Thursday, 6 November 2014

Poems About Life And Love

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Poems About Life And Love Biography

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George Meredith was a major Victorian novelist whose career developed in conjunction with an era of great change in English literature during the second half of the nineteenth century. While his early novels largely conformed to Victorian literary conventions, his later novels demonstrated a concern with character psychology, modern social problems, and the development of the novel form that has led to his being considered an important precursor of English Modernist novels. In particular, Meredith is noted as one of the earliest English psychological novelists and as an important experimenter with narrative told from a variety of shifting, unreliable perspectives, reflecting a modern perception of the uncertain nature of both personal motivation and of social or historical events.

Meredith was born in Portsmouth, England. His father inherited a seemingly prosperous Portsmouth naval outfitters and tailor shop from Meredith's grandfather but soon discovered that one reason for the shop's popularity with customers was that delinquent bills were rarely pursued. The Merediths ran the failing business at a loss for several years while living extravagantly on the dowry that Meredith's mother had brought into the marriage. Considering themselves superior to ordinary tradespeople, the Merediths unsuccessfully attempted to establish themselves as the social equals of the elegant patrons of the tailor shop. Meredith was sent to private schools and quickly learned to say nothing of his family's position, instead encouraging the assumption that he was of the gentry. Meredith remained secretive about his origins all his life, and much is unknown about his childhood because of his unwillingness to disclose details of this period.

When Meredith was five his mother died, leaving her money in a trust for her son's education. Lacking access to these funds for his business, Meredith's father was forced into bankruptcy. The boy was sent to boarding schools and had very little contact with his father thereafter. At fourteen Meredith was sent to school in Neuwied, Germany, where he remained for two years, leaving with a love of German culture, especially music, that lasted the rest of his life. Upon Meredith's return to England, his father wanted to apprentice him to a bookseller and publisher, but Meredith, disinclined to follow the advice of a man he considered "a muddler and a fool," found a post for himself assisting an attorney, for whom he worked for five years.

As he entered his early twenties, Meredith began writing poetry, influenced in particular by John Keats and Lord Tennyson. He became acquainted with Edward Gryffydh Peacock and Mary Nicolls, the son and widowed daughter of the satirist Thomas Love Peacock, a man he admired. With the younger Peacock he collaborated on the publication of a privately circulated literary magazine, the Monthly Observer, to which he submitted his own poetry and critical essays. A tempestuous relationship with Nicolls culminated in their marriage in 1849, but the marriage was neither a happy nor a lasting one, in part due to Meredith's precarious financial situation. Although his father-in-law offered to secure him an office position, Meredith preferred to try to make his living by his pen. However, his first book, Poems, a volume published at his own expense, attracted little notice and never recouped printing costs. During the first years of their marriage Nicolls suffered several miscarriages and stillbirths, while Meredith developed nervous and digestive disorders that led him to demand a highly specialized diet. Nicolls turned this to financial advantage by writing and publishing, with her father's help, a successful cookbook. In 1853, with Nicolls again pregnant, the couple's financial difficulties forced them to move in with Thomas Love Peacock. Peacock could not adjust to the disruption of his household, which was exacerbated by the birth of the Merediths' son Arthur later that year, and he eventually quit his own house to take rooms elsewhere.

By 1856 Meredith and his wife were living apart, and in 1858 she left for Italy with another man, leaving Meredith alone with five-year-old Arthur. When she returned to England years later, alone and seriously ill, Meredith refused to let her see their son until shortly before her death. Meredith's lifetime of reticence about his early years carried over into a stolid refusal to discuss his first marriage, though critics maintain that the sonnet cycle Modern Love, which painstakingly details the dissolution of a marriage, actually chronicles that event. Meredith's subsequent relationships with women proved for some time unsatisfactory. He fell in love with a much younger woman whose socially prominent parents cultivated the rising novelist as a valuable social asset, but refused to consider him a suitable match for their daughter. Meredith lived alone or with male friends for years, traveling extensively in Switzerland, France, and Italy. In London he shared a house briefly with Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Algernon Charles Swinburne, but, unprepared for their unconventional way of life, soon took single lodgings. Upon his second marriage in 1864, Meredith settled at Box Hill, Surrey, where he lived the rest of his life.

During the 1850s Meredith began to receive an income from magazine writing and was thus encouraged to attempt a longer prose work. His first work of fiction, The Shaving of Shagpat: An Arabian Entertainment, is a lighthearted fantasy that contains a number of themes that recur throughout Meredith's career, including ridicule of social conventions and disdain for social climbers, and features as a central character a young man whose growth to maturity is aided by a woman. The favorable reception of Shagpat inspired Meredith to write a serious novel, The Ordeal of Richard Feverel: A History of Father and Son. In this partially autobiographical work, a man is abandoned with an infant son by his wife and brings up the child according to a strict scientific system designed to insure that the boy will accept his father's social, political, and ideological beliefs, and will ultimately select an ideal mate who will prove faithful. However, the son eventually rebels against the debilitating and stifling environment created by his father and marries a woman of the lower classes. The novel contained a great deal of irony at the expense of both the characters and the conventions of Victorian society and created a stir due to its sarcastic tone and freethinking atheism. Moreover, many reviewers misread the work as an attack on science or scientific systems in general, despite Meredith's claim that "the moral is that no System of any sort succeeds with human nature, unless the originator has conceived it purely independent of personal passion." The novel also lost many readers when Mudie's lending library refused to circulate it because it depicted extramarital sex. Thus, after promising early sales, the novel fell both in critical and public regard.

