Wordsworth: Poems

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My Husband Operated on Me for 18 Hours… So I Left Him
My Husband Operated on Me for 18 Hours… So I Left Him
Thanks to a car accident, I've suffered from a severe injury in my head, leaving me with one foot in my grave. My husband, Andrew Rollins who's known for being an extremely talented doctor, serves as my primary surgeon. He conducts a surgery on me that lasts for 18 hours straight just so he can wrench my life from Death's cold fingers. But the first thing I do after I wake up is tell him, "Let's get divorced, Andrew." His eyes become bloodshot immediately. "Tess, I just saved your life, and yet the first thing you want is a divorce? Is it because I've been too busy with my work at the hospital that it cuts down on the time I get to spend with you?" I frown deeply. "It's precisely due to the fact that you've saved me that I must file for a divorce. That's the only way I can help you uphold your title as an extremely talented doctor." My older family members are quick to advise me. "Andrew is such an amazing husband. Not only is he a family man, but he also loves you with all his heart. Why must you insist on getting a divorce? Are you tired of living a great life with Andrew?" Whoever has the gall to advise me will receive a rebuttal from me, no questions asked. "If you think he's such a prized man, you can have him after the divorce." Because of that, everyone is pissed at me. "Go ahead with the divorce, then! You'd better not regret your decision in the future!" I mumble under my breath, "Oh, I regret it alright… I regret not divorcing him sooner."
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10 Chapters
18 Hours of Surgery Couldn't Save Our Marriage
18 Hours of Surgery Couldn't Save Our Marriage
A car accident left me with severe brain injuries. I was left hanging by a thread. My wife, a renowned medical genius, personally operated on me for 18 consecutive hours, pulling me back from death's grasp. Yet, the first words I said to her after waking up were, "Grace, I want a divorce." Her eyes were filled with tears. "Derek, I just saved your life, and now, you want to leave me? Is it because I've been too busy at the hospital? Because I haven't spent enough time with you?" I frowned. "It's exactly because you saved me that I want this divorce. I won't let you sacrifice your reputation for me." The family elders tried to reason with me. "Grace is such a wonderful wife. She takes care of everything and loves you deeply. Why insist on a divorce? Why throw away such happiness?" No matter who approached me, I dismissed them with the same response. "If you think she's so perfect, then she'll be available once we're divorced." The elders were furious. "Fine! Get your divorce! But don't come crying to us when you regret it!" I whispered under my breath, "The only thing I regret is not divorcing her sooner."
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10 Chapters
Pearls of love
Pearls of love
The Griffin brothers; Shane and Kane fell in love with the same girl but only Shane captures her heart. When he chooses suicide as a cure to his inoperable cancer, Kane swoops in and confesses his feelings. After three years, Shane reincarnates in the body of a man who went into a coma as a result of a ghastly car accident. This return brings the realization that he will have to contend with his brother for the love of his life without revealing his true identity, least according to the prophecy he dies.
9.8
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40 Chapters
Tycoon's favorite wife: I am enough to match with you
Tycoon's favorite wife: I am enough to match with you
Heloise, the Brook family's adopted daughter, was merely a pitiable tool they used to shield their biological daughter, Coral, from harm. She suffered abuse in the Brook household from a young age and was eventually discarded and left to fend for herself in the harsh and hellish slums of BlueWolf Mountain, teeming with mentally ill, disabled, and sinister individuals. Then one day, Reginald Wordsworth, the enigmatic and domineering CEO of the PHOENIXFELL Empire's first conglomerate, Reginald Wordsworth chose her, and brought her out of the slums. Her fate took a dramatic turn as she embarked on a quest for revenge. She pretended to be a mental patient and engaged in a battle of wits with Reginald, unraveling the mysteries surrounding the enigmatic head of the first financial conglomerate. At the same time, Reginald also discovered that she was not an ordinary person. ******** she had ever been penniless, but Reginald, the big cheese, was irresistibly drawn to her and highly pampered her. ******** " Heloise, an abandoned baby, a dirt poor!" Someone said before he saw Heloise signing dozens of real estate agreements, while dozing off. " Heloise, has no backing. Why is she so arrogant?" Someone said, and then he saw Phoenixfell's first conglomerate's tycoon Reginald Wordsworth publicly announced his marriage to Heloise. "Heloise, I know, she couldn't give birth a long time ago!" Another person said, and then he was beaten by Wordsworth's little young master, "Mommy can't give birth, so where did I come from?"
10
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291 Chapters
TUNNELS
TUNNELS
Tunnels deconstructs the individual’s Romantic fascination with ‘love’ or the grammaticality of beauty. Ideally, the ‘tunnels’ in the collection are subterranean love poems from the suburban imaginary. These seemingly syntactic tunnels travel through one’s literary imagination or heterotopic dreamscapes, and while αγάπη (Greek for ‘love’) inspires these rhizomic tunnels to navigate the abysmal ‘meta-spectacle’ of gesture, language or moment of poemness, the mind like the many-colored jeepneys of Manila, where driving past roast goose restaurants in Shek Kip Mei or spotting stilt houses in Kampong Kleang, attempt to explore the transgeneric textualities of the everyday, alongside the unstructurality of time and space, the littoral and the liminal.
Not enough ratings
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46 Chapters
The Unfulfilled Wedding
The Unfulfilled Wedding
While cleaning Desmond Maynard's house, I accidentally knocked over his mother's keepsake. He once told me it was his most precious possession. But when I picked it up, hundreds of love letters spilled out. There were beautiful poems, passionate lyrics, and heartfelt confessions. He had written one letter a week without stopping. On the back of each one wrote a line: To My Love, Bunny. The nickname rang a bell. It was his junior in college. Things started to make sense. I slaved away for 13 years, running his household and caring for his family, but Desmond never even said he liked me. That was because he already had someone he liked. I sorted the letters by date, put them back, and grabbed my phone to make a call. "Mom, I'm in for the marriage proposal."
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9 Chapters

