When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: prayer for lost of a family member poem

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Come Up from the Fields Father - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Come_Up_From_the_Fields_Father

    The poem was one of Whitman's most popular during his lifetime, particularly during the Reconstruction era. The scholar Ed Folsom notes that it was his most anthologized poem in those years. Folsom felt that the poem found its success because of the vast populations that could relate to the loss of a family member during the war. [8]

  3. Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do_Not_Stand_at_My_Grave...

    The poem was adapted as the lyrics in the song "Prayer" by Lizzie West. The last four lines of the poem were recited among others in Getting Over It with Bennett Foddy. The poem is read by Lisa (played by Kerry Godliman), the dying wife of lead character Tony (played by Ricky Gervais) in the final episode of the Netflix series After Life.

  4. Brothers Poem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_Poem

    The poem is 20 lines (five stanzas) long and written in Sapphic stanzas, a metre named after Sappho, which is composed of three long lines followed by one shorter line. [7] The beginning of the poem is lost, but it is estimated that the complete work was probably between one and three stanzas longer. [39]

  5. Edward Rowland Sill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Rowland_Sill

    A memorial volume was privately printed by his friends in 1887. A biographical sketch in The Poetical Works of Edward Rowland Sill, edited by William Belmont Parker with Mrs Sill's assistance was printed in 1906, and his poem "The Fool's Prayer" (1879) was selected for inclusion in the Yale Book of American Verse in 1912. [4]

  6. Vespers (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vespers_(poem)

    When he prays for the members of his family it is in terms of what he ought to say rather than his actual feelings of love. The lines of the poem have caesurae particularly when the child's mind turns from prayer to casual thoughts. [11] As printed in the book the child's recitations of prayer, and the first and last stanzas, are in italics. [7]

  7. Funeral oration (ancient Greece) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funeral_oration_(ancient...

    A funeral oration or epitaphios logos (Ancient Greek: ἐπιτάφιος λόγος) is a formal speech delivered on the ceremonial occasion of a funeral.Funerary customs comprise the practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honour.