anne Sexton: The Starry Night Henri Matisse: Dance Natalie Safir: Matisse’s Dance Inés Arredondo n The Shunammite Ha Jin Saboteur Ernest Hemingway A Clean Well-Lighted Place Ralph Ellison Battle Royal John Cheever The Swimmer ------------Allen Ginsberg A Supermarket in California Anne Sexton Her Kind Pablo Neruda Muchos Somos / We Are Many Walt Whitman I Hear America Singing Paul Laurence Dunbar Sympathy Robert Frost Mending Wall W. H. Auden The Unknown Citizen Emily Dickinson I’m Nobody! Who are you? Emily Dickinson The Soul selects her own Society Emily Dickinson This is my letter to the World Emily Dickinson Much Madness is divinest Sense Emily Dickinson Some keep the Sabbath going to Church ------------Martin Luther King Jr. Letter from Birmingham Jail Henry David Thoreau On Civil Disobedience Maxine Hong Kingston No Name Woman ------------Sophocles Antigonê Further Suggestions for Writing: Literature About the Individual and Society Kitagawa utamaro: Two Women Dressing Their Hair Cathy Song: Beauty and Sadness Edwin Romanzo Elmer: Mourning Picture Adrienne Rich: Mourning Picture Jan Vermeer: The Loveletter Sandra Nelson: When a Woman Holds a Letter A Student’s Comparison and Contrast Essay: Process and Product Exploring Poetry and Painting: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research Women and Men Robert Olen Butler, Jealous Husband Returns in Form of Parrot Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper Ernest Hemingway, Hills Like White Elephants D. H. Lawrence, The Horse Dealer’s Daughter Bobbie Ann Mason, Shiloh Rosario Morales, The Day It Happened ----------------Christopher Marlowe, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Walter Raleigh, The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd Andrew Marvell, To His Coy Mistress Maya Angelou, Phenomenal Woman Margaret Atwood, You Fit into Me Elizabeth Barrett Browning, How Do I Love Thee? Robert Browning, Porphyria’s Lover Sharon Olds, Rite of Passage Edna St. Vincent Millay, What Lips My Lips Have Kissed, and Where, and Why Love Is Not All Sharon Olds, Sex Without Love Sylvia Plath, Mirror William Shakespeare, Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day? (Sonnet No. 18) William Shakespeare, My Mistress’ Eyes Are Nothing Like the Sun (Sonnet No. 130) Anne Sexton, Cinderella ----------------Anton Chekhov, The Proposal Susan Glaspell, Trifles Henrik Ibsen, A Doll’s House ----------------Virginia Woolf, If Shakespeare Had a Sister Faith and Doubt Raymond Carver, Cathedral Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried Flannery O’Connor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find ----------------John Donne, Death, Be Not Proud John Keats, When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be Mary Oliver, When Death Comes Matthew Arnold, Dover Beach Robert Frost, Fire and Ice Walt Whitman, Song of Myself Thomas Hardy, Hap Connecting Through Comparison: The Impact of War Thomas Hardy, The Man He Killed Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est A. E. Housman, To an Athlete Dying Young Pablo Neruda, The Dead Woman Dylan Thomas, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night ----------------David Mamet, Oleanna John Millington Synge, Riders to the Sea Anton Chekhov, The Swan Song John Galsworthy, The Sun ----------------Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus Plato, The Allegory of the Cave 10. Beliefs and Ethics: The Worlds around Us / Images of Good and Evil in the World Genesis Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown Kate Chopin, The Story of an Hour Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried Robert Frost, Fire and Ice John Donne, Death, Be Not Proud Dylan Thomas, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night Emily Dickinson, I like a look of Agony Emily Dickinson, Because I could not stop for Death — *8. Cultural and Historical Contexts: Women in Turn-ofthe-Century America 1. KATE CHOPIN, The Story of an Hour 2. CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, The