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| The Elements of Poetry | p. 1 |
| What Is Poetry? | p. 3 |
| The Eagle | p. 5 |
| Winter | p. 6 |
| Dulce et Decorum Est | p. 7 |
| Reviewing Chapter One | p. 10 |
| Understanding and Evaluating Poetry | p. 11 |
| Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? | p. 12 |
| The Whipping | p. 12 |
| The last Night that She lived | p. 13 |
| Ballad of Bi... MORE | p. 14 |
| Kitchenette Building | p. 16 |
| The Red Wheelbarrow | p. 17 |
| Constantly risking absurdity | p. 17 |
| Suicide's Note | p. 18 |
| Terence, this is stupid stuff | p. 19 |
| Ars Poetica | p. 21 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 22 |
| Reading the Poem | p. 24 |
| The Man He Killed | p. 26 |
| A Study of Reading Habits | p. 27 |
| Is my team plowing | p. 30 |
| Reviewing Chapter Two | p. 33 |
| Break of Day | p. 33 |
| There's been a Death, in the Opposite House | p. 34 |
| When in Rome | p. 35 |
| Animals Are Passing from Our Lives | p. 36 |
| Question | p. 37 |
| Mirror | p. 38 |
| The Clod and the Pebble | p. 38 |
| Ethics | p. 39 |
| Storm Warnings | p. 40 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 41 |
| Denotation and Connotation | p. 42 |
| There is no Frigate like a Book | p. 42 |
| When my love swears that she is made of truth | p. 44 |
| Pathedy of Manners | p. 45 |
| Exercises | p. 47 |
| Reviewing Chapter Three | p. 48 |
| Naming of Parts | p. 48 |
| Cross | p. 49 |
| The world is too much with us | p. 50 |
| Desert Places | p. 51 |
| Let No Charitable Hope | p. 52 |
| A Hymn to God the Father | p. 52 |
| One Art | p. 53 |
| 35/10 | p. 54 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 55 |
| Imagery | p. 56 |
| Meeting at Night | p. 57 |
| Parting at Morning | p. 58 |
| Exercises | p. 59 |
| Reviewing Chapter Four | p. 59 |
| Spring | p. 59 |
| The Widow's Lament in Springtime | p. 60 |
| The Man with Night Sweats | p. 61 |
| I felt a Funeral, in my Brain | p. 62 |
| Living in Sin | p. 63 |
| The Forge | p. 64 |
| After Apple-Picking | p. 64 |
| Those Winter Sundays | p. 66 |
| An August Night | p. 67 |
| The Snow Man | p. 67 |
| To Autumn | p. 68 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 69 |
| Figurative Language I: Simile, Metaphor, Personification, Apostrophe, Metonymy | p. 70 |
| Harlem | p. 71 |
| Bereft | p. 72 |
| It sifts from Leaden Sieves | p. 73 |
| The Author to Her Book | p. 74 |
| The Telephone | p. 76 |
| Bright Star | p. 77 |
| Exercise | p. 80 |
| Reviewing Chapter Five | p. 81 |
| Mind | p. 81 |
| I taste a liquor never brewed | p. 82 |
| Metaphors | p. 83 |
| Toads | p. 83 |
| Ghost of a Chance | p. 84 |
| A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning | p. 85 |
| To His Coy Mistress | p. 87 |
| Introduction to Poetry | p. 88 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 89 |
| Figurative Language 2: Symbol, Allegory | p. 90 |
| The Road Not Taken | p. 90 |
| A Noiseless Patient Spider | p. 92 |
| The Sick Rose | p. 93 |
| Digging | p. 95 |
| To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time | p. 98 |
| Peace | p. 99 |
| Exercises | p. 101 |
| Reviewing Chapter Six | p. 101 |
| The Writer | p. 102 |
| Fire and Ice | p. 103 |
| Up-Hill | p. 104 |
| Harlem Hopscotch | p. 104 |
| I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing | p. 105 |
| Because I could not stop for Death | p. 106 |
| Hymn to God My God, in My Sickness | p. 107 |
| Weighing the Dog | p. 109 |
| Ulysses | p. 109 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 112 |
| Figurative Language 3: Paradox, Overstatement, Understatement, Irony | p. 113 |
| Much Madness is divinest Sense | p. 114 |
| The Sun Rising | p. 115 |
| Incident | p. 116 |
| Barbie Doll | p. 118 |
| The Chimney Sweeper | p. 120 |
| Ozymandias | p. 121 |
| Exercise | p. 122 |
| Reviewing Chapter Seven | p. 123 |
| Lady Luncheon Club | p. 123 |
| Batter my heart, three-personed God | p. 124 |
| Sorting Laundry | p. 125 |
| The History Teacher | p. 127 |
| Mid-Term Break | p. 128 |
| A Considerable Speck | p. 129 |
| The Unknown Citizen | p. 130 |
| In the inner city | p. 131 |
| My Last Duchess | p. 132 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 134 |
| Allusion | p. 135 |
| "Out, Out-" | p. 136 |
| From Macbeth ("She should have died hereafter") | p. 137 |
| Reviewing Chapter Eight | p. 138 |
| In Just- | p. 139 |
| Yet Do I Marvel | p. 140 |
| On His Blindness | p. 140 |
| Miniver Cheevy | p. 141 |
| My Son the Man | p. 142 |
| Siren Song | p. 143 |
| Journey of the Magi | p. 144 |
| Leda and the Swan | p. 146 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 146 |
