Johann Wolfgang von Goethe "Poems"

The book contains Goethe's romantic poetry made him a leader of the "Sturm and Drang" movement. The roots of his poems are in the literatures of England, France, Italy, classical Greece, Persia and the Arab world.
Goethe's works span the fields of poetry, drama, literature, theology, philosophy, and science; his broad sympathies and balanced personality illuminated German culture. His influence on German philosophy is virtually immeasurable, having major effect especially on the generation of Hegel and Schelling.


Robert Browning "Poems"

Browning is a forerunner of modernism. His poetry can offer difficulty because of the labyrinthian syntax in pursuit of meanings which for their originator, at least, were clear.
Browning is a "Christian" poet but no orthodox one. He believes in a dynamic incarnation repeating itself throughout creation and in every moment of existence. Grace and Redemption, however, are relatively foreign if not alien concepts to him - one of the reasons it's quite accurate to think of him as the most "optimistic" poet, if not author, in all English literature.


William Wordsworth "Poems"

Wordsworth, born in his beloved Lake District, was the son of an attorney. His school years were later to be described vividly in "The Prelude". Wordsworth wrote many of his greatest poems after his returning from France (1795-1799), where he twice fell in love: once with a young french woman Annette Vallon, and the, once more, with the French Revolution. In these years he wrote enlarged edition of "Lyrical Ballads", this was followed by the publication of "Poems in Two Volumes", which included the poems "Resolution and Independence" and "Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood". During this period he also made new friendships with Walter Scott, Sir G. Beaumont and De Quincy, wrote such poems as "Elegaic Stanzas suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle".
Today Wordsworth's poetry remains widely read. Its almost universal appeal is perhaps best explained by Wordsworth's own words words on the role, for him, of poetry; what he called "the most philosophical of all writing" whose object is "truth... carried alive into the heart by passion".


Nothing Twice: Selected Poems / Nic Dwa Razy: Wybor Wierszy

120 poems by Wisława Szymborska, who was awarded Nobel Prize for literature - the largest and most extensive selection of the poet’s lyrics in translations awarded by both American and Polish Pen Clubs.

Download links;

http://hotfile.com/dl/63304816/c428d55/35933024-Nothing-Twice-Szymborska.pdf.html

Illuminated Verses

"...it was a challenge for me to find a publisher for 'Illuminated Verses'. Over eleven years, many were approached, but only Canadian Scholars' Press has dared to set Scipio's breathtaking vistas before a public. Why? Maybe the idea of the unclothed black feminine seems too much a palimpsest of pornography, or just too dark a concept for a society addicted to depictions of elect whiteness." - observes George Elliott Clarke.


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William Shakespeare's As You Like It (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)

Shakespeare's romantic comedy sets up a number of dualities which are explored but never answered, exposing the complexity of human life that exists between romance and realism, nobleman and commoner, male and female, and more.

The title, William Shakespeare’s As You Like It, part of Chelsea House Publishers’ Modern Critical Interpretations series, presents the most important 20th-century criticism on William Shakespeare’s As You Like It through extracts of critical essays by well-known literary critics. This collection of criticism also features a short biography on William Shakespeare, a chronology of the author’s life, and an introductory essay written by Harold Bloom, Sterling Professor of the Humanities, Yale University.



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Mystical Poems of Rumi


My verse resembles the bread of Egypt—night passes over it, and you cannot eat it any more.
Devour it the moment it is fresh, before the dust settles upon it.
Its place is the warm climate of the heart; in this world it dies of cold.
Like a fish it quivered for an instant on dry land, another moment and you see it is cold.
Even if you eat it imagining it is fresh, it is necessary to conjure up many images.
What you drink is really your own imagination; it is no old tale, my good man.


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World's Greatest Classic Books (CD-ROM) by Corel


Large Collection of Literature-Old Documents
This is the cd-rom version of my earlier upload. This cd-rom program contains: Fiction, Short Stories, Plays, Poetry, Historical Documents, Religious Documents, & Scientific Documents. The program contains over 3,500 "literary works" in it. Also, the program allows for searching within the books and the entire database.