What Themes Are Explored In Broken And Reset: Selected Poems?

4 Answers2025-12-10 12:00:35

Broken and Reset: Selected Poems' dives deep into the raw, unfiltered emotions of human existence. The collection grapples with themes of suffering and renewal, often juxtaposing the fragility of the human spirit with its incredible resilience. One poem might depict the shattering of identity after loss, while another slowly pieces together hope from the fragments. The imagery of broken glass, mended pottery, and regrowth after fire weaves through the work, creating a visceral sense of destruction and healing.

What struck me most was how the poet frames personal breakdowns as necessary transformations. There's this recurring motif of voluntary surrender—like breaking down walls to rebuild them stronger. Some sections read almost like alchemical texts, where emotional pain becomes the crucible for change. The later poems shift toward quieter realizations, suggesting that recovery isn't about returning to wholeness but finding beauty in the cracks.

Can You Recommend Classic Poems That Rhyme And Inspire?

5 Answers2025-10-19 15:40:15

Listening to classic poetry is like sipping a fine wine—it has so many layers to enjoy! One of my all-time favorites has to be 'The Road Not Taken' by Robert Frost. The way he captures the essence of choices in life resonates deeply with me. The rhyme scheme is simple yet effective, and it makes the imagery of his journey feel real. Another gem is 'A Dream Within a Dream' by Edgar Allan Poe. His haunting rhythm pulls you in, and the philosophical questions about reality really make you ponder existence itself.

Then there’s the ever-charming ‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening’, also by Frost. That feeling of peaceful solitude in the woods really strikes a chord, especially in today’s fast-paced world. It’s hard not to feel reflective and inspired when you read it.

To think of classic rhymes, we can't skip over Emily Dickinson’s works. Although many are short, they're packed with depth and emotion, and her striking use of slant rhyme makes each piece uniquely beautiful.

How To Care For Wordsworth Classics Paperback Editions?

5 Answers2025-09-10 23:54:01

Collecting classic literature is one of my quiet joys, especially those Wordsworth Editions with their elegant covers. To keep them in good shape, I handle them with clean hands—oils and dirt can degrade the paper over time. I also avoid bending the spines too much; instead, I gently open the book to read without causing stress to the binding.

Storage matters just as much. I keep them upright on a shelf, snug but not squeezed, to prevent warping. Humidity is a killer for paperbacks, so I make sure my room isn’t too damp. A silica gel pack tucked nearby helps. Sunlight fades those lovely covers, so I position my shelf away from direct light. It’s a small ritual, but seeing my collection stay pristine brings me peace.

What Is The Meaning Behind Forty-Five: Poems?

4 Answers2025-11-26 09:33:41

Forty-Five: Poems' by Seamus Heaney feels like a quiet conversation with history, memory, and loss. The collection was written after his father's death, and the number 45 refers to the age he was when his father passed. There's this raw intimacy in how Heaney stitches together grief with everyday moments—like digging potatoes or recalling childhood stories. The poems don't just mourn; they resurrect. The imagery of soil, tools, and hands becomes a metaphor for how we unearth and hold onto the past.

What strikes me most is the balance between personal pain and universal resonance. Heaney never shouts his grief; it's in the pauses, the half-said things. The collection isn't about grand gestures but the weight of small, accumulated absences. I always finish it feeling like I've walked through someone else's memories, yet somehow recognized my own.

Where Can I Read Selected Poems Online For Free?

3 Answers2026-01-30 08:13:37

Finding 'Selected Poems' online for free can be a bit of a treasure hunt, but there are a few places worth checking out. Project Gutenberg is my go-to for classic literature, and they often have older poetry collections available in their public domain section. If the poet you're looking for is well-known, like Emily Dickinson or Walt Whitman, their works might be there. Another great resource is the Internet Archive—they sometimes have scanned copies of older editions that you can borrow digitally. Just search for the title or poet, and you might get lucky.

For more contemporary poets, things get trickier due to copyright, but some authors share excerpts on their personal websites or platforms like Medium. Poetry Foundation’s website also has a vast library of poems, though not always full collections. If you’re flexible about which 'Selected Poems' you want, browsing their database could lead you to something just as inspiring. I’ve stumbled upon gems there I wouldn’t have found otherwise.

