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poems and 1905
About a quarter of Hardy's poems carry an appended date line, usually the year of completion, but sometimes inclusive years ( `` 1908 - 1910 '' ) or two separate dates when Hardy worked on the poem ( `` 1905 and 1926 '' ) or an approximate date ( `` During the War '' ).
He attempted to make his poetry more comprehensible by reworking his earlier pieces and starting two lengthy poems on the Russian Revolution of 1905.
* Pfohl, Ferdinand: 5 poems (" Moon-rondels, fantastic scenes from ' Pierrot Lunaire '") for voice and piano ( 1891 ); Marschalk, Max: 5 poems for voice and piano ( 1901 ); Vrieslander, Otto: 50 poems for voice and piano ( 46 in 1905, 4 more in 1911 ); Graener, Paul: 3 poems for voice and piano ( c. 1908 ); Marx, Joseph: 4 poems for voice and piano ( 1909 ; 1 of 4, " Valse de Chopin ", reset for voice, piano, and string quartet in 1917 ); Schoenberg, Arnold: 21 poems for speaking voice, piano, flute ( also piccolo ), clarinet ( also bass clarinet ), violin ( also viola ), and violoncello ( 1912 ); Kowalski, Max: 12 poems for voice and piano ( 1913 ); Prohaska, Carl: 6 poems for voice and piano ( 1920 ); Lothar, Mark: 1 poem for voice and piano ( 1921 ).
* Jebb, Richard ( 1905 ) Bacchylides: the poems and fragments, Cambridge University Press
Balakirev's other two symphonic poems, In Bohemia ( 1867, 1905 ) and Russia ( 1884 version ) lack the same narrative content ; they are actually looser collections of national melodies and were originally written as concert overtures.
Alexander Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy ( 1905 – 08 ) and Prometheus: The Poem of Fire ( 1908 – 10 ), in their projection of an egocentric theosophic world unequalled in other symphonic poems, are notable for their detail and advanced harmonic idiom.
In 1905, the Sydney book collector Alfred Lee discovered the 1802 English book " Original Poems and Translations ... chiefly by Susanna Watts ," which collected poems by Watts and others.
In 1905, Pound presented her with a sheaf of love poems under the collective title Hilda's Book.
This ended beginning in about 1905, when Endre Ady's poems were published, composer Béla Bartók was published for the first time, and Zoltán Kodály began collecting folk songs.
Logan tried to prevent by law the reprinting of Bruce's poems ( see James Mackenzie's Life of Michael Bruce, 1905, chap.
1903 ), an edition of the Minor Caroline Poets of the Caroline Period ( 2 vols., 1905 – 1906 ), a collection of rare poems of great value, and editions of English classics.
His poems, Gedichte ( 1838 ; 22nd ed., 1905 ), are mostly lyrics, often humorous, but expressed in simple and natural language.
Although in his early years he was more famous for his orchestral tone poems, Salome ( 1905 ) and Elektra ( 1907 ) quickly established his reputation as Germany's leading opera composer.
Because of this romantic aura, a spirit of struggle for a just cause imbues such diverse works about that period as Sergei Eisenstein's film The Battleship Potemkin and Boris Pasternak's narrative poems " 1905 " and " Lieutenant Schmidt " as well as Shostakovich's symphony.
In 1904 and 1905 Gogarty published several short poems in the London publication The Venture and in John Eglinton's journal Dana.
The collected edition Ionica edited by A. C. Benson ( George Allen, 1905. xxxii, 220 pages ) restored five poems dropped in 1891-three from the 1858 volume & two from the 1877 book-and added one from a letter of 1862 ( first published in the Letters and Journals of 1897 ).
His debut came in 1905, the year he published his first verses in Sunday papers and minor magazines ; in 1909, he managed to have poems featured in major periodicals, such as Sămănătorul.

