Poetry
- Among the Millett, and Other Poems. (Ottawa: J. Durie, 1888).
- Lyrics of Earth. (Boston: Copeland & Day, 1895) (Wildside Press, 2007) ISBN 978-1-4344-0130-4
- Archibald Lampman and Duncan Campbell Scott, Two poems. n.p., 1896.
- Alcyone. (Ottawa: Ogilvy, 1899).
- The Poems of Archibald Lampman, Duncan Campbell Scott ed. (Toronto: Morang, 1900) (General Books, 2009). ISBN 978-1-150-52018-1
- Lyrics of Earth: Sonnets and Ballads, Duncan Campbell Scott ed. (Toronto: Musson, 1925).
- At the Long Sault and Other New Poems, Duncan Campbell Scott and E.K. Brown ed.. (Toronto: Ryerson, 1943).
- Selected Poems of Archibald Lampman, Duncan Campbell Scott ed. (Toronto: Ryerson, 1947).
- Lampman’s Kate: Late Love Poems of Archibald Lampman, Margaret Coulby Whitridge ed. (Ottawa: Borealis, 1975).
- Lampman’s Sonnets: The Complete Sonnets of Archibald Lampman, Margaret Coulby Whitridge ed. (Ottawa: Borealis, 1976). ISBN 978-0-919594-50-0
- The Story of an Affinity, D.M.R. Bentley ed. (London, ON: Canadian Poetry Press, 1986). ISBN 978-0-921243-00-7
- Selected Poetry of Archibald Lampman, Michael Gnarowski ed. (Ottawa: Tecumseh, 1990). ISBN 978-0-919662-15-5
Read more about this topic: Archibald Lampman, Publications
Famous quotes containing the word poetry:
“Do you know how poetry started? I always think that it started when a cave boy came running back to the cave, through the tall grass, shouting as he ran, Wolf, wolf, and there was no wolf. His baboon-like parents, great sticklers for the truth, gave him a hiding, no doubt, but poetry had been bornthe tall story had been born in the tall grass.”
—Vladimir Nabokov (18991977)
“The base of all artistic genius is the power of conceiving humanity in a new, striking, rejoicing way, of putting a happy world of its own creation in place of the meaner world of common days, of generating around itself an atmosphere with a novel power of refraction, selecting, transforming, recombining the images it transmits, according to the choice of the imaginative intellect. In exercising this power, painting and poetry have a choice of subject almost unlimited.”
—Walter Pater (18391894)
“Surrealism is not a school of poetry but a movement of liberation.... A way of rediscovering the language of innocence, a renewal of the primordial pact, poetry is the basic text, the foundation of the human order. Surrealism is revolutionary because it is a return to the beginning of all beginnings.”
—Octavio Paz (b. 1914)