Adams, Henry Brooks
Aeschines
Aeschylus
Aesop
Alcott, Louisa May
Andersen, Hans Christian
Anonymous
Antonius, Marcus Aurelius
Ariosto, Lodovico
Aristophanes
Aristotle
Arnold, Matthew
Augustine, Saint
Austen, Jane
Bacon, Sir Francis
Barrie, Sir James Matthew
Bastiat, Claude-Frederic
Baum, Lyman Frank
Behn, Aphra
Berkeley, George
Blake, William
Boccaccio, Giovanni
Boswell, James
Bradstreet, Anne
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Brooke, Rupert Chawner
Browning, Elizabeth Barret
Browning, Robert
Bryant, William Cullen
Bulfinch, Thomas
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward George Earle
Burke, Edmund
Burns, Robert
Burton, Sir Richard Francis
Butler, Samuel
Byron, Lord George Gordon Noel
Carroll, Lewis
Cather, Willa Silbert
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cicero, Marcus Tullius
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Collins, (William) Wilkie
Collodi, Carlo
Confucius
Congreve, William
Conrad, Joseph
Cooper, James Fenimore
Crane, Stephen
Dana, Richard Henry
Dante, Alighieri
Darwin, Charles Robert
Defoe, Daniel
Demosthenes
Descartes, René
Dickens, Charles
Dickinson, Emily (Elizabeth)
Donne, John
Dostoevsky, Fyodor Mikhailovich
Dowson, Ernest Christopher
Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan
Dreiser, Theodore Herman Albert
Dryden, John
Dumas Père, Alexandre
Eliot, George
Eliot, Thomas Stearns
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Epictetus
Erasmus, Desiderius
Euripides
Fielding, Henry
Firdawsi
Flaubert, Gustave
Foss, Sam Walter
France, Anatole
Freud, Sigmund
Frost, Robert Lee
Galen
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Grahame, Kenneth
Gray, Thomas
Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm
Haggard, Sir Henry Rider
Hardy, Thomas
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Hemans, Felicia Dorthea
Henley, William Ernest
Herodotus
Herrick, Robert
Hippocrates
Historical Document
Hobbes, Thomas
Homer
Housman, Alfred Edward
Hubbard, Elbert Green
Hugo, Victor
Hume, David
Hunt, (James Henry) Leigh
Ibsen, Henrik
Irving, Washington
James, Henry
James, William
Jonson, Ben
Joseph, Chief (Highn'moot Tooyalakekt)
Joyce, James Augustine Aloysius
Kant, Immanuel
Keats, John
Kempis, Thomas à
Khayyam, Omar
Kipling, Rudyard
Lamb, Charles
Lawrence, David Herbert
Lazarus, Emma
Lear, Edward
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm
Lincoln, Abraham
Locke, John
London, Jack
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Lovelace, Richard
Machiavelli, Niccolo
Marlowe, Christopher
Marvell, Andrew
Marx, Karl/Engels, Friedrich
Maupassant, Guy de
McDonald, Clarence
Melville, Herman
Mill, John Stuart
Milton, John
Montaigne, Michel Eyquem de
Montgomery, Lucy Maud
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm
Noyes, Alfred
Orczy, Baroness Emma
Ortega y Gasset, José
Paine, Thomas
Pascal, Blaise
Philip II, King of Macedon
Plato
Plotinus
Plutarch
Poe, Edgar Allan
Pope, Alexander
Pound, Ezra Loomis
Prescott, William Hickling
Publius Ovidius Naso
Raleigh, Sir Walter
Religious Document
Rhead, Louis
Rice, Henry Grantland
Robinson, Edwin Arlington
Rossetti, Christina
Rostand, Edmond
Rousseau, Jean Jacques
Sa'di, Sheykh Moslehoddin
Seeger, Alan
Service, Robert William
Shakespeare, William
Shaw, George Bernard
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley
Sinclair, Upton Beall
Smith, Adam
Sophocles
Spenser, Edmund
Spyri, Johanna
Stannard, David Edward
Stendhal
Stevenson, Robert Louis Balfour
Stoker, Bram
Stowe, Harriet Beecher
Summers, Montague
Swift, Jonathan Dean
Tacitus, Cornelius
Tennyson, Lord Alfred
Thayer, Ernest Lawrence
Thompson, Francis
Thoreau, Henry David
Thucydides
Titus Lucretius Carus
Tolstoy, Leo
Twain, Mark
Verne, Jules
Virgil
Voltaire
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Wallace, Lewis
Washington, Booker Taliaferro
Wells, Herbert George
Wharton, Edith
Wheatley, Phillis
Whitman, Walter
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Wilde, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills
Wollstonecraft, Mary
Wordsworth, William
Wyss, Johann Rudolph
Yeats, William Butler


Rapidshare Link (ISO | 454.8 MB)

Book Study Notes by Corel


Large Collection of Study and Reference Guide
This collection of guides contains 101 files total, which cover the topics of: Plot Summary, Character Analysis, Settings, Themes, Form and Structure, Style and Point of View, and Chapter/Act Synopsis. These books were extracted from a software cd, which had to be converted from .evy to pdf. Therefore, it is more flexible than the software viewer, but there are less features.
Also, the cd states there is 101 literary classics covered, but some authors have multiple books under their names.