Following the failure of The Ordeal of Richard Feverel, Meredith entered into a complex relationship with his readers, attempting, according to Ioan Williams, "to reconcile his artistic purpose with the demands of the reading public." Most critics agree that during the period from 1860 to 1875, Meredith was very responsive to the desires of the book-buying public. Several critics have theorized that Meredith tried in each new novel to correct the faults that had been criticized in the last, and to incorporate elements that would appeal to Victorian readers. As a part-time reader for Chapman and Hall publishers, Meredith was able to observe literary trends and to employ them in his early novels. In Emilia in England and its sequel Vittoria, for example, Meredith was inspired by the current interest in local-color fiction to give the heroine a vividly realized Italian background and to introduce historical figures and events into the story. Despite the introduction of fictional devices and elements that had proved successful for many other writers of the time, Meredith was unable to attract either readers or favorable critical notice. Some critics contend that Meredith's attempts to craft his books to the public taste by utilizing literary conventions was a calculated attempt on his part to couch his radical ideas concerning the impermanent nature of human values and the inconstancy of human nature in a form that would be acceptable to his readers. It is now commonly accepted by critics that Meredith possessed what Judith Wilt has called a "sensitive and aggressive awareness of the presence, at the heart of his creative art, of the reader." This assumption contradicts the widely held belief that he wrote in lofty disregard of his readers out of a single-minded dedication to his own artistic values. This estimation was reached by some commentators when Meredith, after years of courting a broad readership, professed his contempt for readers in angry statements that his books were ignored by an unworthy and hypocritical public. Once he despaired of reaching a large audience, Meredith began to write primarily to please himself and the small circle of admirers who had defended and praised his works from the first. It was then that he found his works more popular than at any other time in his career.

Meredith's early novels share a number of characteristics of plot and style. Walter F. Wright has written that "without being autobiography, Meredith's creative work manifests the qualities revealed in his own life," and this is most noticeable in the novels written before 1876. The novels often open with a single father, abandoned by his wife or widowed, raising a son alone. The son's growth to young manhood and experiences with first love—often ending in tragedy—occupy many of the early novels. Many of them portray the marriage of an upper-class man with a woman of the lower classes, and the antagonisms resulting from differences between the classes is a recurring subject. These early novels contain Meredith's nascent attempts at psychological portraiture, and are typically concerned with demonstrating the instability of human nature as they satirically attack egoism, pretense, snobbery, and false values.

Meredith's most critically acclaimed work is the 1877 lecture An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comic Spirit, printed in the New Quarterly Magazine and published separately twenty years later. In this essay, which Arthur Symons called "his most brilliant piece of sustained writing," Meredith did not discuss comedy in general terms, but rather expounded on the comic approach that characterized his own fiction. Meredith contended that great comedy rectifies the excesses of human behavior by permitting audiences to laugh at their own foibles, depicting, according to Joseph Warren Beach, "the discrepancy between the real and the supposed motive" for human actions. True comedy thus has a beneficial social effect. For that reason Meredith asserted that true comedy is both "impersonal" and "thoughtful" and can only appear in a civilized nation. The novel The Egoist, written immediately after the essay on comedy, is the most successful example of his comic method and remains his most critically praised novel. In this comedy of manners, Meredith attacked a widely embraced element in the thought of John Stuart Mill, who held that individuals could think and do as they wished provided that they did no harm to others. Meredith demonstrated through the character of Sir Willoughby Patterne that such a belief was both alienating and harmful in that it ultimately denied the legitimacy of other opinions through the domination of egoistic individuals. Critical consensus is that with this work Meredith most successfully combined his theory of comedy, writing style, and thematic concerns. With The Egoist, Meredith finally achieved popular success and his popularity grew with subsequent novels.

Following The Egoist, Meredith was most concerned with writing psychological novels that portrayed the tangled motivations of individuals and explored the disparity between the public and private aspects of self. These later novels demonstrate a heightened social awareness, a more tolerant view of human folly, and a corresponding softening of the satiric and ironic portraits of individuals. In these works there is no clear explanation of individual behavior, but rather an examination of the various ways that individuals and their actions are perceived. Often it is unclear what actually happens in the novels, and the reader is forced to extract the truth from the gossip, half-truths, and misdirection arising from the different characters' perceptions; in many cases Meredith gave several versions of the same event through the eyes of several characters. Critics contend that in Meredith's experiments with the novel form and with complex characterizations can be seen the germ of the modern psychological novel. Throughout these works Meredith sought to demonstrate that most human motivations are concealed and that, while much in life is relative, including morality, actions are not: once something has happened, it is unchangeable and often irredeemable.

