Gedichten uit de wereldliteratuur/Engelse gedichten op titel
Uiterlijk
Gedichten
[bewerken]- After Death (Christina Rossetti)
- Best image of myself, and dearer half (John Milton: Paradise Lost)
- Darkness (Lord Byron)
- Death Be Not Proud (John Donne)
- Do not go gentle into that good night (Dylan Thomas)
- Do not stand at my grave and weep (auteur is onzeker)
- Holy Sonnets (John Donne)
- How do I love thee? (Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
- I started early - took my dog (Emily Dickinson)
- Leaves of Grass (Walt Whitman)
- Lines Composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey (William Wordsworth)
- O there is blessing in this gentle breeze (William Wordsworth)
- Paradise Lost van John Milton
- Piers Plowman (Middelengels gedicht van William Langland)
- Sonnet 18 (Shakespeare), bekend als "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day"
- Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening ("Halte houden aan een woud, op een sneeuwachtige avond", Robert Frost)
- The Flea ("De vlo", John Donne)
- The Legend of Good Women ((Middelengels gedicht van Geoffrey Chaucer))
- The Phoenix and the Turtle (Shakespeare)
- The Prelude van William Wordsworth
- The Raven van Edgar Allan Poe
- The Road Not Taken ("De niet gekozen weg", Robert Frost)
- The Tyger ("De tijger", William Blake)
- To His Mistress Going to Bed (John Donne)
- Troilus and Criseyde, lang verhalend gedicht van Geoffrey Chaucer
- Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote, Openingsregels 1-18 van 'The General Prologue' van The Canterbury Tales van Geoffrey Chaucer.
Versdrama
[bewerken]- Not marching now in fields of Thrasymene (Christopher Marlowe: "Doctor Faustus")
- Of comfort no man speak! Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs (Shakespeare, monoloog uit Richard the Second)
- O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo? (Shakespeare, monoloog uit Romeo en Julia)
- To be or not to be (Shakespeare, monoloog uit Hamlet)
- Was this the face that launch'd a thousand ships uit "Doctor Faustus" van Christopher Marlowe