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Robert and Southey's
* The Literary Protégées of the Lake Poets, Dennis Low ( Chapter 1 contains a revisionist contextualisation of Robert Southey's infamous letter to Charlotte Brontë )
These were both times he was in the area, and, by 1799, Coleridge was able to read Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer, a work which also drew on Purchas's work.
The first mention of vampires in English literature appears in Robert Southey's monumental oriental epic poem Thalaba the Destroyer ( 1797 ), where the main character Thalaba's deceased beloved Oneiza turns into a vampire, although that occurrence is actually marginal to the story.
* Robert Southey's first collection of poetry is published.
Other books by him which indicate his interests in literature include: Robert Southey ( in the " English Men of Letters " series, 1880 ), his edition of Southey's Correspondence with Caroline Bowles ( 1881 ), and Select Poems of Southey ( 1895 ), his Correspondence of Sir Henry Taylor ( 1888 ), his edition of Wordsworth's Poetical Works ( 1892 ) and of his Lyrical Ballads ( 1890 ), his French Revolution and English Literature ( 1897 ; lectures given at Princeton University in 1896 ), History of French Literature ( 1897 ), Puritan and Anglican ( 1900 ), Robert Browning ( 1904 ) and Michel de Montaigne ( 1905 ).
The first mention of the game is in Robert Southey's memoirs published in 1821.
The most famous account in English is Robert Southey's long 1805 poem Madoc, which uses the story to explore the poet's freethinking and egalitarian ideals.
" Other Romantic poets wrote works with a Middle-Eastern setting inspired by Vathek, included Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer ( 1801 ) and Thomas Moore's
* " Iram " is the lost city where the Muslim hero Thalaba was kept safe in Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer ( 1801 )
Kehama is the name of a fictional Hindu rajah who obtains and sports with supernatural powers, whose adventures are given in Robert Southey's Curse of Kehama ( 1810 ).
In Elms's view, the anality of " The Story of the Three Bears " can be traced directly to Robert Southey's fastidious, dirt-obsessed aunt who raised him and passed her obsession to him in a milder form.

Robert and anti-war
In the UK a Labour Party anti-war activist Robert Smillie isuued a statement in June 1919 condeming the continuation blockade in which he also claimed that 100, 000 German civilians had died.
With the nation divided by the Vietnam War and with the assassinations of King and Robert F. Kennedy earlier that year serving as backdrop, the city became a battleground for anti-war protesters who vowed to shut down the convention.
A few days later, Senator Robert Kennedy of New York also entered the race on an anti-war platform.
After leaving the Rank Organisation in the early 1960s, Bogarde abandoned his heart-throb image for more challenging parts, such as barrister Melville Farr in Victim ( 1961 ), directed by Basil Dearden ; decadent valet Hugo Barrett in The Servant ( 1963 ), which garnered him a BAFTA Award, directed by Joseph Losey and written by Harold Pinter ; The Mind Benders ( 1963 ), a film ahead of its times in which Bogarde plays an Oxford professor conducting sensory deprivation experiments at Oxford University ( precursor to Altered States ( 1980 )); the anti-war film King & Country ( 1964 ), playing an army lawyer reluctantly defending deserter Tom Courtenay, directed by Joseph Losey ; a television broadcaster-writer Robert Gold in Darling ( 1965 ), for which Bogarde won a second BAFTA Award, directed by John Schlesinger ; Stephen, a bored Oxford University professor, in Losey's Accident, ( 1967 ) also written by Pinter ; Our Mother's House ( 1967 ), an off-beat film-noir directed by Jack Clayton in which Bogarde plays an n ' er do well father who descends upon " his " seven children on the death of their mother, British entry at the Venice Film Festival ; German industrialist Frederick Bruckmann in Luchino Visconti's La Caduta degli dei, The Damned ( 1969 ) co-starring Ingrid Thulin ; as ex-Nazi, Max Aldorfer, in the chilling and controversial Il Portiere di notte, The Night Porter ( 1974 ), co-starring Charlotte Rampling, directed by Liliana Cavani ; and most notably, as Gustav von Aschenbach in Morte a Venezia, Death in Venice ( 1971 ), also directed by Visconti ; as Claude, the lawyer son of a dying, drunken writer ( John Gielgud ) in the well-received, multi-dimensional French film Providence ( 1977 ), directed by Alain Resnais ; as industrialist Hermann Hermann who descends into madness in Despair ( 1978 ) directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder ; and as Daddy in Bertrand Tavernier's Daddy Nostalgie, ( aka These Foolish Things ) ( 1991 ), co-starring Jane Birkin as his daughter, Bogarde's final film role.
Following that, several politically active Oregon Democrats asked Robert Kennedy to run as an anti-war candidate.
Staughton Lynd, a lawyer and historian noted for anti-war, civil rights and community activism, was one of two children of Robert Staughton Lynd and Helen Lynd.
He was active in opposition to the Vietnam War, volunteering for the 1966 anti-war campaign of Robert Scheer ( the subject of his book The Scheer Campaign ).
As a result, she has created some remarkable collaborations with other artists and international musicians, including Joan Baez in an anti-war concert that took place in Tel Aviv in 1988 ; Mercedes Sosa ; Oliver Shante, Germany ; Stadio, Italy ; the Greek singer Glykeria ; Noa ; Anwar Ebrahem from Tunisia, Enzo Avetable of Italy ; Nani Cayemi in Brazil ; Robert Wyatt in the UK and The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra ( UK ) in 2005, and many others.
It united the remaining international socialist anti-war movement, whose more prominent leaders were Vladimir Lenin, Grigory Zinoviev and Leon Trotsky from Russia, Robert Grimm from Switzerland, and Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht from Germany.
When anti-war activists detonated a truck bomb outside the University's Army Math Research Center on August 24, 1970, damaging several campus buildings and killing a post doc physics researcher, The Daily Cardinal editorially supported the bombers, saying " If Robert Fassnacht had died in Vietnam ... he would be a line in a news story – a number.
One notable example of its sometimes controversial editorial approach was a musical comedy sketch that satirised the actions of then-NSW Premier Robert Askin, who was reported to have ordered his driver to “ run over the bastards ” when anti-war demonstrators threw themselves in the front the car in which he and visiting U. S. President Lyndon B. Johnson were travelling.