The most popular and artistically successful of Meredith's later works was Diana of the Crossways, a novel inspired by a scandal involving an adulterous woman accused of selling a state secret. It has been theorized that readers were attracted by the belief that in this novel Meredith was revealing some inside information about this widely discussed affair; in fact, so many readers assumed that the novel reflected the facts of the scandal that later editions contained disclaimers disallowing any connection between Meredith's creation and the affair. The character of Diana, who leaves her husband to pursue a writing career, became a favorite with feminists and the prototype of many subsequent novel heroines who, misunderstood and unappreciated, strike out boldly on their own. Throughout his career Meredith had explored the circumscribed role of women in society, a topic known in his day as "the woman question," and had long contended that civilization can only flourish when men and women are equal. It was in Diana that his didactic intentions, novelistic devices, and analysis of character achieved their greatest unity.

Critics have been united in comparing Meredith with Thomas Hardy as a "poet-novelist" who considered poetry his true literary vocation but turned to writing novels for financial reasons. Meredith's poetry has received increasing attention in recent years and critics have noted that it follows the same course of development as his novels, moving from early examinations of the self in society to a later concern with broader social issues and defiance of the conventions of the form. In particular, Meredith explored new meters and stanzaic forms and experimented dramatically with syntax and grammar. Critics characterize his poetry as verbally dense, allusive, and metaphorical, and in many ways reflective of the late nineteenth-century inclination toward aesthetic artifice. Although "Modern Love" is considered his most important poetic achievement, several of his late poems provide important perspectives on his fiction, particularly a series of odes on the purpose of literature and the nature of the historical process. In these works, as well as in his novels, Meredith demonstrated his desire to challenge and overcome what he perceived as narrow and constrictive world views.

At the time of his death Meredith was considered one of England's premier men of letters. In the years since, his critical reputation has undergone several reassessments, although he has never enjoyed the resurgence in general popularity enjoyed by such Victorian novelists as Charles Dickens and Anthony Trollope. Several reasons have been cited for this. Meredith's novels feature very little action, relying instead on dialogue, or what Meredith called "action of the mind," to advance the story. This resulted in a popular perception of his novels as static and "talky." However, Meredith's prose is most often identified as the barrier that makes his works inaccessible to readers. Meredith's narrative style, making extensive use of metaphor, allusion, and aphorism, has been described by his admirers and detractors alike as so difficult that close rereadings of passages are frequently necessary to extract the meaning. Some critics contend that Meredith became so enamored of his mannered style that style itself became the end of his work and not the means to tell a story. His supporters, however, praise the poetic quality of Meredith's prose, maintaining that each line of Meredith's work is written in the allusive, rich language usually reserved for poetry. Although Meredith's career has undergone several reappraisals as new generations of critics rediscover his works, the difficulties presented by his narrative style have been cited as the factor that has discouraged a resurgence of widespread interest. However, as has been true throughout the history of commentary on Meredith, there remains a dedicated group of admirers who contend, with J. B. Priestley, that Meredith's difficult style, requiring as it does the full and undivided attention of the reader, paved the way for the public acceptance of much subsequent serious fiction, helping to shape "the modern attitude towards fiction and the modern novel itself."