| Meaning and Idea | p. 148 |
| Little Jack Horner | p. 148 |
| Loveliest of Trees | p. 149 |
| Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening | p. 150 |
| Reviewing Chapter Nine | p. 152 |
| The Rhodora: On Being Asked, Whence Is the Flower? | p. 152 |
| Design | p. 153 |
| I never saw a Moor | p. 154 |
| "Faith" is a fine invention | p. 154 |
| On the Sonnet | p. 155 |
| Sonnet | p. 155 |
| The Lamb | p. 156 |
| The Tiger | p. 157 |
| The Indifferent | p. 158 |
| Love's Deity | p. 159 |
| My Number | p. 160 |
| I had heard it's a fight | p. 161 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 161 |
| Tone | p. 163 |
| For a Lamb | p. 165 |
| Apparently with no surprise | p. 165 |
| Since there's no help | p. 167 |
| Picnic, Lightning | p. 168 |
| Reviewing Chapter Ten | p. 169 |
| My mistress' eyes | p. 169 |
| Crossing the Bar | p. 170 |
| The Oxen | p. 171 |
| One dignity delays for all | p. 172 |
| 'Twas warm-at first-like Us | p. 173 |
| The Apparition | p. 173 |
| The Flea | p. 174 |
| Dover Beach | p. 176 |
| Church Going | p. 177 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 180 |
| Musical Devices | p. 181 |
| The Turtle | p. 182 |
| That night when joy began | p. 184 |
| The Waking | p. 185 |
| God's Grandeur | p. 187 |
| Exercise | p. 188 |
| Reviewing Chapter Eleven | p. 189 |
| Blow, blow, thou winter wind | p. 189 |
| We Real Cool | p. 190 |
| Woman Work | p. 191 |
| Rite of Passage | p. 192 |
| As imperceptibly as Grief | p. 193 |
| Music Lessons | p. 194 |
| Traveling through the dark | p. 194 |
| Thistles | p. 195 |
| Nothing Gold Can Stay | p. 196 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 197 |
| Rhythm and Meter | p. 198 |
| Virtue | p. 203 |
| Exercises | p. 212 |
| Reviewing Chapter Twelve | p. 213 |
| "Introduction" to Songs of Innocence | p. 213 |
| Had I the Choice | p. 214 |
| The Aim Was Song | p. 215 |
| Stanzas | p. 216 |
| Old Ladies' Home | p. 216 |
| Africa | p. 217 |
| To a Daughter Leaving Home | p. 218 |
| A Blessing | p. 219 |
| Porphyria's Lover | p. 220 |
| Break, break, break | p. 222 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 223 |
| Sound and Meaning | p. 224 |
| Pease Porridge Hot | p. 224 |
| Eight O'Clock | p. 226 |
| Sound and Sense | p. 227 |
| I heard a Fly buzz-when I died | p. 231 |
| Exercise | p. 233 |
| Reviewing Chapter Thirteen | p. 235 |
| Anthem for Doomed Youth | p. 235 |
| Landcrab | p. 236 |
| Tree at My Window | p. 237 |
| Aunt Jennifer's Tigers | p. 238 |
| At the round earth's imagined corners | p. 238 |
| Blackberry Eating | p. 239 |
| The Health-Food Diner | p. 240 |
| The Dance | p. 241 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 241 |
| Pattern | p. 243 |
| The Pulley | p. 244 |
| On First Looking into Chapman's Homer | p. 246 |
| That time of year | p. 247 |
| Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night | p. 249 |
| Exercise | p. 250 |
| Reviewing Chapter Fourteen | p. 251 |
| From Romeo and Juliet | p. 251 |
| Death, be not proud | p. 252 |
| The Sheaves | p. 253 |
| The White City | p. 253 |
| America | p. 254 |
| We Wear the Mask | p. 255 |
| Sonnenizio on a Line from Drayton | p. 255 |
| Acquainted with the Night | p. 256 |
| In Memory of the Unknown Poet, Robert Boardman Vaughn | p. 257 |
| Villanelle for an Anniversary | p. 258 |
| The House on the Hill | p. 259 |
| These are the days when Birds come back | p. 260 |
| Delight in Disorder | p. 261 |
| Still to be Neat | p. 262 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 262 |
| Evaluating Poetry I: Sentimental, Rhetorical, Didactic Verse | p. 263 |
| Reviewing Chapter Fifteen | p. 266 |
| God's Will for You and Me | p. 266 |
| Pied Beauty | p. 266 |
| A Poison Tree | p. 267 |
| The Most Vital Thing in Life | p. 267 |
| Lower New York: At Dawn | p. 268 |
| Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 | p. 269 |
| Pitcher | p. 269 |
| The Old-Fashioned Pitcher | p. 270 |
| Piano | p. 270 |
| The Days Gone By | p. 271 |
| The Engine | p. 271 |
| I like to see it lap the Miles | p. 272 |
| When I have fears that I may cease to be | p. 272 |
| O Solitude! | p. 273 |
| Suggestions for Writing | p. 273 |
| Evaluating Poetry 2: Poetic Excellence | p. 275 |
| The Canonization | p. 276 |
| Ode on a Grecian Urn | p. 278 |
| There's a certain Slant of light | p. 280 |
| Home Burial | p. 281 |
| The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock | p. 285 |
| Sunday Morning | p. 290 |
| The Weary Blues | p. 294 |
| The Fish | p. 296 |
| Diving into the Wreck | p. 298 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |