WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Poems cover

Poems

Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A lyric collection that ranges across seasons, landscapes, and intimate domestic scenes, pairing meditations on memory, loss, and mortality with vivid natural imagery. Several poems revisit ruined houses, sea-worn shores, and ancestral shame, while others examine the strains of marriage, private grief, and artistic longing. Formally the volume mixes short lyrics, narrative sketches, and occasional dramatic addresses, shifting tone between elegy, irony, and spare tenderness. Recurring motifs of autumn, winter, music, and architecture bind contemplative reflections on time, identity, and the consolations and limits of memory and art.

About the Author

Stoddard, Elizabeth portrait

Elizabeth Stoddard

Elizabeth Stoddard was an American novelist and poet known for her contributions to 19th-century literature. Born in the early 1820s, she gained recognition for her novel "The Morgesons," which explores themes of identity and familial relationships through the lens of a young woman's experiences. Stoddard's work often reflects her keen observations of society and the complexities of human emotions. In addition to her fiction, she published a collection of poetry, showcasing her versatility as a writer. Stoddard's literary legacy is marked by her distinctive voice and her role in the development of American literature during a transformative period.

More Books by This Author

You May Also Like