CAREER

Author and journalist. Apprenticed as law clerk to Richard Charnock in London, 1846; founder, with Charnock and others, of Monthly Observer, late 1840s; literary critic for Westminster Review; journalist for Ipswich Journal, a Tory newspaper, around 1858-68, and contributor to other Conservative papers, including the Morning Post and Pall Mall Gazette; manuscript reader and literary adviser for Chapman and Hall, 1860-95, and reader for Saunders & Otley; war correspondent for Morning Post, covering Italy's battle for independence from Austria during the summer of 1866; contributor to Fortnightly Review, beginning 1867, served as editor, 1867-68; moved to Flint Cottage, near Dorking, England, 1868; became active in politics, canvassing for Frederick Maxse's unsuccessful campaign for a seat in Parliament, 1868; published series of dialogues in Graphic, December, 1872, to January, 1873; lectured on comedy at London Institute, 1877; London Library, vice president, 1902; continued to write occasionally for newspapers and magazines until shortly before his death.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Poems, Parker, 1851, Scribner, 1898.
The Shaving of Shagpat: An Arabian Entertainment, Chapman & Hall, 1856, Roberts Brothers, 1887.
Farina: A Legend of Cologne, Smith, Elder, 1857.
The Ordeal of Richard Feverel: A History of Father and Son, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1859, 1 volume, Roberts Brothers, 1887, reprint edited and introduced by John Halperin, Oxford University Press (New York City), 1984.
Evan Harrington; or, He Would Be a Gentleman, Harper, 1860, 3 volumes, Bradbury & Evans, 1861.
"Modern Love" and Poems of the English Roadside, with Poems and Ballads, Chapman & Hall, 1862, edited by E. Cavazza, Mosher, 1891.
Emilia in England, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1864, published as Sandra Belloni, Chapman & Hall, 1886, Roberts Brothers, 1887.
(Editor and author of introduction and concluding chapters) The Cruise of the Alabama and the Sumter: From the Private Journals and Other Papers of Commander R. Semmes, Saunders & Otley, 1864, Carleton, 1864.
Rhoda Fleming: A Story, 3 volumes, Tinsley, 1865, 1 volume, Roberts Brothers, 1886.
Vittoria, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1866, Roberts Brothers, 1888.
The Adventures of Harry Richmond, 3 volumes, Smith, Elder, 1871, 1 volume, Roberts Brothers, 1887.
Beauchamp's Career, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1876, 1 volume, Roberts Brothers, 1887, reprint edited and introduced by Margaret Harris, Oxford University Press, 1988.
The House on the Beach: A Realistic Tale, Harper, 1877.
The Egoist: A Comedy in Narrative, 3 volumes, Kegan Paul, 1879, Harper, 1879, reprint edited and introduced by Margaret Harris, Oxford University Press, 1992.
The Tragic Comedians: A Study in a Well-Known Story, 2 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1880, 1 volume, Munro, 1881.
Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth, Macmillan, 1883, Roberts Brothers, 1883.
Diana of the Crossways, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1885, 1 volume, Munro, 1885.
Ballads and Poems of Tragic Life, Macmillan, 1887, Roberts Brothers, 1887.
A Reading of Earth, Macmillan, 1888, Roberts Brothers, 1888.
Jump-to-Glory Jane, privately printed, 1889, Sonnenschein, 1892.
The Case of General Ople and Lady Camper, Lovell, 1890.
The Tale of Chloe: An Episode in the History of Beau Beamish, Lovell, 1890.
One of Our Conquerors, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1891, 1 volume, Roberts Brothers, 1891.
Poems: The Empty Purse, with Odes to the Comic Spirit, to Youth in Memory and Verses, Macmillan, 1892, Roberts Brothers, 1892.
The Tale of Chloe; The House on the Beach; The Case of General Ople and Lady Camper, Ward, Lock & Bowdon, 1894.
Lord Ormont and His Aminta: A Novel, 3 volumes, Chapman & Hall, 1894, 1 volume, Scribner, 1894.
The Amazing Marriage, 2 volumes, Constable, 1897, Scribner, 1897.
An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comic Spirit (first published in New Quarterly, 1877), Constable, 1897, Scribner, 1897.
Selected Poems, Constable, 1897, Scribner, 1897.
The Nature Poems, Constable, 1898.
Odes in Contribution to the Song of French History, Constable, 1898, Scribner, 1898.
The Story of Bhanavar the Beautiful, Constable, 1900.
A Reading of Life, with Other Poems, Constable, 1901, Scribner, 1901.
Last Poems, Constable, 1909, Scribner, 1909.
Chillianwallah, Marion Press, 1909.
Love in the Valley, and Two Songs: Spring and Autumn, Seymour, 1909.
Poems Written in Early Youth, Poems from "Modern Love," and Scattered Poems, Constable, 1909, Scribner, 1909.
Celt and Saxon, Constable, 1910, Scribner, 1910.
Up to Midnight: A Series of Dialogues Contributed to the "Graphic," Luce, 1913.
1909-11 The Works of George Meredith, De Luxe Edition, 39 volumes, Constable, Library Edition, 18 volumes, Constable, Boxhill Edition, 17 volumes, Scribner, Memorial Edition, 27 volumes, Constable, Scribner.
The Poetical Works of George Meredith, edited by G. M. Trevelyan, Constable, 1912.
The Letters of George Meredith, edited by C. L. Cline, 3 volumes, Clarendon Press, 1970.
The Poems of George Meredith, edited by Phyllis B. Bartlett, 2 volumes, Yale University Press, 1978.
Selected Poems, edited by Keith Hanley, Carcanet Press (Manchester, England), 1983.
The Adventures of Harry Richmond: The Unpublished Parts, edited with an introduction by Sven-Johan Spanberg, Almqvist and Wiksell International (Stockholm, Sweden), 1990.
Modern Love, edited and with an afterword by D. von R. Drenner, wood engravings by John DePol, Zauberberg Press, 1991.
Selected Letters of George Meredith edited by Mohammad Shaheen, St. Martin's (New York, NY), 1996.
George Meredith's Essay On Comedy and Other New Quarterly Magazine Publications: A Critical Edition edited by Maura C. Ives, Bucknell University Press (Lewisburg, PA), 1998.
Also author of Short Stories, 1898; The Sentimentalists (play), produced 1910; The Contributions to the Monthly Observer, edited by H. Buxton Forman, 1928; and The Notebooks, edited by Gillian Beer and Margaret Harris, 1983. Meredith's papers are in the Altschul Collection at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University; the Berg Collection at the New York Public Library; and the Henry E. Huntington Library, San Marino, CA.