Yellow Wallpaper 3. *SUSAN GLASPELL, A Jury of Her Peers 4. *CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, from Similar Cases 5. *CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, from Women and Economics 6. *BARBARA BOYD, “Heart and Home Talks: Politics and Milk” 7. *MRS. ARTHUR LYTTELTON, from Women and Their Work 8. *RHETA CHILDE DORR, What Eight Million Women Want 9. *NEW YORK TIMES, December 1, 1892, Mrs. Delong Acquitted: She Killed Her Husband, But the Jury Has Set Her Free 10. *THE WASHINGTON POST, November 28, 1909,The Chances of Divorce 11. *CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, How I Came To Write ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ 12. *THE WASHINGTON POST, August 4, 1902, The Rest Cure 13. *THE WASHINGTON POST, September 10, 1905, Egotism of the Rest Cure 1. 2. *Exploring Gender: An Album 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. RICHARD LOVELACE, Song: To Lucasta, Going to the Wars MARY, LADY CHUDLEIGH, To the Ladies *WILFRED OWEN, Disabled AMY LOWELL, The Lonely Wife ELIZABETH BISHOP, Exchanging Hats PAULETTE JILES, Paper Matches DAVID WAGONER, My Father’s Garden *JUDITH ORTIZ COFER, The Changeling LIZ ROSENBERG, The Silence of Women Emily Dickinson, I felt a Funeral, in my Brain Emily Dickinson, I heard a Fly buzz — when I died — Emily Dickinson, It was not Death, for I stood up Emily Dickinson, A Toad, can die of Light — Emily Dickinson, Tell all the Truth but tell it slant — Wilfrid Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est Carolyn Forché, The Colonel Sophocles, Antigone ” Romantic Movement Poetic Form: Elegy American Lit Anne Bradstreet – To My Dear and Loving Husband Jonathan Edwards – Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God Phyllis Wheatley – On Being Brought to America from Africa Washington Irving – William Cullen Bryant Ralph Waldo Emerson Nathaniel Hawthorne Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Edgar Allan Poe Walt Whitman Henry David Thoreau The Poetry of Emily Dickinson PART 3 The Reader’s World: Exploring The Themes Of Literature 10. MARIE HOWE, Practicing Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Emily Dickinson Henry James Mark Twain Ambrose Bierce Henry James – Daisy Miller Kate Chopin Charlotte Perkins Gilman Edith Wharton – Roman Fever Stephen Crane – The Open Boat, War is Kind, The Blue Hotel Paul Laurence Dunbar – We Wear the Mask Jack London – To Build a Fire Edwin Arlington Robinson – Richard Cory, Miniver Cheevy Willa Cather – The Sculptor’s Funeral Amy Lowell Carl Sandburg Wallace Stevens Mina Loy William Carlos Williams Ezra Pound H.D. – Hilda Doolittle Marianne Moore T.S. Eliot – Prfrock, Wasteland, The Hollow Men, Journey of the Magi Claude McKay Edna St. Vincent Millay Zora Neale Hurston e.e. Cummings F. Scott Fitzgerald – Babylon Revisited William Faulkner – A Rose for Emily, Barn Burning Hart Crane Ernest Hemingway – The Snows of Kilimanjaro Langston Hughes John Steinbeck – The Leader of the People Countee Cullen – Yet Do I Marvel, Incident, Heritage Richard Wright – The Man Who Was Almost a Man Since 1945 Theodore Roethke – Eudora Welty – Petrified Man Elizabeth Bishop John Cheever – The Swimmer Robert Hayden – Middle Passage, Those Winter Sundays Randall Jarrell – The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner, Thinking of the Lost World Ralph Ellison – Battle Royal Saul Bellow Arthur Miller Robert Lowell – The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket, For the Union Dead Gwendolyn Brooks Jack Kerouac – Big Sur Denise Leveretov James Baldwin Flannery O’Connor A.R. Ammons Allen Ginsberg – Howl, A Supermarket in California Galway Kinnell – The Porcupine, After Making Love We Hear Footsteps John Ashberry James Wright Anne Sexton Adrienne Rich – Storm Warnings, A Valediction Forbidden Morning Gary Snyder Toni Morrison Sylvia Plath – Morning Song, Lady Lazarus, Daddy, Blackberry, Child John Updike Philip Roth – Defender of the Faith Audre