Love After Love (poem)
Love After Love is a poem by Derek Walcott. The poem is about how people often forget themselves when they have been in a relationship for a very long time. It instructs the reader on how to love themselves and learn how to put their own needs first. .[1] The poem is studied at GCSE level in English school's as part of the AQA Anthology.[2]
References
- ^ http://www.teachit.co.uk/armoore/anthology/differentcultures.htm#loveafterlove
- ^ http://www.teachit.co.uk/armoore/anthology/differentcultures.htm#loveafterlove
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Poems from
Other Cultures |
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Seamus Heaney |
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Gillian Clarke |
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Carol Ann Duffy |
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Simon Armitage |
"Mother, any distance greater than a single span" · "My father thought it..." · "Homecoming" · "November" · " Kid" · "Those bastards in their mansions" · "I've made out a will; I'm leaving myself" · "Hitcher"
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Pre-1914 |
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Prose |
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