FURTHER READING

BOOKS
Auchincloss, Louis, Reflections of a Jacobite, Houghton, 1961, pp. 85-94.
Bailey, Elmer James, The Novels of George Meredith: A Study, Scribner, 1907.
Beach, Joseph Warren, The Comic Spirit in George Meredith, Longman, 1911.
Beer, Gillian, Meredith: A Change of Masks; A Study of the Novels, Athlone Press, 1970.
Bernstein, Carol L., Precarious Enchantment: A Reading of Meredith's Poetry, Catholic University of America Press, 1979.
Bloom, Harold, editor, George Meredith, Chelsea House Publishers (New York, NY), 1988.
Booth, Thornton Y., Mastering the Event: Commitment to Fact in George Meredith's Fiction, Utah State University Press, 1967.
Concise Dictionary of British Literary Biography, Volume 4:Victorian Writers, 1832-1890, Gale, 1991.
Crees, J. H. E., George Meredith, B. H. Blackwell, 1918.
Curle, Richard H. P., Aspects of George Meredith, Dutton, 1908.
Deis, Elizabeth J., editor, George Meredith's 1895 Collection of Three Stories: Explorations of Gender and Power, Edwin Mellen Press, 1997.
Dictionary of Literary Biography, Gale, Volume 18: Victorian Novelists after 1885, Gale, 1983, Volume 35: Victorian Poets after 1850, Gale, 1985, Volume 57: Victorian Prose Writers after 1867, Gale, 1987, Volume 159: British Short Fiction Writers, 1800-1880, Gale, 1996.
Ellis, S. M., George Meredith: His Life and Friends in Relation to His Work, Dodd, Mead, 1920.
Fletcher, Ian, editor, Meredith Now: Some Critical Essays, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1971.
Gindin, James, Harvest of a Quiet Eye: The Novel of Compassion, Indiana University Press, 1971, pp. 57-77.
Gretton, Mary Sturge, The Writings and Life of George Meredith: A Centenary Study, Harvard University Press, 1926.
Kelvin, Norman, A Troubled Eden: Nature and Society in the Works of George Meredith, Stanford University Press, 1961.
Lindsay, Jack, George Meredith: His Life and Work, Bodley Head, 1956.
Moses, Joseph, The Novelist as Comedian, Schocken Books, 1983, pp. 164-183.
Muendel, Renate, George Meredith, Twayne, 1986.
Murray, Janet Horowitz, Courtship and the English Novel: Feminist Readings in the Fiction of George Meredith, Garland Publishing (New York City), 1987.
Payne, Susan, Difficult Discourse: George Meredith's Experimental Fiction, ETS (Pisa, Italy), 1995.
Priestley, J. B., George Meredith, Macmillan, 1926.
Pritchett, V. S., George Meredith and the English Comedy, Chatto & Windus, 1970.
Reference Guide to English Literature, second edition, St. James Press, 1991.
Roberts, Neil, Meredith and the Novel, St. Martin's, 1997.
Sassoon, Siegfried, Meredith, Viking, 1948.
Shaheen, Mohammad, George Meredith: A Reappraisal of the Novels, Macmillan (London), 1981.
Shaheen, Mohammad, Selected Letters of George Meredith, St. Martin's, 1996.
Stevenson, Lionel, The Ordeal of George Meredith: A Biography, Scribner, 1953.
Stone, J. S., George Meredith's Politics: As Seen in His Life, Friendships, and Works, P. D. Meany (Port Credit, Ontario), 1986.

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And LoveStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures 

Poems About Life And LoveStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Life And Love Struggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On Life

Poems On Life Struggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On Life BiographY

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Robert Lee Frost was an American poet. He is highly regarded for his realistic depictions of rural life and his command of American colloquial speech. His work frequently employed settings from rural life in New England in the early twentieth century, using them to examine complex social and philosophical themes. A popular and often-quoted poet, Frost was honored frequently during his lifetime, receiving four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry.

Early years

Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California, to journalist William Prescott Frost, Jr., and Isabelle Moodie. His mother was of Scottish descent, and his father descended from Nicholas Frost of Tiverton, Devon, England, who had sailed to New Hampshire in 1634 on the Wolfrana.

Frost's father was a teacher and later an editor of the San Francisco Evening Bulletin (which afterwards merged into the San Francisco Examiner), and an unsuccessful candidate for city tax collector. After his father's death in May 5, 1885, in due time the family moved across the country to Lawrence, Massachusetts under the patronage of (Robert's grandfather) William Frost, Sr., who was an overseer at a New England mill. Frost graduated from Lawrence High School in 1892. Frost's mother joined the Swedenborgian church and had him baptized in it, but he left it as an adult.

Despite his later association with rural life, Frost grew up in the city, and published his first poem in his high school's magazine. He attended Dartmouth College long enough to be accepted into the Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Frost returned home to teach and to work at various jobs including delivering newspapers and factory labor. He did not enjoy these jobs at all, feeling his true calling as a poet.

Adult years

In 1894 he sold his first poem, "My Butterfly: An Elegy" (published in the November 8, 1894 edition of the New York Independent) for fifteen dollars. Proud of this accomplishment he proposed marriage to Elinor Miriam White, but she demurred, wanting to finish college (at St. Lawrence University) before they married. Frost then went on an excursion to the Great Dismal Swamp in Virginia, and asked Elinor again upon his return. Having graduated she agreed, and they were married at Harvard University[citation needed], where he attended liberal arts studies for two years.

He did well at Harvard, but left to support his growing family. Grandfather Frost had, shortly before his death, purchased a farm for the young couple in Derry, New Hampshire; and Robert worked the farm for nine years, while writing early in the mornings and producing many of the poems that would later become famous. Ultimately his farming proved unsuccessful and he returned to education as an English teacher, at Pinkerton Academy from 1906 to 1911, then at the New Hampshire Normal School (now Plymouth State University) in Plymouth, New Hampshire.