What Is The Meaning Behind Afternoon Masala: Poems Ending?

4 Answers2026-02-25 08:21:32

That ending hit me like a ton of bricks the first time I read it. 'Afternoon Masala: Poems' wraps up with this haunting image of an empty kitchen—spices still lingering in the air, but the hands that mixed them are gone. It made me think about how traditions fade when they aren't passed down. My grandmother used to cook with those same spices, and now her recipes live in my memory, just like the poems suggest.

What really stuck with me was the contrast between warmth and absence. The last stanza describes sunlight pooling on a counter where someone should be chopping onions, but isn't. It's not just about loss—it's about the spaces people leave behind, how ordinary places become memorials. I tear up every time I reread it while making chai; the steam feels like a ghost of those disappearing flavors.

Where Can I Read Scattered Poems Online For Free?

3 Answers2026-01-16 23:22:20

Reading poetry online for free can be a bit of a treasure hunt, especially for lesser-known works like 'Scattered Poems.' I’ve spent hours digging through digital archives and stumbled across a few gems. Sites like Project Gutenberg and Open Library sometimes have older poetry collections, though 'Scattered Poems' might be trickier to find since it’s not as mainstream.

Another route is checking out academic repositories or university libraries that offer free access to their digital collections. I once found a rare chapbook in a university archive that wasn’t available anywhere else. If you’re okay with snippets, Google Books or Internet Archive might have previews or scans. Just don’t expect a full copy—unless someone’s uploaded it unofficially, which isn’t ideal but happens. Honestly, half the fun is the search itself, like uncovering buried literary artifacts.

Why Does 'Out Of The Dust: New And Selected Poems' Focus On Dust?

4 Answers2026-02-18 03:23:58

Reading 'Out of the Dust' feels like sifting through layers of history and memory—dust isn’t just dirt here; it’s a metaphor for resilience and impermanence. The Oklahoma Dust Bowl era was brutal, and Karen Hesse’s poems capture how dust became life itself—how it choked crops but also carried stories of survival. It’s in the cracks of floors, the grit in food, the haze between hope and despair. What sticks with me is how dust transforms: it’s destruction, but also the raw material for rebuilding. The imagery makes you feel the weight of it, like a phantom limb of the land.

Hesse’s choice isn’t just historical accuracy; dust symbolizes how people endure what’s unshakable. My favorite poem, 'Debts,' ties dust to debt—both inescapable, both defining lives. It’s genius how something so small becomes this vast force, like the way grief lingers in a room long after the event. Makes you wonder what 'dust' we’re carrying today, invisible but shaping us all the same.

Where Can I Read Poems For Rebels Online For Free?

3 Answers2026-01-28 06:13:27

Man, finding 'Poems For Rebels' online can feel like hunting for hidden treasure! I stumbled across it a while back on a site called Project Gutenberg—they’ve got a ton of public domain works, and sometimes niche poetry collections slip in there. It’s worth combing through their catalog or using their search bar. Another spot I’ve dug around in is the Internet Archive; they’ve got this wild digital library where people upload all sorts of obscure texts. If the collection’s old enough to be out of copyright, there’s a chance it’s floating around there. Just typing the title into their search might yield gold.

If those don’ pan out, I’d hit up forums like Reddit’s r/FreeEBOOKS or even poetry-focused subreddits. Sometimes folks share Dropbox links or Google Drive folders with rare finds. And hey, don’t overlook LibriVox if you’re cool with audiobooks—volunteers record public domain stuff, and hearing rebellious poetry read aloud adds a whole new layer of fire to it. Fair warning, though: if it’s a newer anthology, free copies might be sketchy. Always double-check if it’s legal to avoid supporting sketchy pirate sites.

What Happens In The Poetic Edda: The Mythological Poems?

5 Answers2026-02-25 01:27:27

The Poetic Edda' is this incredible collection of Old Norse poems that feels like stepping into a world where gods and giants clash, heroes rise and fall, and fate is woven with ruthless precision. The mythological poems particularly dive into the creation of the cosmos, the exploits of Odin, Thor, and Loki, and the looming doom of Ragnarök. One of my favorite parts is 'Völuspá,' where a seeress unravels the universe’s origins and its fiery end—it’s hauntingly beautiful, full of imagery like Yggdrasil trembling and the sun turning black. Then there’s 'Hávamál,' where Odin drops wisdom like 'All the entrance fees before you cross the bridge,' which basically means think before you act. The poems don’t just tell stories; they feel like incantations, rhythmic and raw, pulling you into a time where myth was as real as the ground underfoot.

What’s wild is how these poems balance humor and horror—like Loki’s verbal sparring in 'Lokasenna,' where he roasts every god at a feast until things escalate into chaos. Or 'Thrymskvida,' where Thor cross-dresses to retrieve his stolen hammer, blending absurdity with sheer badassery. The Edda doesn’t romanticize; it’s gritty, tragic, and darkly funny, showing gods who are flawed, petty, and utterly human. Every time I reread it, I catch new layers—like how Odin’s relentless pursuit of knowledge mirrors our own hunger for understanding, even when it costs us everything.

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