
Shepherdess
Alice Meynell's poetry dwells in the quiet spaces where nature meets the soul. In these verses, the shepherdess becomes more than a rural figure: she is a meditative presence, watching her flock against expansive skies while the world moves silently around her. Meynell writes with the delicate precision of someone who understands that profound truths live in stillness, in the patient rhythm of days spent among hills and sheep. Her language is spare but luminous, each image carrying weight beyond its apparent simplicity. These are poems that ask readers to slow down, to notice the way light falls on grass or how wind moves through wool. Written during an era when women poets were still rare, Meynell's work asserts a feminine consciousness at home in the natural world, finding meaning not in cities or society but in solitary communion with the earth. For readers who crave poetry that breathes rather than demands, that whispers rather than shouts, Shepherdess offers a window into a gentler mode of seeing.
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Algy Pug, Agnes Robert Behr, Bruce Kachuk, Craig Franklin +12 more








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