In 1912 Frost sailed with his family to Great Britain, living first in Glasgow before settling in Beaconsfield outside London. His first book of poetry, A Boy's Will, was published the next year. In England he made some important acquaintances, including Edward Thomas (a member of the group known as the Dymock Poets), T.E. Hulme, and Ezra Pound. Pound would become the first American to write a (favorable) review of Frost's work. Surrounded by his peers, Frost wrote some of his best work while in England.

As World War I began, Frost returned to America in 1915. He bought a farm in Franconia, New Hampshire, where he launched a career of writing, teaching, and lecturing. This family homestead served as the Frosts' summer home until 1938, and is maintained today as 'The Frost Place', a museum and poetry conference site at Franconia. During the years 1916–20, 1923–24, and 1927–1938, Frost taught English at Amherst College, Massachusetts, notably encouraging his students to account for the sounds of the human voice in their writing.

For forty-two years, from 1921 to 1963, Frost spent almost every summer and fall teaching at the Bread Loaf School of English of Middlebury College, at the mountain campus at Ripton, Vermont. He is credited as a major influence upon the development of the school and its writing programs; the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference gained renown during Frost's tenure there.[citation needed] The college now owns and maintains his former Ripton farmstead as a national historic site near the Bread Loaf campus. In 1921 Frost accepted a fellowship teaching post at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where he resided until 1927; while there he was awarded a lifetime appointment at the University as a Fellow in Letters. The Robert Frost Ann Arbor home is now situated at The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Frost returned to Amherst in 1927. In 1940 he bought a 5-acre (2.0 ha) plot in South Miami, Florida, naming it Pencil Pines; he spent his winters there for the rest of his life.

Harvard's 1965 alumni directory indicates Frost received an honorary degree there. He also received honorary degrees from Bates College and from Oxford and Cambridge universities; and he was the first person to receive two honorary degrees from Dartmouth College. During his lifetime the Robert Frost Middle School in Fairfax, Virginia, and the main library of Amherst College were named after him.

Frost was 86 when he spoke and performed a reading of his poetry at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy on January 20, 1961. Some two years later, on January 29, 1963, he died, in Boston, of complications from prostate surgery. He was buried at the Old Bennington Cemetery in Bennington, Vermont. His epitaph reads, "I had a lover's quarrel with the world."

Frost's poems are critiqued in the "Anthology of Modern American Poetry", Oxford University Press, where it is mentioned that behind a sometimes charmingly familiar and rural façade, Frost's poetry frequently presents pessimistic and menacing undertones which often are not recognized nor analyzed.

One of the original collections of Frost materials, to which he himself contributed, is found in the Special Collections department of the Jones Library in Amherst, Massachusetts. The collection consists of approximately twelve thousand items, including original manuscript poems and letters, correspondence, and photographs, as well as audio and visual recordings

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia Robert Frost; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the CC-BY-SA.James Mercer Langston Hughes was born February 1, 1902, in Joplin, Missouri. His parents divorced when he was a young child, and his father moved to Mexico. He was raised by his grandmother until he was thirteen, when he moved to Lincoln, Illinois, to live with his mother and her husband, before the family eventually settled in Cleveland, Ohio. It was in Lincoln that Hughes began writing poetry. After graduating from high school, he spent a year in Mexico followed by a year at Columbia University in New York City. During this time, he held odd jobs such as assistant cook, launderer, and busboy. He also travelled to Africa and Europe working as a seaman. In November 1924, he moved to Washington, D. C. Hughes’s first book of poetry, The Weary Blues, (Knopf, 1926) was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1926. He finished his college education at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania three years later. In 1930 his first novel, Not Without Laughter, (Knopf, 1930) won the Harmon gold medal for literature.

Hughes, who claimed Paul Lawrence Dunbar, Carl Sandburg, and Walt Whitman as his primary influences, is particularly known for his insightful, colorful portrayals of black life in America from the twenties through the sixties. He wrote novels, short stories and plays, as well as poetry, and is also known for his engagement with the world of jazz and the influence it had on his writing, as in his book-length poem Montage of a Dream Deferred (Holt, 1951). His life and work were enormously important in shaping the artistic contributions of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. Unlike other notable black poets of the period—Claude McKay, Jean Toomer, and Countee Cullen—Hughes refused to differentiate between his personal experience and the common experience of black America. He wanted to tell the stories of his people in ways that reflected their actual culture, including both their suffering and their love of music, laughter, and language itself.

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

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Poems About Love And Life

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Poems About Love And Life Biography

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After you've been to bed together for the first time,
without the advantage or disadvantage of any prior acquaintance,
the other party very often says to you,
Tell me about yourself, I want to know all about you,
what's your story? And you think maybe they really and truly do

sincerely want to know your life story, and so you light up
a cigarette and begin to tell it to them, the two of you
lying together in completely relaxed positions
like a pair of rag dolls a bored child dropped on a bed.