Albee, Edward
Austen, Jane
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Buck, Pearl S.
Camus, Albert
Cather, Willa Silbert
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Conrad, Joseph
Crane, Stephen
Dante, Alighieri
Dickens, Charles
Dostoevsky, Fyodor Mikhailovich
Eliot, George
Ellison, Ralph
Faulkner, William
Fielding, Henry
Fitzgerald, F.Scott
Flaubert, Gustave
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Golding, William
Hardy, Thomas
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Heller, Joseph
Hemingway, Ernest
Hesse, Hermann
Homer
Huxley, Aldous
Ibsen, Henrik
James, Henry
Joyce, James Augustine Aloysius
Kesey, Ken
Knowles, John
Lawrence, David Herbert
Lee, Harper
Lewis, Sinclair
Machiavelli, Niccolo
Marlowe, Christopher
Melville, Herman
Miller, Arthur
Milton, John
Orwell, George
Paton, Alan
Plato
Religious Document
Remarque, Erich Maria
Salinger, J.D.
Shakespeare, William
Sinclair, Upton Beall
Sophocles
Steinbeck, John Ernst
Stowe, Harriet Beecher
Swift, Jonathan Dean
Thoreau, Henry David
Tolkien, J.R.R.
Tolstoy, Leo
Twain, Mark
Virgil
Voltaire
Vonnegut, Kurt
Warren, Robert Penn
Wharton, Edith
Wilder, Thornton
Williams, Tennessee
Wright, Richard

Rapidshare Link (41.2 MB)

Jeff Mock -You Can Write Poetry

Poetry''s forms, styles and structures are illustrated through the work of Shakespeare, e.e. cummings, Tim Geiger and others. These poems, and dozens of hands on practice sessions, will inspire readers to experiment with language, and write poetry.'

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Harold Bloom, Janyce Marson - The Comedy of Errors

Each volume in the "Bloom's Shakespeare Through the Ages" series contains the finest criticism on a particular work from the Bard's oeuvre, selected under the guidance of renowned Shakespearean scholar Harold Bloom. Providing invaluable study guides, this comprehensive collection sheds light on how our relationship with the works of Shakespeare has evolved through the ages. Each title features: a selection of the best criticism on the work through the centuries; introductory essays on the development of criticism on the work in each century; a brief biography of Shakespeare; a plot synopsis, list of characters, and analysis of several key passages; and, an introduction by Harold Bloom.

In the Shakespearean play that most closely resembles farce, two sets of identical twins, each separated for years, arrive in Ephesus, setting off a madcap series of events and leaving a trail of confusion and mistaken identity in their wake. While evoking one of Shakespeare's recurring themes—the restorative power of love—this early work contains some of the playwright's developing insights on the human condition and presents a portrait of women's various roles in Elizabethan society. With an introduction from Shakespearean scholar Harold Bloom, plus a plot synopsis and a brief biography of Shakespeare, this volume of critical essays will assist students studying The Comedy of Errors.

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Wagner's Ring Cycle and the Greeks (Cambridge Studies in Opera)

Wagner's Ring cycle, argues Foster, follows an evolutionary model of Greek poetry and politics adapted from Hegel. Providing a thorough analysis of three of the most important poetic genres - epic, lyric, and drama - this book interrogates the ways in which Wagner uses Greek aesthetics to further his own ideological goals.

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Willis Barnstone - Ancient Greek Lyrics, Second Edition

Ancient Greek Lyrics collects Willis Barnstone's elegant translations of Greek lyric poetry -- including the most complete Sappho in English, newly translated. This volume includes a representative sampling of all the significant poets, from Archilochos, in the 7th century BCE, through Pindar and the other great singers of the classical age, down to the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods. William E. McCulloh's introduction illuminates the forms and development of the Greek lyric while Barnstone provides a brief biographical and literary sketch for each poet and adds a substantial introduction to Sappho -- revised for this edition -- complete with notes and sources. A glossary and updated bibliography are included.