Robert and poem
Carmine Coppola wrote and edited the musical score, including the title song " Stay Gold ", which was based upon a famous Robert Frost poem and performed for the movie by Stevie Wonder.
The haggis is a traditional Scottish dish, considered the national dish of Scotland as a result of Robert Burns ' poem Address to a Haggis of 1787.
Recitation of the poem Address to a Haggis by Robert Burns is an important part of the Burns supper
" Auld Lang Syne " is a traditional poem reinterpreted by Robert Burns, which was later set to music.
The poet The Hon William Robert Spencer immortalised this hound in a poem.
Perceval, although unfinished, was particularly popular: four separate continuations of the poem appeared over the next half century, with the notion of the Grail and its quest being developed by other writers such as Robert de Boron, a fact that helped accelerate the decline of Arthur in continental romance.
Much of the poem could have been influenced by Coleridge's opium dream or, as his friend and fellow poet Robert Southey joked, " Coleridge had dreamed he had written a poem in a dream ".
As a characteristic of speech and writing, metaphors can serve the poetic imagination, Sylvia Plath, in her poem " Cut ", to compare the blood issuing from her cut thumb to the running of a million soldiers, " redcoats, every one "; and, enabling Robert Frost, in " The Road Not Taken ", to compare one's life to a journey.
Merlin reciting his poem s, as illustrated in the French book from the 13th century " Merlin ", by Robert de Boron.
Several decades later, the poet Robert de Boron retold this material in his poem Merlin.
Innocent XII appears as one of the narrators in Robert Browning's long poem " The Ring and the Book " ( 1869 ), based on the true story of the Pope's intervention in a historical murder trial in Rome during his papacy.
* Bob Smart's Dream, a 1906 poem by Robert Service that speculates about the Whitehorse of the future.
* Robert Burns ' version of the Scots poem Auld Lang Syne is first published, in this year's volume of The Scots Musical Museum.
* " Porphyria's Lover ", originally published as " Porphyria ", a poem by Robert Browning
More orgiastic witches ' meetings are also depicted in Robert Burns ' poem " Tam o ' Shanter " and in Goethe's play Faust.
American poet laureate Robert Frost describes a pointless rock wall as a metaphor for the myopia of the culture-bound in his poem Mending Wall.
In 1929, Robert E. Howard ( under the pseudonym " Patrick Howard ") published a poem, " Skulls and Dust ", about Cambyses's death.
This story was published in the poem " Ticonderoga a Legend of the West Highlands " by Robert Louis Stevenson in Scribner's Magazine December 1887.
There is first hand evidence from the captured Carmelite friar, Robert Baston in his poem, written just after the battle, that one or both sides employed slingers and crossbowmen.
" Scots Wha Hae " is the title of a patriotic poem by Robert Burns.
Robert Frost alluded to the merging of Amygdalaceae into Rosaceae in his poem The Rose Family, when he wrote " The rose is a rose and was always a rose / But the theory now goes that the apple's a rose, / and the pear is, and so's the plum, I suppose.
Then Disney consultant and children's book author Robert D. San Souci suggested making a movie of the Chinese poem, " The Song of Fa Mu Lan " and Disney combined the two separate projects.
* Robert Burns published a brief irreverent poem, On A Celebrated Ruling Elder, as an elegy for a Scottish Presbyterian.

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