You tell them your story, or as much of your story
as time or a fair degree of prudence allows, and they say,
       Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
each time a little more faintly, until the oh
is just an audible breath, and then of course

there's some interruption. Slow room service comes up
with a bowl of melting ice cubes, or one of you rises to pee
and gaze at himself with the mild astonishment in the bathroom mirror.
And then, the first thing you know, before you've had time
to pick up where you left off with your enthralling life story,
they're telling you their life story, exactly as they'd intended to all along,

and you're saying, Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
each time a little more faintly, the vowel at last becoming
no more than an audible sigh,
as the elevator, halfway down the corridor and a turn to the left,
draws one last, long, deep breath of exhaustion
and stops breathing forever. Then?

Well, one of you falls asleep
and the other one does likewise with a lighted cigarette in his mouth,
and that's how people burn to death in hotel rooms.
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"Life Story" by Tennessee Williams, from The Collected Poems of Tennessee Williams, copyright © 1937, 1956, 1964, 2002 by The University of the South. Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.
We were put on this planet
To live and to love.
To cherish the ones in our lives.
And never let them get hurt.......
Safety is a priority 
But danger is an outcome.
Why is it, that we work so very hard?
For something that will still happen
in the end........
Should we care about our lives,
Or sit and waste it away.
"It doesn't matter, were all going to
die someday!"
These words fill our heads
With sad confusion. There's no end
We get lost with the love
We want to have.
There is no conclusion to all 
this pain.
But an answer that comes
Just the same.
The negative side seems to win,
But the positive side seems to 
Glow.
We are who we choose to be,
So be careful who you choose.
Love everyday like there is no 
Tomorrow....
And give to others the joy of life
So no one will hurt.
Love, And love will love you back.
Open your arms to life
And life will hug you back!
Don't be scared!
Life is still a one time thing!
.There's No Heaven -new-
Now, there's no heaven between me 
and my bygone days of past. 
It was only the shady shelter 
of my mother's veil, the read more »

Veteran Poet - 4,874 Points Neela Nath
2.my childhood garden
my childhood garden 

my childhood garden 
lush and green read more »

Rookie danielle eager
3.Do You Remember Childhood
Crawling across the floor 
Trapped behind closed doors 
Never wanting more read more »

Rookie Faith Grayson
4.Childhood Memories Sung to the Tune of Shawnee West Franklin Bison Blues
Some people have a childhood garden 
Filled with green and growing things 
Some people have a childhood garden 
Filled with purple peonies read more »

Tim Bovee
5.My Childhood
my childhood was the time when i was innocent 
when the world seemed to be fair 
when my universe was around my toys read more »

Rookie jahanvi .......................
6.my childhood
my childhood was the time when i was innocent 
when the world seemed to be fair 
when my universe was around my toys read more »

Rookie - 0 Points Saffan Asif
7.My Childhood
My childhood was fun, 
tough and exciting. 
My childhood was one 
where there wasn't much fighting. read more »

Rookie Kiera R Lewis
8.CHildhood
Childhood is rare 
Unlike a bear 
Childhood is fun 
Unlike eating a bun read more »

Rookie Karon Yan
9.Facilities To Childhood. -new-
Children the beauty angels of the world 
without which earth is a hell 
Childhood, better childhood they deserves 
Childhood plays more important. read more »

Silver Star - 7,784 Points Gangadharan nair Pulingat..
10.Childhood -new-
childhood, beautiful childhood 
But unfortunate to little one 
where childhood is hardships 
Where schooling is neglected read more »

Silver Star - 7,784 Points Gangadharan nair Pulingat..
11.My Childhood
My childhood a moment unforgettable. 
A moment of careless pleasure 
A moment when there was no thought for what should be, 
what may be, carelessly moved all. read more »

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poems About Love And LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumblr Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem Of Life

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Poem On Life Biography

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Robert Lee Frost was an American poet. He is highly regarded for his realistic depictions of rural life and his command of American colloquial speech. His work frequently employed settings from rural life in New England in the early twentieth century, using them to examine complex social and philosophical themes. A popular and often-quoted poet, Frost was honored frequently during his lifetime, receiving four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry.

Early years

Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California, to journalist William Prescott Frost, Jr., and Isabelle Moodie. His mother was of Scottish descent, and his father descended from Nicholas Frost of Tiverton, Devon, England, who had sailed to New Hampshire in 1634 on the Wolfrana.

Frost's father was a teacher and later an editor of the San Francisco Evening Bulletin (which afterwards merged into the San Francisco Examiner), and an unsuccessful candidate for city tax collector. After his father's death in May 5, 1885, in due time the family moved across the country to Lawrence, Massachusetts under the patronage of (Robert's grandfather) William Frost, Sr., who was an overseer at a New England mill. Frost graduated from Lawrence High School in 1892. Frost's mother joined the Swedenborgian church and had him baptized in it, but he left it as an adult.

Despite his later association with rural life, Frost grew up in the city, and published his first poem in his high school's magazine. He attended Dartmouth College long enough to be accepted into the Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Frost returned home to teach and to work at various jobs including delivering newspapers and factory labor. He did not enjoy these jobs at all, feeling his true calling as a poet.

Adult years

In 1894 he sold his first poem, "My Butterfly: An Elegy" (published in the November 8, 1894 edition of the New York Independent) for fifteen dollars. Proud of this accomplishment he proposed marriage to Elinor Miriam White, but she demurred, wanting to finish college (at St. Lawrence University) before they married. Frost then went on an excursion to the Great Dismal Swamp in Virginia, and asked Elinor again upon his return. Having graduated she agreed, and they were married at Harvard University[citation needed], where he attended liberal arts studies for two years.

