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  2. Poems of Passion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poems_of_Passion

    Cover of the first edition of Poems of Passion, 1883. Poems of Passion is a collection of poems by Ella Wheeler Wilcox that was published in 1883. [1]Despite the fact that the book's title "threatened to spark a scandal," eventually it "was embraced by thousands of perfectly respectable midwestern readers."

  3. Patience Strong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patience_Strong

    Winifred Emma May (4 June 1907 – 28 August 1990) was a poet from the United Kingdom, best known for her work under the pen name Patience Strong.Her poems were usually short, simple and imbued with sentimentality, the beauty of nature and inner strength.

  4. Maggie Pogue Johnson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maggie_Pogue_Johnson

    Her poem The Story of Lovers Leap was inspired by a famous resorts in the South, Greenbrier White Sulpher Springs in West Virginia. [6] Johnson's early poetry was part of a larger movement by Black women poets to create a model of womanhood that was an alternative to the dominant model of "True Womanhood" as a white, middle-class experience. [7]

  5. Joanna Baillie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_Baillie

    Real passion, "genuine and true to nature", was to be the subject; each play was to focus on the growth of one master passion. [8] This unusually analytical and arguably artificial approach generated much discussion and controversy, and in "a week or two Plays on the Passions was a main topic... in the best literary circles" (Carswell 273).

  6. Feminist poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminist_poetry

    A prodigy as a child, Wheatley was the first black person to publish a book of poems in the American colony, and though her poems are sometimes thought of as expressing "meek submission," she is also what Camille Dungy describes as "a foremother," and a role model for black women poets as "part of the fabric" of American poetry. [21]

  7. Edith Wharton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Wharton

    One of her earliest literary endeavors (1902) was the translation of the play Es Lebe das Leben ("The Joy of Living"), by Hermann Sudermann. The Joy of Living was criticized for its title, because the heroine swallows poison, at the end, and was a short-lived Broadway production. It was, however, a successful book. [37]

  8. Are Women People? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Are_Women_People?

    These satirical poems directly address issues of feminism, the double standards that women face and the need for equality for women. This collection of poems differs from that of The Treacherous Texts because unlike in the first section, most of the poems in this collection are not directly in response to and referencing a specific quote.

  9. Judith Wright - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judith_Wright

    The Judith Wright Award was awarded as part of the ACT Poetry Award by the ACT Government between 2005 and 2011, for a published book of poems by an Australian poet. [ 29 ] The Judith Wright Poetry Prize for New and Emerging Poets (worth A$20,000 ), was established in 2007 by Overland magazine.