Rudyard KiplingSterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2000 - 48 páginas "Twenty-eight poems (or parts of poems) reverberate with Kipling's compassion for his fellow humans....introduction details the events of his life and their relationship to his work. With dedication to the structure, rhythm, and rhyme of his craft, Kipling created poetry that, when read aloud, sings to its audience in every phase. Sharpe's exquisite paintings illustrate the exotic quality of the verse, whether of animals in the jungle or ships at sea. Vibrant colors reflect the strong emotions of each poem...The faces of children show humor, trust, curiosity, and moodiness. Familiar lines from 'If' and 'The Ballad of East and West' demonstrate the poet's universal appeal. As in other books in this series, each poem is preceded by background information, and difficult or unfamiliar words are defined...A worthy addition."--School Library Journal. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 5
Página 3
... Prophets at Home At Home and Abroad Neighbours The Houses The Beginning of the Armadilloes The Ballad of East and West To Thomas Atkins 19 222 20 323 24 25 26 27 28 30 Mandalay Thorkild's Song Tales and Legends Letting in the Jungle ...
... Prophets at Home At Home and Abroad Neighbours The Houses The Beginning of the Armadilloes The Ballad of East and West To Thomas Atkins 19 222 20 323 24 25 26 27 28 30 Mandalay Thorkild's Song Tales and Legends Letting in the Jungle ...
Página 7
... prophet preaching to a deaf audience . Yet " Prophets at Home " ( page 22 ) is both intensely personal and historical , and exactly the sort of poem that Kipling most valued . In the same way , " A Song in Storm " ( pages 40-41 ) ...
... prophet preaching to a deaf audience . Yet " Prophets at Home " ( page 22 ) is both intensely personal and historical , and exactly the sort of poem that Kipling most valued . In the same way , " A Song in Storm " ( pages 40-41 ) ...
Página 21
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Página 22
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Página 48
... Prophets at Home , 7 , 22 Recessional , 8 , 46 Road - Song of the Bandar - Log , 34 Roosevelt , Teddy , 7 " Scribbler , The , " 6 Seal , white , 10-11 Second Jungle Book , 6 Seven Years ' Hard , 6 Something of Myself , 5 Song in Storm ...
... Prophets at Home , 7 , 22 Recessional , 8 , 46 Road - Song of the Bandar - Log , 34 Roosevelt , Teddy , 7 " Scribbler , The , " 6 Seal , white , 10-11 Second Jungle Book , 6 Seven Years ' Hard , 6 Something of Myself , 5 Song in Storm ...
Contenido
III | 10 |
IV | 13 |
V | 14 |
VI | 15 |
VII | 16 |
VIII | 18 |
IX | 19 |
X | 21 |
XVIII | 30 |
XIX | 32 |
XX | 33 |
XXI | 34 |
XXII | 36 |
XXIII | 38 |
XXIV | 39 |
XXV | 40 |
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Términos y frases comunes
anon aught Ballads BANDAR-LOG Binkie black and blue child Cities and Thrones city in Burma class and skin combers Cupid's bow DANE WOMEN Departmental Ditties Djinn dramatic monologue Eileen Gillooly England famous Fate's discourtesy Whereby flipperling forget-lest we forget frouzly Gods have afflicted home-acre house and thy hump Cameelious hump India Jim Sharpe Jungle Book Kiddies and grown-ups Kipling once wrote Kipling's poems Lest we forget-lest live long pull Lord mirth Moulmein MOWGLI'S BROTHERS Nineveh Nobel Prize North and Forty old grey Widow-maker poet pull for Stavenger Pussy Rangoon Recessional rhythm ring-dove Rio Roll Roll down-roll roll to Rio Rudyard Kipling seas ship smells the Northland snarly-yarly SONG IN STORM sound Southampton speaker stanza talk thee thine thinks she smells Thorkild's Song Thrones and Powers thy house thy tail hangs tooth and nail Twixt my house verse form Viking wake the white-ash white-ash breeze woods wraith
Pasajes populares
Página 9 - I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine; The deaths ye died I have watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine. Was there aught that I did not share In vigil or toil or ease,— One joy or woe that I did not know, Dear hearts across the seas? I have written the tale of our life For a sheltered people's mirth, In jesting guise — but ye are wise, And ye know what the jest is worth.