He did well at Harvard, but left to support his growing family. Grandfather Frost had, shortly before his death, purchased a farm for the young couple in Derry, New Hampshire; and Robert worked the farm for nine years, while writing early in the mornings and producing many of the poems that would later become famous. Ultimately his farming proved unsuccessful and he returned to education as an English teacher, at Pinkerton Academy from 1906 to 1911, then at the New Hampshire Normal School (now Plymouth State University) in Plymouth, New Hampshire.

In 1912 Frost sailed with his family to Great Britain, living first in Glasgow before settling in Beaconsfield outside London. His first book of poetry, A Boy's Will, was published the next year. In England he made some important acquaintances, including Edward Thomas (a member of the group known as the Dymock Poets), T.E. Hulme, and Ezra Pound. Pound would become the first American to write a (favorable) review of Frost's work. Surrounded by his peers, Frost wrote some of his best work while in England.

As World War I began, Frost returned to America in 1915. He bought a farm in Franconia, New Hampshire, where he launched a career of writing, teaching, and lecturing. This family homestead served as the Frosts' summer home until 1938, and is maintained today as 'The Frost Place', a museum and poetry conference site at Franconia. During the years 1916–20, 1923–24, and 1927–1938, Frost taught English at Amherst College, Massachusetts, notably encouraging his students to account for the sounds of the human voice in their writing.

For forty-two years, from 1921 to 1963, Frost spent almost every summer and fall teaching at the Bread Loaf School of English of Middlebury College, at the mountain campus at Ripton, Vermont. He is credited as a major influence upon the development of the school and its writing programs; the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference gained renown during Frost's tenure there.[citation needed] The college now owns and maintains his former Ripton farmstead as a national historic site near the Bread Loaf campus. In 1921 Frost accepted a fellowship teaching post at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where he resided until 1927; while there he was awarded a lifetime appointment at the University as a Fellow in Letters. The Robert Frost Ann Arbor home is now situated at The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Frost returned to Amherst in 1927. In 1940 he bought a 5-acre (2.0 ha) plot in South Miami, Florida, naming it Pencil Pines; he spent his winters there for the rest of his life.

Harvard's 1965 alumni directory indicates Frost received an honorary degree there. He also received honorary degrees from Bates College and from Oxford and Cambridge universities; and he was the first person to receive two honorary degrees from Dartmouth College. During his lifetime the Robert Frost Middle School in Fairfax, Virginia, and the main library of Amherst College were named after him.

Frost was 86 when he spoke and performed a reading of his poetry at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy on January 20, 1961. Some two years later, on January 29, 1963, he died, in Boston, of complications from prostate surgery. He was buried at the Old Bennington Cemetery in Bennington, Vermont. His epitaph reads, "I had a lover's quarrel with the world."

Frost's poems are critiqued in the "Anthology of Modern American Poetry", Oxford University Press, where it is mentioned that behind a sometimes charmingly familiar and rural façade, Frost's poetry frequently presents pessimistic and menacing undertones which often are not recognized nor analyzed.

One of the original collections of Frost materials, to which he himself contributed, is found in the Special Collections department of the Jones Library in Amherst, Massachusetts. The collection consists of approximately twelve thousand items, including original manuscript poems and letters, correspondence, and photographs, as well as audio and visual recordings

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia Robert Frost; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the CC-BY-SA.James Mercer Langston Hughes was born February 1, 1902, in Joplin, Missouri. His parents divorced when he was a young child, and his father moved to Mexico. He was raised by his grandmother until he was thirteen, when he moved to Lincoln, Illinois, to live with his mother and her husband, before the family eventually settled in Cleveland, Ohio. It was in Lincoln that Hughes began writing poetry. After graduating from high school, he spent a year in Mexico followed by a year at Columbia University in New York City. During this time, he held odd jobs such as assistant cook, launderer, and busboy. He also travelled to Africa and Europe working as a seaman. In November 1924, he moved to Washington, D. C. Hughes’s first book of poetry, The Weary Blues, (Knopf, 1926) was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1926. He finished his college education at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania three years later. In 1930 his first novel, Not Without Laughter, (Knopf, 1930) won the Harmon gold medal for literature.

Hughes, who claimed Paul Lawrence Dunbar, Carl Sandburg, and Walt Whitman as his primary influences, is particularly known for his insightful, colorful portrayals of black life in America from the twenties through the sixties. He wrote novels, short stories and plays, as well as poetry, and is also known for his engagement with the world of jazz and the influence it had on his writing, as in his book-length poem Montage of a Dream Deferred (Holt, 1951). His life and work were enormously important in shaping the artistic contributions of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. Unlike other notable black poets of the period—Claude McKay, Jean Toomer, and Countee Cullen—Hughes refused to differentiate between his personal experience and the common experience of black America. He wanted to tell the stories of his people in ways that reflected their actual culture, including both their suffering and their love of music, laughter, and language itself.

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On LifeStruggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures

Poem On Life Struggles And Love Lessons Tumbir Photos Images Pics Pictures