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The emphasis by Coleridge on his sister expresses both grief and his own isolation from others. [7] In terms of relationships with siblings and sisters in general, Coleridge wrote a few other poems on the topic including "On Seeing a Youth Welcomed by his Sister" (1791) [12] and a brief mention of his sister in "Frost At Midnight" (1798). [9]
Giovanni's collection Bicycles: Love Poems (2009) is a companion work to her 1997 Love Poems. [73] Both works touch on the deaths of her mother, her sister, and those massacred on the Virginia Tech campus. Giovanni chose the title of the collection as a metaphor for love itself, "because love requires trust and balance." [74]
Lee Cauldwell, the son of a ranch family at Point Lobos in California, decides to stop drinking one night when he returns drunk from Monterey, falls into the sea and is saved by his sister Tamar. Also living at the ranch are their father David, their deceased mother's mediumistic sister Stella, and their father's mentally disabled sister Jinny ...
Read sister quotes from famous sisters like Serena and Venus Williams as well as fictional sisters to put words to your ... ― Jenny Han, “P.S. I Still Love You” “She is the mother I never ...
Mother-Son Quotes: “All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That’s his.” — Oscar Wilde (TODAY Illustration)
Hanging on the wall is a card he gave her as a child for Mother’s Day. ... There are more than 200 poems about her son and his friends, most of whom have been killed or are in jail, she said ...
We are Seven" is a poem written by William Wordsworth and published in his Lyrical Ballads. It describes a discussion between an adult poetic speaker and a "little cottage girl" about the number of brothers and sisters who dwell with her. The poem turns on the question of whether to account two dead siblings as part of the family.
Snow-Bound: A Winter Idyl is a long narrative poem by American poet John Greenleaf Whittier first published in 1866. The poem, presented as a series of stories told by a family amid a snowstorm, was extremely successful and popular in its time. The poem depicts a peaceful return to idealistic domesticity and rural life after the American Civil War.