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Page "Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne" ¶ 17
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Her and poems
Her acquaintance with him parallels her writing a number of poems, which may suggest she fell in love with him.
Her first book, Child Whispers, a collection of poems, was published in 1922.
Her works include novels, plays, stories, libretti and poems written in a highly idiosyncratic, playful, repetitive, and humorous style.
Her early poems usually picture a man and a woman involved in the most poignant, ambiguous moment of their relationship, much imitated and later parodied by Nabokov and others.
Her best known poems are “ Arkansas ” and “ Ozark Mountaineer .” More information about Ms. Willie Kavanaugh Hocker may be found at http :// encyclopediaofarkansas. net
Her poems have been translated into Italian, Japanese and Russian.
These poems were " Lesbos ", " Femmes damnés ( À la pâle clarté )" ( or " Women Doomed ( In the pale glimmer ...)"), " Le Léthé " ( or " Lethe "), " À celle qui est trop gaie " ( or " To Her Who Is Too Gay "), " Les Bijoux " ( or " The Jewels "), and " Les " Métamorphoses du Vampire " ( or " The Vampire's Metamorphoses ").
Her life, immortalized in the writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero and also, it is generally believed, in the poems of Gaius Valerius Catullus, was characterized by perpetual scandal.
Her aim was to have her poems distributed through the German birth clinics, but the letter has been interpreted as showing sympathy for Hitler.
Her poems were set to music and made into hymns, and were published in the United States and Germany as well as in England.
Her poems have been translated in more than twenty-five languages and published in different literary journals, anthologies in Slovenia and abroad.
Her poems were first published when she was at university in the early 1950s.
Her first book of poems, The Unlooked-for Season won a Gregory Award in 1960 and she won a Cholmondeley Award for her second collection, Rose in the Afternoon in 1974.
Her first published poems appeared in the Malahat Review in 1978.
Her poems were selected for inclusion in Best American Poetry ( 1992 ) and Best Canadian Poetry ( 2009, 2010, 2011 ).
Her millennial book, Waging Peace, collects the poetry, art, and texts from Convergence: Poems for Peace, which presented art-wrapped poems from across Canada to all MPs and Senators in 2001.
Her first collection of poems, Sonnets to Duse and Other Poems, was published that same year.
Her poetry is often requested and read on the BBC Radio 4 programme ' Poetry Please ' and one of her poems was chosen by Judi Dench and Michael Williams in their joint BBC Radio 4 ' With Great Pleasure '.
Her poems in this meter ( collected in Book I of the ancient edition ) ran to 330 stanzas, a significant part of her complete works ( and of her surviving poetry: fragments 1-42 ).
Her death triggered great sadness in Rexroth, who wrote a number of elegiac poems in her honor.
Her first book, New Goose ( 1946 ), collected many of these poems.
Her youthful ambition had been to be the greatest English poetess, and her first publications were poems in the manner of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Walter Scott ( Miscellaneous Verses, 1810, reviewed by Scott in the Quarterly ; Christina, the Maid of the South Seas, a metrical tale based on the first news of discovery of the last surviving mutineer of the H. M. S. Bounty and a generation of British-Tahitian children on Pitcairn Island in 1811 ; and Blanche part of a projected series of ' Narrative poems on the Female Character ,' 1813 ).
Her volume of poems, Fleurs d ' avril ( 1882 ), was crowned by the Académie française.

Her and at
Her hat had come off and fallen behind her shoulders, held by the string, and he could see her face more clearly than he had at any time before.
Her mother wrote Kate of her grief at the death of Kate's baby and at Jonathan's decision to go with the South `` And, dear Kate '', she wrote, `` poor Dr. Breckenridge's son Robert is now organizing a militia company to go South, to his good father's sorrow.
Her house stood on a rise of ground, and before she got into her car she looked at the houses below.
Her first day at work she was puzzled by an entry in the doctor's notes on an emergency case.
Her pride is as much at stake as her virtue ; ;
Her neighbors in the expensive Houston apartment building told reporters that the ash-blonde beauty had talked at times about her past as `` the Golden Girl of the Mickey Jelke trial ''.
Her father's attention would be on the road ahead and it wouldn't deviate an inch until he crossed the bridge at the Falls and took the River Road to LaSalle and, finally, turned in at their own driveway at 387 Heather Heights.
Her teeth chattered so that she made three attempts at speech before she became intelligible.
Her husband, who is the son of Alton John Mason of Shreveport, La., and the late Mrs. Henry Cater Parmer, was president of Alpha Tau Omega and a member of Delta Sigma Pi at Lamar Tech, and did graduate work at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa, on a Rotary Fellowship.
Her young British lawyer, James Dunlop, pleaded that she was sorely needed at her Portland home by her widowed mother, 80, her maiden aunt, also 80 and bedridden for 20 years, and her uncle, 76, who once ran a candy shop.
Her husband, who was sentenced to 15 years in the federal prison at McNeil Island last April for robbery of the Hillsdale branch of Multnomah Bank, also was charged with the store holdup.
Her days as an art student at the University of Budapest came to a sudden end during the Hungarian uprisings in 1957 and she and her husband Stephen fled to Vienna.
Her lover precedes her in death, at the wheel, and presumably he too has chosen.
Her time spent at the many locations featured in her books is very apparent by the extreme detail in which she describes them.
Her first appearance in a full-length novel was in The Murder at the Vicarage in 1930.
Her chief center of worship was at Paphos, where the goddess of desire had been worshipped from the early Iron Age in the form of Ishtar and Astarte.
Her brother conducted the ceremony and a modest reception followed at her father's house.
Her jealousy of Cassandra, and her wrath at the sacrifice of Iphigenia and at Agamemnon's having gone to war over Helen of Troy, are said to have been the motives for her crime.
According to Ben Pimlott, biographer of Queen Elizabeth II, the Aga Khan presented Her Majesty with a filly called Astrakhan, who won at Hurst Park Racecourse in 1950.
Her two children by Philip II, Philip, count of Clermont ( died 1234 ), and Mary, who married Philip I of Namur, were legitimized by the pope in 1201 at the request of the king.

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