American Literature
Mirror Poem
War of the Worlds
English Literature
Beocat Poem
Shakespeare's Plays
Wanderer Poem
Grammar
Dictionary
Form & Structure Classes
Morphology
Punctuation
Rules & Tests
Sentence Structures
Research Paper
Constructing a Thesis
Testing the Thesis
Outline Basics
Developing an Outline
So What Test
Index


English Literature


The Wanderer

Doom is dark and deeper than any sea-dingle.
Upon what man it fall
In spring, day-wishing flowers appearing,
Avalanche sliding, white snow from rock-face
That he should leave his house,
No cloud-soft hand can hold him, restraint by women;
But ever that man goes
Through place-keepers, through forest trees
A stranger to strangers over undried sea,
Houses for fishes, suffocating water,
Or lonely on fell as chat,
By pot-holed becks
A bird stone-haunting, an unqulet bird.

There head falls forward, fatigued at evening,
And dreams of home,
Waving from window, spread of welcome,
Kissing of wife under single sheet;
But waking sees
Bird-flocks nameless to him, through doorway voices
Of new men making another love.

Save him from hostile capture,
From sudden tiger's leap at corner;
Protect his house.
His anxious house where days are counted
From thunderbolt protect,
From gradual ruin spreading like a stain;
Converting number from vague to certain,
Bring joy, bring day of his returning,
Lucky with day approaching, with leaning dawn.


Teacher Territory is designed to assist the high school Language Arts teacher in ideas and resources for teaching students using a variety of methods. From traditional methods to integrating technology into the classroom, Teacher Territory can help. This site currently contains lesson plans, WebQuests, thematic units, graphic organizers, and more. More things will be added as developed.


Click here to email the Webmaster.