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American Writers: Supplement, 18th Edition (American Writers Supplements)

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Password: tFam0684315521.rar

British Writers Retrospective: Supplement 2, 2nd edition

Following closely after Retrospective Supplement I (which was published in December 2001), this volume offers reassessments of 44 writers, including Jane Austen, Geoffrey Chaucer, E. M Forster, and Tom Stoppard. It closes with an index to the entire British Writers series.

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Password: tFbr068431228X.rar

Creative Approaches to Poetry for the Primary Framework for Literacy

Creative Approaches to Poetry for the Primary Framework for Literacy supports teachers in planning, teaching and, most importantly, enjoying poetry with their pupils. With an emphasis on creative, cross curricular approaches the authors explore tried and tested methods of teaching poetry in an engaging and comprehensive manner. A carefully considered range of poems has been included in order to expand children’s repertoires in a variety of poetic forms.

Chapters cover:

how to develop a range of creative approaches to teaching poetry, involving visualisation, drama, choral speaking, performance, discussion and writing how to engage children from a variety of backgrounds and abilities in experiencing poetry in its many forms integrating the teaching of poetry with all other areas of the curriculum including ICT and citizenship effectively linking all work to the KS1 poetry units of the renewed Primary National Framework for Literacy an innovative model that takes children on a journey beginning before they meet the poem through to becoming poets themselves.

This accessible and user-friendly book includes informative case studies, photographs and children’s work to demonstrate alternative routes to working with poetry. It will prove an invaluable resource for all primary teachers seeking to employ progressive and effective strategies in the teaching of poetry.



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Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy, and Popular Literature, 2nd Edition

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Rudyard Kipling - Verses 1889-1896

Poems by Joseph Rudyard Kipling, a British writer and poet, best works of whose speak to a versatile and luminous narrative gift.
Rudyard Kipling began to write during the period of Victorian Age. According to English and Western Literature, conservatism, optimism and self-assurance marked the poetry of this age. Though Kipling’s works achieved literary fame during his early years, as he grew older his woks faced enormous amount of literary criticism. His poems dealt with racial and imperialistic topics which attracted a lot of critics. Critics also condemned the fact that unlike the popular model of poetry, Kipling’ poetry did not have an underlying meaning to it and that interpreting it required no more than one reading. Kipling’s reputation started a revival course after T. S. Eliot’s essay on his poetic works where Eliot describes Kipling’s verse as 'great verse' that sometimes unintentionally changes into poetry. Following Eliot’s lead many other critics reanalyzed Kipling’s verse and revived his poetic reputation to the merited level.

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Depositfiles.com

"Essays on the History of Ethics" by Michael Slote

In Essays on the History of Ethics Michael Slote collects his essays that deal with aspects of both ancient and modern ethical thought and seek to point out conceptual/normative comparisons and contrasts among different views.


Arranged in chronological order of the philosopher under discussion, the relationship between ancient ethical theory and modern moral philosophy is a major theme of several of the papers and, in particular, Plato, Aristotle, Hume, Kant, and/or utilitarianism feature centrally in (most of) the discussions.




One essay seeks to show that there are three main ways to conceive the relationship between human well-being and virtue: one is dualistic a la Kant (they are disparate notions); one is the sort of reductionism familiar from the history of utilitarianismm; and one, not previously named by philosophers, is implicit in the approach the Stoics, Plato, and Aristotle take (in their different ways) to the topic of virtue and well-being. Slote names this third approach "elevationism" and argue that it is more promising than either reductionism or dualism.

Two of the essays are narrowly focused on Hume's ethics, and one seeks to show that even Kant's opponents have reason to accept a number of important and original Kantian ideas. Finally, the two last essays in the volume talk about ethical thought during the last half of the twentieth century and the first few years of the twenty-first, arguing that the care ethics of Carol Gilligan and Nel Noddings has a distinctive and important contribution to make to ongoing ethical theorizing--and to our understanding of the history of ethics as well.

Hitomaro: Poet as God

Kakinomoto no Hitomaro (fl. ca. 690) is generally regarded as one of the pre-eminent poets of premodern Japan. While most existing scholarship on Hitomaro is concerned with his poetry, this study foregrounds the process of his reception and canonization as a deity of Japanese poetry. Building on new interest in issues of canon formation in premodern Japanese literature, this book traces the reception history of Hitomaro from its earliest beginnings to the early modern period, documenting and analysing the phases of the process through which Hitomaro was transformed from an admired poet to a poetic deity. The result is a new perspective on a familiar literary figure through his placement within the broader context of Japanese poetic culture.











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