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FURTHER READING
Poems for Halloween
Bats
by Paisley Rekdal
Darkness
by George Gordon Byron
Dirge
by Thomas Lovell Beddoes
From The Lady of the Manor
by George Crabbe
Goblin Market
by Christina Rossetti
Halloween
by Robert Burns
Haunted Houses
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Raising the Devil: A Legend of Cornelius Agrippa
by Richard Harris Barham
Shadwell Stair
by Wilfred Owen
Spirits of the Dead
by Edgar Allan Poe
The Hag
by Robert Herrick
The Hand of Glory: The Nurse's Story
by Richard Harris Barham
The Haunted Palace
by Edgar Allan Poe
The Raven
by Edgar Allan Poe
The White Witch
by James Weldon Johnson
Third Charm from Masque of Queens
by Ben Jonson
Three Witches from Macbeth
by William Shakespeare
Ulalume
by Edgar Allan Poe
Other Sonnets
A Certain Slant of Sunlight
by Ted Berrigan
American Sonnet (10)
by Wanda Coleman
American Sonnet (35)
by Wanda Coleman
Anthem for Doomed Youth
by Wilfred Owen
Atlantis—A Lost Sonnet
by Eavan Boland
Autumn
by Richard Garcia
Death, be not proud (Holy Sonnet 10)
by John Donne
Discourse
by Forrest Hamer
History
by Robert Lowell
How Do I Love Thee? (Sonnet 43)
by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Mother Night
by James Weldon Johnson
My Letters! all dead paper... (Sonnet 28)
by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun (Sonnet 130)
by William Shakespeare
Oil & Steel
by Henri Cole
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? (Sonnet 18)
by William Shakespeare
Shawl
by Albert Goldbarth
Silence
by Thomas Hood
Sonnet 1
by Gwendolyn Bennett
Sonnet 131
by Petrarch
Sonnet 6
by Rainer Maria Rilke
Sonnet [Nothing was ever what it claimed to be,]
by Karen Volkman
When I Consider How My Light Is Spent
by John Milton
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Sonnet 100  
by Lord Brooke Fulke Greville

In night when colors all to black are cast,

Distinction lost, or gone down with the light;
The eye a watch to inward senses placed,
Not seeing, yet still having powers of sight,

Gives vain alarums to the inward sense,
Where fear stirred up with witty tyranny,
Confounds all powers, and thorough self-offense,
Doth forge and raise impossibility:

Such as in thick depriving darknesses,
Proper reflections of the error be,
And images of self-confusednesses,
Which hurt imaginations only see;

And from this nothing seen, tells news of devils,
Which but expressions be of inward evils.
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