Lorde Amiri Baraka N. Scott Momaday Lucile Clifton Thomas Pynchon Michael S. Harper Raymond Carver – Cathedral Maxine Hong Kingston – No Name Woman Billy Collins Simon J. Ortiz Gloria Anzaldua Alice Walker – Everyday Use Yusef Komunyakaa Leslie Marmon Silko Julia Alvarez Jorie Graham Joy Harjo Rita Dove Alberto Rios Sandra Cisneros Louis Erdich Cathy Song Li-Young Lee – Persimmons, Eating Alone, Eating Together Sherman Alexie Jhumpa Lahiri The Norton Introduction to Literature Shorter Tenth Edition JOHN KEATS, On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer ANONYMOUS, The Elephant in the Village of the Blind RAYMOND CARVER, Cathedral 2. Narration and Point of View 1. EDGAR ALLAN POE, The Cask of Amontillado 2. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, Hills Like White Elephants 3. LORRIE MOORE, How 4. JAMAICA KINCAID, Girl 1. Plot 1. 2. 3. 4. *JACOB AND WILHELM GRIMM, The Little Shroud *GUY DE MAUPASSANT, The Jewelry JAMES BALDWIN, Sonny’s Blues EDITH WHARTON, Roman Fever 3. Character 1. *CHARLOTTE BRONTË, from Jane Eyre 2. *WILLIAM FAULKNER, Barn Burning 3. *TONI MORRISON, Recitatif 4. *HA JIN, In Broad Daylight 4. Setting 1. *ITALO CALVINO, from Invisible Cities 2. *MARGARET MITCHELL, from Gone with the Wind 3. *ALICE RANDALL, from The Wind Done Gone 4. ANTON CHEKHOV, The Lady with the Dog 5. KATHERINE ANNE PORTER, Flowering Judas 6. AMY TAN, A Pair of Tickets 7. *Student Writing: STEPHEN MATVIEW, … Setting in ‘The Lady with the Dog’ 5. Symbol 1. *NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, The Birthmark 2. A. S. BYATT, The Thing in the Forest 3. EDWIDGE DANTICAT, A Wall of Fire Rising 6. Theme 1. *AESOP, The Two Crabs 2. STEPHEN CRANE, The Open Boat 3. GABRIEL GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ, A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings 4. LOUISE ERDRICH, Love Medicine 5. YASUNARA KAWABATA, The Grasshopper and the Bell Cricket Exploring Contexts MARGARET ATWOOD, Scarlet Ibis AMBROSE BIERCE, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge JORGE LOUIS BORGES, The Garden of Forking Paths MICHAEL CHABON, The Lost World *RALPH ELLISON, King of the Bingo Game Reading 1. Reading Poems: Four Examples 2. 1. ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING, How Do I Love Thee? 2. JAROLD RAMSAY, The Tally Stick 3. LINDA PASTAN, love poem 4. LIZ ROSENBERG, Married Love Responding 1. BEN JONSON, On My First Son 2. HOWARD NEMEROV, The Vacuum 3. Responding to Poems: An Exercise 4. 1. RITA DOVE, Fifth Grade Autobiography 2. ANNE SEXTON, The Fury of Overshoes 3. SEAMUS HEANEY, Mid-Term Break 5. Responding to Poetry: Eight Concrete Steps and An Example 6. 1. APHRA BEHN, On Her Loving Two Equally Reading, Responding, Writing Writing 1. STEPHEN BORLAND, response paper on Auden’s “Stop All the Clocks” 2. *Sample Writing: Multiplying by Dividing in Aphra Behn’s ‘On Her Loving Two Equally 10. Theme and Tone 3. Listening to Tone 4. 1. MARGE PIERCY, Barbie Doll 2. W. D. SNODGRASS, Leaving the Motel 3. THOM GUNN, In Time of Plague 11. Speaker: Whose Voice Do We Hear? 3. THOMAS HARDY, The Ruined Maid 4. X. J. KENNEDY, In a Prominent Bar in Secaucus One Day 5. MARGARET ATWOOD, Death of a Young Son by Drowning 6. ROBERT BROWNING, Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister 7. DOROTHY PARKER, A Certain Lady 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. ETHERIDGE KNIGHT, Hard Rock Returns to Prison from the Hospital for the Criminal Insane Setting as Theme 1. WILLIAM BLAKE, London Animal Poems: An Exercise in Subject, Theme, and Tone 1. 2. 8. 9. Author Versus Speaker 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways AUDRE LORDE, Hanging Fire ROBERT BURNS, To a Louse GWENDOLYN BROOKS, We Real Cool WALT WHITMAN, [I celebrate myself, and sing myself] MAXINE KUMIN, Woodchucks ADRIENNE RICH, Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers 12. Situation and Setting: What Happens? Where? When? 1. Situations: Caring for Children 2. 