poems and edited
The fourth period spans 730 – 760 and includes the work of the last great poet of this collection, the compiler Ōtomo no Yakamochi himself, who not only wrote many original poems but also edited, updated and refashioned an unknown number of ancient poems.
Some of the letters are published with the Historia Langobardorum in the Monumenta ; the poems and epitaphs edited by Ernst Dümmler will be found in the Poetae latini aevi carolini, Band i. ( Berlin, 188f ).
Fresh material having come to light, a new edition of the poems ( Die Gedichte des Paulus Diaconus ) has been edited by Karl Neff ( Munich, 1908 ), who denies, however, the attribution to Paul of the most famous poem in the collection, the Ut queant laxis, a hymn to St. John the Baptist, which Guido d ' Arezzo fitted to a melody which had previously been used for Horace's Ode 4. 11.
The Swedish author Mirjam Tapper has edited a book on Rilke's stay in Paris, where she reflected on the many addresses Rilke lived at and tried to find the correlation between his stay there and his poems.
Thoreau's friend Ellery Channing published his first biography, Thoreau the Poet-Naturalist, in 1873, and Channing and another friend Harrison Blake edited some poems, essays, and journal entries for posthumous publication in the 1890s.
In 1920 Blunden published a collection of poems, The Waggoner, and with Alan Porter edited the poems of John Clare ( mostly from Clare's manuscript )
After the poet Opitz died, pastor Nigrinus with two of his associates edited the Opitz poems published by Huenefeld.
* Settings of Essex's poems " Change thy minde " ( set anonymously ) and " To plead my faith " ( set by Daniel Bacheler ) are published in A Musicall Banquet ( 1610 ), a collection of songs edited by Robert Dowland.
In 2002 the text of three short poems was published for the first time in Wedding Poems, edited by Thomas Dilworth.
The first four poems are commonly regarded as ancient lyrics of the early monarchy of Israel and Judah, although there is some suspicion amongst several critics that they have been edited from either less edifying oracles, or oracles which did not refer to Israel.
Frederic G. Kenyon, who edited the papyrus poems, took an unsympathetic view of Bacchylides's treatment of myth in general:
He published a collection of poems at Pest in 1827 and also edited the poetical works of Anyos and Faludi.
Robert Bly, in the 1993 edited volume Neruda and Vallejo: Selected Poems, describes it as " a staggering book, sensual, prophetic, affectionate, wild ," and as " the greatest single collection of poems I have ever read.
( There is also a collection of Barham's miscellaneous poems, edited posthumously by his son, called The Ingoldsby Lyrics.
In the Göttingen Musenalmanach, edited by Heinrich Christian Boie and Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter, Bürger's first poems were published, and by 1771 he had already become widely known as a poet.
That and a two volume edition of Drayton's poems published at Harvard in 1953, edited by John Buxton, are the only 20th century editions of his poems recorded by the Library of Congress.
Using his initials W. H., Hall had edited a collection of the poems of Robert Southwell that was printed by George Eld, the same printer for the 1609 Sonnets.
The Gedichte ( poems ) were edited by Karl Lachmann ( 1827 ).
However, the greatest boost to his fame probably came from a number of his poems being anthologized in the collection Very Bad Poetry, edited by Ross and Kathryn Petras ( Vintage, 1997 ).
His poems were first edited by Rufus Wilmot Griswold ( New York, 1844 ); another American edition, by W. A. Whitmore, appeared in 1859 ; an authorized edition with a memoir by Derwent Coleridge appeared in 1864: The Political and Occasional Poems of W. M. Praed ( 1888 ), edited with notes by his nephew, Sir George Young, included many pieces collected from various newspapers and periodicals.
He published a facsimile of the Milton manuscript in the Trinity College library ( 1899 ), and edited Milton's poems with critical notes ( 1903 ).

poems and by
but this -- yes, terrible step I am about to take is lightened with an inundating joy by the new-found hope that here, in these poems, is treasure -- or at least some measure of beauty, which I did not know of ''.
In many of his poems, death comes by train: a strongly evocative visual image.
Albert B. Lord suggests that the Homeric poems were dictated to a scribe by a minstrel who held in his mind the poems fully matured but did not himself possess the knowledge of writing since it would be useless to his guild, and Magoun argues that the Beowulf poet and Cynewulf may have dictated their verse in the same fashion.
Carl Eduard Schmidt counted 1804 different lines repeated exactly in the two Homeric poems, and by increasing this figure so as to include lines repeated with very slight modifications he counted 2118 different lines used a total of 5612 times.
The style is characterized by specific rhythms and of Qacidate ( Popular poems ) in Arabic dialect that are long poems from the Algerian heritage.
His son was born in August 1920 and in 1924 Milne produced a collection of children's poems When We Were Very Young, which were illustrated by Punch staff cartoonist E. H. Shepard.
Several of Milne's children's poems were set to music by the composer Harold Fraser-Simson.
Of the shorter poems, besides the greeting to Pippin on his return from the campaign against the Avars ( 796 ), an epistle to David ( Charlemagne ) incidentally reveals a delightful picture of the poet living with his children in a house surrounded by pleasant gardens near the emperor's palace.
Angilbert's poems have been published by E. Dummler in the Monumenta Germaniae Historica.
According to 20th-century scholar Walther Ludwig, the poems were spuriously inserted into an early biography of Plato sometime between 250 BC and 100 BC and adopted by later writers from this source.
Among his epic poems, we possess the titles and some fragments of three pieces: the Fisherman, Kirka or Krika, which, however, is designated by Athenaeus as doubtful, and Helena, Of his elegies, some beautiful fragments are still extant.
His Cynaedi, or Ionic poems (), are mentioned by Strabo and Athenaeus.
An example of ancient aesthetics in Greece through poetry is Plato's quote: " For the authors of those great poems which we admire, do not attain to excellence through the rules of any art ; but they utter their beautiful melodies of verse in a state of inspiration, and, as it were, possessed by a spirit not their own.
Many poems and plays, and two operas ( Les Abencérages, by Luigi Cherubini, and L ' esule di Granata, by Giacomo Meyerbeer ) mention the legend, but the whole story is doubtful, because the best historians do not mention it.
The poems are pervaded by deep pessimism and preoccupation with death, without religious consolation.
In the 1985 film „ Out of Africa ” Karen “ Tanja “ Blixen, the character played by Meryl Streep, cites poems by A. E.
Crowne have proposed the idea that the poem was passed down from reciter to reciter under the theory of oral-formulaic composition, which hypothesises that epic poems were ( at least to some extent ) improvised by whoever was reciting them.
The Battle of the Nile remains one of the Royal Navy's most famous victories, and has remained prominent in the British popular imagination, sustained by its depiction in a large number of cartoons, paintings, poems and plays.
One of the best known poems about the battle is Casabianca, which was written by Felicia Dorothea Hemans in 1826 and describes a fictional account of the death of Captain Casabianca's son on Orient.
As a boy he knew Virgil by heart and composed a number of poems in Italian and Latin.

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