English 325:002 Dimensions of Writing and Literature
(Spring 2007)

Other Sonnets in the Norton Introduction to Literature for Writing Assignment #4

Edna St. Vincent Millay, "[Women have loved before as I love now]" (878-79) and "[I, being born a woman and distressed]" (879); John Milton, "On the Late Massacre in Piedmont" (889-90); William Shakespeare, "[Full many a glorious morning have I seen]" (901), "[That time of year thou mayst in me behold]" (942), "[Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?]" (948), "[Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore]" (985), "[Th'expense of spirit in a waste of shame]" (1011), "[Not marble, nor the gilded monuments]" (1138); Wendy Cope, "[Not only marble, but the plastic toys]" (1150-51); Archibald Lampman, "Winter Evening" (906-07); John Donne, "[Batter my heart, three-personed God]" (950) and "[Death, be not proud]" (1241-42); Robert Frost, "Design" (1057); Sandra Gilbert, "Sonnet: The Ladies' Home Journal" (1064-65); Robert Hayden, "Frederick Douglass" (1069); Elizabeth Barrett Browning, "To George Sand: A Desire" (1079), "To George Sand: A Recognition" (1080); John Keats, "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" (1094), "On the Grasshopper and the Cricket" (1094), "On Seeing the Elgin Marbles" (1095), "Sonnet to Sleep" (1095), and "[O thou whose face hath felt the Winter's wind]" (1105); June Jordan, "Something Like a Sonnet for Phillis Miracle Wheatley" (1156); Countee Cullen, "Yet Do I Marvel" (1172-73) and "From the Dark Tower" (1174); Helene Johnson, "Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem" (1177); Claude McKay, "If We Must Die" (1178), "The Harlem Dancer" (1179), and "The White House" (1179-80); Gerard Manley Hopkins, "God's Grandeur" (1255) and "The Windhover" (1256); Galway Kinnell, "Blackberry Eating" (1256); Ezra Pound, "A Virginal" (1264)Alfred Tennyson, "Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal" (1272-73); William Butler Yeats, "Leda and the Swan" (1289)