top of page

Poemas sobre animales

​

“Pangur Bán”, Anónimo

​

"El sapo y el raton" (The Puddock and the Mouse), Robert Henryson

​

“Soledad Segunda”, Luis de Góngora

​

"El fénix y la tortuga" (The Phoenix and the Turtle), William Shakespeare

​

“Oda sobre la muerte de una gata favorita, ahogada en una pescera de peces dorados” (Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes), Thomas Gray

​

"Soliloquio de un gato muriendo” (An Old Cat's Dying Soliloquy), Anna Seward

​

"A un ratón" (To a Mouse), Robert Burns

​

"Oda a un ruiseñor" (Ode to a Nightingale), John Keats

 

"Para una alondra" (To a Skylark), Percy Shelley

​

"Tejón" (Badger), John Clare

​

"Ella mira un pájaro - ella ríe" (She sights a Bird - she chuckles), Emily Dickinson

​

"Palomas" (Pigeons), James Henry

​

Octava elegía. Elegías de Duino, Rainer Maria Rilke

 

"La pantera" (The Panther), Rainer Maria Rilke

​

"Una gata" (A Cat), Edward Thomas

​

"Serpiente" (The Snake), D.H. Lawrence

​

"El pez" (The Fish), Elizabeth Bishop

​

El libro de los gatos habilidosos del viejo Possum, T.S. Eliot

​

Poeta en Nueva York, Federico Garcia Lorca

​

"La canción de las aves nunca jamás sería la misma" (Never Again will Birds Song be the Same), Robert Frost

​

"En el pasto" (At Grass), Philip Larkin

​

"El jaguar" (The Jaguar), Ted Hughes

​

“View of a Pig, Ted Hughes

​

"El otro tigre", J.L. Borges

​

“Perro”, Charles Bukowski

​

“Las abejas”, Audre Lorde

​

"The Animals", Josephine Jacobsen

​

Manglares, Tomás González

​

La serena hierba, Horacio Benavides

​

"The Otter and the Fish Farmer", Vinciane Despret

​​

"Toward a Zoopolis: Animal Poiesis and the Poetry of Emily Dickinson and Brenda Hillman". Forum for world literarure studies, Vol. 6 No. 1., 2014, http://aaronmoe.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Toward-a-Zoopolis-Publication.pdf

​

La vida radiante de los animales (The radiant lives of Animals), Linda Hogan

​

Del porno y las babosas, Fátima Vélez y Power Paola

​

Una ballena es un país, Isabel Zapata​

​

Bees, and After, John Liles

bottom of page