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Sara Teasdale

Advice to a Girl

No one worth possessing
Can be quite possessed;
Lay that on your heart,
My young angry dear;
This truth, this hard and precious stone,
Lay it on your hot cheek,
Let it hide your tear.
Hold it like a crystal
When you are alone
And gaze in the depths of the icy stone.
Long, look long and you will be blessed:
No one worth possessing
Can be quite possessed.

—Sara Teasdale

This article was written by Knowledgerush staff or contributed by users. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

Sara Teasdale (August 8, 1884 - January 29, 1933), was an American lyrical poet. She was born Sarah Trevor Teasdale in St. Louis, Missouri.

Sara’s major themes were love, nature's beauty, and death, and her poems were much loved during the early 20th century. In 1918 she won the Columbia University Poetry Society prize (the forerunner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry) and the annual prize of the Poetry Society of America for her volume, Love Songs . Her style and lyricism are well illustrated in her poem, Spring Night (1915), from that collection.

Throughout her life, Sara suffered poor health and it was not until she was nine that she was judged healthy enough to begin school - a private school for children just one block away from her home. In 1898 she attended Mary Institute, and the following year she enrolled in Hosmer Hall, from which she graduated in 1903. Her influences included the actress Duse, whom she never saw perform, the British poet Christina Rossetti, and numerous trips to Europe, beginning in 1905.

In 1913, Sara was courted by two admirers. The poet Vachel Lindsay fell in love with her and at one point was sending her long, fantastic love letters on a daily basis. He asked her to marry him, but though she had deep feelings for Vachel, she instead married Ernst Filsinger, a businessman, in 1914. The following year they moved to New York City, which became her home for the rest of her life. Sara and Vachel remained fond but platonic friends throughout their lives, and Lindsay said that she was his life's "most inspiring, most satisfying friend." She was the inspiration for what Lindsay believed to be his greatest poem, The Chinese Nightingale.

Sara was very much a product of her Victorian upbringing, and she was never able to experience in life the passion that she expressed in her poetry. She was not happy in her marriage, and she divorced Ernst in 1929, against his wishes. Sara's health further declined. On the morning of January 29, 1933, in her New York City apartment, Sara took an overdose of sleeping pills, lay down in a warm bath, fell asleep, and never woke up again. Her last, and some say her finest, collection of verse, Strange Victory, was published posthumously that same year.

Sara Teasdale’s major works include: Sonnets to Duse and Other Poems (1907); Helen of Troy and Other Poems (1911; Revised, 1922); Rivers to the Sea (1915); Love Songs (1917 ); Flame and Shadow (1920; Revised, 1924 ); Dark of the Moon (1926); Strange Victory (1933); The Collected Poems (1937);

References

Sara Teasdale: Woman and Poet. 1979. William Drake Harper & Row ISBN 0870496069

The Strange Victory of Sara Teasdale by Marya Zaturenska [1]

Referenced By

1918 in literature | 29 January | 29th January | English poets | Famous People Who Have Commited Suicide | Famous People Who Have Committed Suicide | January 29 | January 29th | List of English language poets | List of English poets | List of famous people who have committed suicide | List of famous suicides | List of notable poets | List of people by name: Te | List of people who commited suicide | List of poets | List of women poets | Orrick Glenday Johns | Orrick Johns | Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sara Teasdale".

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Previous Page 1 2
Posted by Anonymous May 11th, 2006
it helped me with my english project i really like this website i am going to use it on all of my projects for school thank you
Posted by Anonymous May 11th, 2006
SHE REALLY SUX
Posted by Anonymous May 11th, 2006
haha gay person
Posted by Anonymous May 12th, 2006
it needs more info like who were her parents and other important things that happened in her life other than tht it is ok
Posted by Anonymous May 12th, 2006
she needs help
Posted by Anonymous May 12th, 2006
needs more info
Posted by billy bob May 23rd, 2006
this is worthless if u really want ot know about sara teasdale go to www.bonniehamre.com it tells u almost everything in her life in cludign her parents and wat the y did
Posted by Anonymous May 23rd, 2006
That site looks like Bonnie Hamre's home page... a lot of info on Bonnie and her books and a bunch of dead links on sara and stuff cut and paste from William Drakes biography *sigh*
Posted by Anonymous May 18th, 2007
this is not enough information
Posted by Anonymous May 22nd, 2007
A Tribute to Sara Teasdale http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUtlJ1Zz2KQ
Posted by Ilona7474@aol.com December 5th, 2007
Did Sarah Teasdale live at One Fifth Ave in New York? Did she commit suicide there? I had heard that she continued to haunt the halls. Is any of these things true?

I would appreciate any information.

Posted by your mom March 6th, 2008
this was soooooooo gooood! NOTTTTTTTTTTT hahahha
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Books by Sara Teasdale

Flame and Shadow
[Text][Paginated Text]

Helen of Troy
[Text][Paginated Text]

Love Songs
[Text][Paginated Text]

Rivers to the Sea
[Text][Paginated Text]



 

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