Egypt's ancient pyramids, temples, and tombs along the Nile, which have
inspired artists and writers for centuries, have also inspired
poets--and particularly in the nineteenth century when romanticism was
at its height. Egyptologist Donald Ryan here collects a wide variety of
English verse composed by British, Irish, and North American poets fired
up by the magic, the splendor, or the desolation of the pharaonic ruins
and their echoes of a distant history. Includes verse by: Robert
Browning, Lord Byron, John Keats, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Herman
Melville, John Ruskin, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Algernon Charles Swinburne,
Alfred Tennyson, Lady Wilde, and many more.