Anthology of Swedish Lyrics from 1750 to 1915 (Volume 9)
by Charles Wharton Stork
This title features "Adorno on the Gold Coast" - who can blame the barometer for being called a gauche gauge which in any case is better than guage, or body thermometer oracle of the oral cavity that cannot stop your torso from wheezing in sync with the refrigerator set one notch below very very cold as the crimson rosella seems to have recovered from its defenestrating flight and tottered sous la guage affixed to the garage next door and you just don't know how to pick through what was discover...
Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales (Longman Critical Readers)
Provides an overview of the various ways in which modern critical theory has impacted on Chaucer studies in the 15 years up to 1998. The text anthologizes some of the most important critical work in the field and provides an introduction which considers Chaucer and Postmodernism.
In Our Time (A Scribner classic) (Vintage Classics)
by Ernest Hemingway
THIS COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES AND VIGNETTES MARKED ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S AMERICAN DEBUT AND MADE HIM FAMOUS When In Our Time was published in 1925, it was praised by Ford Madox Ford, John Dos Passos, and F. Scott Fitzgerald for its simple and precise use of language to convey a wide range of complex emotions, and it earned Hemingway a place beside Sherwood Anderson and Gertrude Stein among the most promising American writers of that period. In Our Time contains several early Hemingway classics,...
The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer
by Geoffrey Chaucer and Thomas Tyrwhitt
Transporting you back to those fanciful days of childhood, 'A Bit of Nonsense' is a collection of classic limericks and stories from Edward Lear that will not fail to delight.
Poetical Works of Robert Bridges, Excluding the Eight Dramas
by Robert S Bridges
The Danse Macabre: Printed by Guyot Marchant, 1485 (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, #447)
by David A. Fein
Revivalist Fantasy (Interventions: New Studies Medieval Cult)
by Randy P Schiff
A Book of Nonsense (Illustrated Edition) (Dodo Press)
by Edward Lear
"The poet makes himself into a visionary by a long derangement of all the senses."-RimbaudIn 1968 Jim Morrison, founder and lead singer of the rock band the Doors, wrote to Wallace Fowlie, a scholar of French literature and a professor at Duke University. Morrison thanked Fowlie for producing an English translation of the complete poems of Rimbaud. He needed the translation, he said, because, "I don't read French that easily. . . . I am a rock singer and your book travels around with me." Fourte...