Narrative Poems - Narrative Poems

Narrative Poems

  • The Adventures & Brave Deeds Of The Ship's Cat On The Spanish Maine: Together With The Most Lamentable Losse Of The Alcestis & Triumphant Firing Of The Port Of Chagres by Richard Adams
  • Autobiography of Red by Anne Carson
  • "The Ballad Of Charlotte Dymond" by Charles Causley
  • The Book of the Duchess by Geoffrey Chaucer
  • The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
  • The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  • Crank by Ellen Hopkins
  • Crossing America by Leo Connellan
  • The Divine Comedy by Dante
  • Don Juan by Lord Byron
  • The Eve of St. Agnes by John Keats
  • Cantar de Mio Cid, (anonymous) medieval epic
  • The Elder Edda (anonymous)
  • The Homeric Epics (Iliad, Odyssey, and The Homeric Hymns)
  • The Epic of Gilgamesh
  • The Hunting of the Snark by Lewis Carroll
  • The Kalevala (the Finish national epic)
  • Lamia by John Keats
  • "The Highwayman" by Alfred Noyes
  • The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun by J.R.R. Tolkien
  • Os Lusíadas (Portugal's national epic by Luís Vaz de Camões)
  • The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser
  • Virgil's Aeneid
  • The Laidly Wyrm of Spindleston Heugh by Josie Whitehead
  • Statius' Thebaid
  • The Prelude by William Wordsworth
  • Pan Tadeusz by Adam Mickiewicz
  • Piers Plowman by William Langland
  • The Rape of Lucrece by William Shakespeare
  • Eugene Onegin by Alexander Pushkin
  • The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe
  • The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • The Ring and the Book by Robert Browning
  • The Song of Hiawatha by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  • The Wreck of the Hesperus by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  • Tam Lin (anonymous)
  • Tam o' Shanter, by Robert Burns
  • The Truant by E.J. Pratt
  • Terje Vigen by Henrik Ibsen
  • The Walrus and the Carpenter by Lewis Carroll
  • Out, Out- by Robert Frost
  • Dust by Carlo Bordini
  • The Battle of Blenheim by Robert Southey

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Famous quotes containing the words narrative and/or poems:

    To have frequent recourse to narrative betrays great want of imagination.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)

    After all, poets shouldn’t be their own interpreters and shouldn’t carefully dissect their poems into everyday prose; that would mean the end of being poets. Poets send their creations into the world, it is up to the reader, the aesthetician, and the critic to determine what they wanted to say with their creations.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)