A combined reading and analysis of the anonymous medieval lyric Wanne Mine Eyhnen Misten, a short contemplation on death and mortality written in Middle English.
A combined reading and analysis of the anonymous medieval lyric Westron Wynde, exploring its expression of love, longing, and desire for homecoming in just four lines.
A combined reading and analysis of Edwin Brock’s Five Ways to Kill a Man, a satirical war poem tracing the history of human violence from crucifixion to modern warfare.
A combined reading and analysis of Jarrell’s The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner, one of the most powerful short poems of the Second World War, exploring its brutal imagery of dehumanisation and death.
An experimental jazz reading of Yeats’s Sailing to Byzantium, bringing the poem’s themes of aging, art, and the soul’s journey toward immortality to life through music.
The second part of an analysis of Milton’s Lycidas, exploring its themes of fame, religious consolation, and the place of the poem in Milton’s development as a poet.
A combined reading and analysis of Yeats’s Mad as the Mist and Snow, exploring its themes of aging, madness, and the passing of time in the context of his later poetry.
The first part of an analysis of Milton’s Lycidas, examining the poem’s pastoral conventions, its elegiac structure, and Milton’s meditation on the death of a fellow poet.
A reading of Milton’s Lycidas, one of the great elegies in English literature, mourning the death of Edward King and meditating on fame, grief, and religious faith.
A reading of Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress, one of the finest carpe diem poems in English, urging the beloved to seize the pleasures of life before time runs out.