1. RITA DOVE, Daystar 2. LINDA PASTAN, To a Daughter Leaving Home 3. Historical Contexts and Settings: Some Examples 4. 1. JOHN MILTON, On the Late Massacre in Piedmont 2. MATTHEW ARNOLD, Dover Beach 3. JOHN BETJEMAN, In Westminster Abbey 5. Situation and Setting: Preparing a Response Paper 6. 1. JAMES DICKEY, Cherrylog Road 7. Two Carpe Diem Poems 8. 1. JOHN DONNE, The Flea 2. ANDREW MARVELL, To His Coy Mistress 9. Poems of Varied Situations and Settings 10. 1. EMILY BRONTË, The Night-Wind 2. SYLVIA PLATH, Point Shirley 3. DEREK WALCOTT, Midsummer 4. EARLE BIRNEY, Irapuato 11. *Morning: An Album 12. 1. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Full many a glorious morning have I seen] 2. JOHN DONNE, The Good-Morrow 3. SYLVIA PLATH, Morning Song 4. BILLY COLLINS, Morning 5. JONATHAN SWIFT, A Description of the Morning 13. *Cultural Homelands: An Album 14. 1. PHILLIS WHEATLEY, On Being Brought from Africa to America 2. MAYA ANGELOU, Africa 3. DEREK WALCOTT, A Far Cry from Africa 4. AGHA SHAHID ALI, Postcard from Kashmir Understanding the Text 13. Language 1. Precision and Ambiguity, Denotation and Connotation 2. 1. SARA CLEGHORN, [The golf links lie so near the mill] 2. ANNE FINCH, Countess of Winchelsea, There’s No To-Morrow 3. CHARLES BERNSTEIN, Of Time and the Line 4. WALTER DE LA MARE, Slim Cunning Hands 5. THEODORE ROETHKE, My Papa’s Waltz 3. Word Order and Word Placement 4. 1. SHARON OLDS, Sex Without Love 2. YVOR WINTERS, At the San Francisco Airport 3. MARTHA COLLINS, Lies 4. EMILY DICKINSON, [I dwell in Possibility—] 5. WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS, The Red Wheelbarrow 6. 1. This is Just to Say 7. GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS, Pied Beauty 8. E. E. CUMMINGS, [in Just—] 9. *BARBARA HAMBY, Ode to American English 5. Picturing: The Languages of Description 6. 1. OSCAR WILDE, Symphony in Yellow 2. RICHARD WILBUR, The Beautiful Changes 3. ANDREW MARVELL, On a Drop of Dew 4. *LYNN POWELL, Kind of Blue 7. Metaphor and Personification 8. 1. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [That time of year thou mayest in me behold] 2. LINDA PASTAN, Marks 9. Simile and Analogy 10. 1. ROBERT BURNS, A Red, Red Rose 2. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?] 3. ANONYMOUS, The Twenty-third Psalm 4. JOHN DONNE, [Batter my heart, three-personed God] 5. 1. The Canonization 6. DAVID FERRY, At the Hospital 7. RANDALL JARRELL, The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner 8. WILFRED OWEN, Dulce et Decorum Est 9. 11. Symbol 12. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 14. The Sounds of Poetry 1. Sound Poems: Some Examples 2. 1. HELEN CHASIN, The Word Plum 2. MONA VAN DUYN, What the Motorcycle Said 3. KENNETH FEARING, Dirge 4. ALEXANDER POPE, Sound and Sense 3. Poetic Meter 4. 1. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE, Metrical Feet 5. Practicing Scansion (Reading Meter) 6. 1. ANONYMOUS, [There was a young girl from St. Paul] 2. *ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON, from The Charge of the Light Brigade 3. SIR JOHN SUCKLING, Song 4. JOHN DRYDEN, To the Memory of Mr. Oldham 5. EDGAR ALLAN POE, The Raven 6. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Like as the waves …] 7. JAMES MERRILL, Watching the Dance 8. GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS, Spring and Fall 9. EMILY DICKINSON, [A narrow Fellow in the Grass] 7. *Words and Music: An Album 8. 1. THOMAS CAMPION, When to Her Lute Corinna Sings 2. *WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Spring 3. AUGUSTUS MONTAGUE TOPLADY, A Prayer, Living and Dying 4. ROBERT HAYDEN, Homage to the Empress of the Blues 5. MICHAEL HARPER, Dear John, Dear Coltrane 6. *BOB DYLAN, Mr. Tambourine Man 16. External Form 1. The Sonnet 2. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, Nuns Fret Not JOHN MILTON, [When I consider how my light is spent] *HARRYETTE MULLEN, Wipe That Smile Off Your Aphasia JAMES DICKEY, The Leap EDMUND WALLER, Song D. H. LAWRENCE, I Am Like a Rose DOROTHY PARKER, One Perfect Rose WILLIAM BLAKE, The Sick Rose SHARON OLDS, Leningrad Cemetery, Winter of 1941 ROBERT FROST, Fireflies in the Garden ADRIENNE RICH, Diving into the Wreck ROO BORSON, After a Death DENISE LEVERTOV, Wedding-Ring 15. Internal Structure 1. Narrative Poems 2. 1. EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON, Mr. Flood’s Party 3. Dramatic Poems 4. 1. HOWARD NEMEROV, The Goose Fish 2. PHILIP LARKIN, Church Going 3. PAT MORA, Sonrisas 5. Other Types of Poetic Structure 6. Structure and Shifts 7. 1. SHARON OLDS, The Victims 2. ANONYMOUS, Sir Patrick Spens 3. WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS, The Dance 4. EMILY DICKINSON, [The Wind begun to knead the Grass —] 5. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, [Th’ expense of spirit in a waste of shame] 6. CATHY SONG, Heaven 7. STEPHEN DUNN, Poetry 8. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY, Ode to the West Wind 9. *Student Writing: LINDSAY GIBSON, Philip Larkin’s “Church Going” ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING, [When our two souls stand up] ARCHIBALD MACLEISH, Ars Poetica BEN JONSON, [Come, my Celia, let us prove] BASHO, [A village without bells—[This road—] ALLEN GINSBERG, [The old pond], ALLEN GINSBERG, [Looking over my shoulder] SYLVIA PLATH, Lady Lazarus LANGSTON HUGHES, Harlem , The Negro Speaks of Rivers HELENE JOHNSON, Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem ZORA NEALE HURSTON, How It Feels to Be Colored Me PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR, Sympathy, We Wear the Mask THOMAS GRAY, Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard WALT WHITMAN, A Noiseless Patient Spider WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, Lines Written a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey Exploring Contexts: The Author’s Work as Context Conformity & Rebellion Love & Hate Innocence & Experience Presence of Identity Culture & Identity Theme Conformity & Rebellion Love & Hate Genre Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Author William Wordsworth William Wordsworth William Wordsworth William Wordsworth Francis Petrarch Francis Petrarch Chronology (1770 – 1850) (1770 – 1850) (1770 – 1850) (1770 – 1850) (1304 – 1374) (1304 – 1374) Country GB GB GB GB Italian Italian Title Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey Ode on Intimations of Immortality Composed on Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 The World is Too Much with US Sonnet 3 – (“It was the morning of that blessed day”) Sonnet 61 – (“Blest be the day , and blest the month and year”) Source World Masterpieces, p. 2275 World Masterpieces, p. 2279 World Masterpieces, p. 2283 Abcarian, p.398 World Masterpieces, p. 1486 World Masterpieces, p. 1486 Innocence & Experience Innocence & Experience Innocence & Experience Conformity & Rebellion Conformity & Rebellion Conformity & Rebellion Presence of Death Presence of Death Love & Hate Love & Hate Conformity & Rebellion Presence of Death Presence of Death Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Francis Petrarch Francis Petrarch Francis Petrarch George Gordon, Lord Byron John Keats John Keats Walt Whitman Walt Whitman Thomas Hardy Andrew Marvell Dylan Thomas John Donne Percy Bysshe Shelley William Blake Robert Browning Mathew Arnold Samuel Taylor Coleridge Christopher Marlowe Sir Walter Raleigh Robert Frost W.H. Auden Alfred Lord Tennyson William Butler Yeats Elizabeth Bishop A. E. Houseman Anne Bradstreet Anonymous Dudley Randall Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Galway Kinnell John Keats Langston Hughes Langston Hughes Phillis Wheatley Robert Burns Robert Frost Robert Frost Robert Frost Robert Hayden Robert Frost Aphra Behn Theodore Roethke William Blake William Blake T.S. Eliot Wilfred Owen William Butler Yeats William Butler Yeats (1304 – 1374) (1304 – 1374) (1304 – 1374) (1788 – 1824) (1795 – 1821) (1795 – 1821) (1819 – 1892) (1819 – 1892) (1840 – 1928) (1621 – 1678) (1914 – 1953) (1572 – 1631) (1792 – 1822) (1757 – 1827) (1812 – 1889) (1822 – 1888) (1772 – 1834) (1564 – 1593) (1564 – 1618) (1874 – 1963) (1907 – 1973) (1809 – 1902) (1865 – 1939) (1911 – 1979) (1859 – 1936) (1612 – 1672) Italian Italian Italian English English English American American English English English English English English (1914 – 2000) (1830 – 1886) (1830 – 1886) (1830 – 1886) (1830 – 1886) (1830 – 1886) (1927 (1795- 1821) (1902 – 1967) (1902 – 1967) (1753 – 1784) (1759 – 1796) (1874 – 1963) (1874 – 1963) (1874 – 1963) (1913 – 1980) (1874 – 1963) (1640 – 1689) (1908 – 1963) (1757 – 1827) (1757 – 1827) (1888 – 1965) (1893 – 1918) (1865 – 1939) (1865 – 1939) American American American American American American English English American English Irish American American English American American American American American American American English English Irish Irish Sonnet 90 – (“She used to let her golden hair fly free”_ Sonnet 292 – (“The eyes that from me such fervent praise”) Sonnet 333 – (“Go, grieving rimes of mine, to that hard stone”) The Destruction of Sennacherib On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer Ode to a Grecian Urn When I heard the learn’d astronomer From Song of Myself The Man He Killed To His Coy Mistress Do not go gentle into that good night Death, be not proud Ozymandias London My Last Duchess Dover Beach Kubla Kahn The Passionate Shepard to His Love The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepard Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening The Unknown Citizen Ulysses Easter 1916 The Fish To An Athlete Dying Young To My Dear and Loving Husband Bonny Barbara Allan Ballad of Birmingham Because I Could Not Stop for Death I Heard a Fly Buzz – When I Died There is no Frigate like a Book Some keep the Sabbath going to Church I died for Beauty – but was scarce Blackberry Eating La Belle Dame sans Merci Harlem Mother to Son On Being Brought from Africa to America A Red, Red Rose Fire and Ice The Road Not Taken The Mending Wall Those Winter Sundays Birches On Her Loving Two Equally Elegy for Jane A Poison Tree The Tygre The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock Dulce et Decorum Est Leda and the Swan Sailing to Byzantium World Masterpieces, p. 1487 World Masterpieces, p. 1487 World Masterpieces, p. 1487 DiYanni, p. 830 Abcarian, p. 141 Abcarian, p. 1185 Abcarian, p. 12 Abcarian, p. 671 Abcarian, p. 431 Abcarian, p. 950 Abcarian, p. 1217 Abcarian, p. 1184 Abcarian, p. 1185 Abcarian, p. 140 Abcarian, p. 142 Abcarian, p. 920 DiYanni, p 1086 Abcarian, p. 949 Abcarian, p. 948 Abcarian, p.1196 Abcarian, p. 415 Abcarian, p. 399 Abcarian, p. 402 Abcarian, p. 1229 Abcarian, p. 1190 Abcarian, p. 917 Abcarian, p. 908 Abcarian, p. 416 Abcarian, p. 1189 Abcarian, p. 1188 Abcarian, p. 3 DiYanni, p. 921 DiYanni, p. 926 DiYanni, p. 1182 Abcarian, p. 414 Abcarian, p. 176 Abcarian, p. 397 Abcarian, p. 920 Abcarian, p. 922 Abcarian, p. 149 DiYanni, p. 960 Abcarian, p. 944 Abcarian, p. 150 Abcarian, p. 917 Abcarian, p. 1198 Abcarian, p. 919 Abcarian, p. 140 Abcarian, p. 646 Abcarian, p. 435 Abcarian, p. 149 Abcarian, p. 1191 (1883 – 1963) (1564 – 1616) Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry Poetry William Carlos Williams William Shakespeare Anoymous Sappho of Lesbos Catullus Edgar Allen Poe Edwin Arlington Robinson Alfred Lord Tennyson (1869 – 1935) (1809 – 1892) Poetry Poetry Poetry Walt Whitman Rudyard Kipling Wallace Stevens (1819 – 1892) (1865 – 1935) ( 630 B.C. 84 – 54 BC Henry Wadsworth Longfellow American Sonnet 73 – “That time of year thou mayst in me behold Psalm 23 Throned in splendor, deathless, O Aphrodite 5 – “Come, Lesbia, let us live and love” 87 – “No woman, if she is honest, can say that she’s” The Day is Done Paul Revere’s Ride The Raven Richard Cory The Charge of the Light Brigade O Captain! My Captain! IfThirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird Abcarian, p. 1183 World Masterpieces, p. 337 World Masterpieces, p. 632 World Masterpieces, p. 633 H 5’ Lib v 42 – p. 1274 Abcarian, p. 1192