Poem of the Week – Tamburlaine the Great, Part One
This week’s poem is an extract from Christopher Marlowe’s celebrated play, Tamburlaine the Great.
This week’s poem is an extract from Christopher Marlowe’s celebrated play, Tamburlaine the Great.
This week’s poem by D.H Lawrence uses a motif of fire to conjure up beauteous images of Spring in its infancy.
Featured in A.E Housman’s collection of poems A Shropshire Lad, “On the Idle Hill of Summer” describes the onset of conflict in the English countryside.
In this week’s poem, the famous author Herman Melville contrasts the plenteous prospects of life with the insensate stillness of death.
A triptych of romantic poetry ahead of Valentine’s Day next week.
In this week’s poem, Georg Heym articulates the disquieting sense of impending doom.
This week’s poem by Romantic era poet John Clare tells the tale of a cold and caliginous January.
In this week’s poem, William Collins paints a picture of a beautiful evening.
The Reaction round-up of what you should, and shouldn’t, be reading this week.
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