Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE HONEYMOON, by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: The honeymoon is very strange Last Line: Faintly; and then . . Has naught to lose. Subject(s): Honeymoons | ||||||||
THE honey-moon is very strange. Unlike all other moons the change She regularly undergoes. She rises at the full; then loses Much of her brightness; then reposes Faintly; and then . . has naught to lose. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE MARRIAGE (3) by TIMOTHY LIU MARRIAGE by GREGORY NUNZIO CORSO THE MI-NA-MEALA by THOMAS OSBORNE DAVIS NOTES OF A HONEYMOON by HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON WE'S ARIDIN' ON DE HONEYMOON TRAIN by A. S. DRAPER A BEAUTY'S SOLILOQUY DURING HER HONEYMOON by THOMAS HARDY HONEYMOON TIME AT AN INN by THOMAS HARDY MISS KILMANSEGG AND HER PRECIOUS LEG: HER HONEYMOON by THOMAS HOOD A FIESOLAN IDYL by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR |
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