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She and published
She edited and published Lavoisier ’ s memoirs ( whether any English translations of those memoirs have survived is unknown as of today ) and hosted parties at which eminent scientists discussed ideas and problems related to chemistry.
She is also the author of articles that have been published in the New York Times and Newsweek.
She wrote the preface for On War and by 1834 had published several of his books.
She was asked to provide information for Defence Secretariat 19 about leading CND personnel but was instructed to include only information from published sources.
She was the wife of Sir Michael Redgrave and mother of Vanessa, Lynn and Corin, and published her autobiography, Life Among the Redgraves, in 1988.
She published under the pen name Ellis Bell.
She also published a cookbook entitled Serving Time: America's Most Wanted Recipes.
She was active up until her death and also published marine life stills and released the marine-based film Impressionen unter Wasser in 2002.
She spent her last years in a close personal and professional collaboration with anthropologist Rhoda Metraux, with whom she lived from 1955 until her death in 1978. Letters between the two published in 2006 with the permission of Mead's daughter clearly express a romantic relationship.
She writes that only three fragmentary manuscripts are known to have survived into the modern period, two 3rd-century fragments ( P. Rylands 463 and P. Oxyrhynchus 3525 ) published in 1938 and 1983, and a longer 5th-century Coptic translation ( Berolinensis Gnosticus 8052, 1 ) published in 1955.
She also joined the Literary Club and had two stories published in the yearbook: Little Sister and Sergeant Terry.
She also updated her biography on her dad and published Frank Sinatra: An American Legend.
Stuart Dischell published a well-received pantoum, " She Put on Her Lipstick in the Dark ," in the December, 2007 issue of The Atlantic.
One further work of Germain's on elasticity was published posthumously in 1831: her “ Memoir sur la courbure des surfaces .” She used the mean curvature in her research ( see Honors in Number Theory ).
" And American University's Gray records,She also published in Annales de chimie et de physique an examination of principles which led to the discovery of the laws of equilibrium and movement of elastic solids.
She had already published extensively, having won various awards, and had come especially to meet Hughes and his fellow poet Lucas Myers.
She ascribed it to her grandmother Adriana Porter, and claimed that the earlier published text was distorted from " its original form ".
She also wrote a children's book, I, Lorelei, which was published by HarperCollins in February 2009.
She published several books.
She translated and published the first English volume of his collected writings.
She published
She placed fourth behind Mia Farrow, Judy Geeson and Katharine Houghton for a " Golden Laurel " award as the year's " Most Promising Newcomer " with the results published in the Motion Picture Exhibitor magazine.
She assumed the role of Elizabeth's guardian following the King's death ; and another book, The Lamentations of a Sinner, was published.
She did nearly a year at the University of Minnesota's Graduate School of Psychology, where she published two articles, and worked in the psychology department's animal research laboratory, before dropping out and moving to attend Berkeley for a few courses, when she began writing the SCUM Manifesto.

She and poem
She was the pursuer as clearly as was Venus in Shakespeare's poem.
She is the subject of a poem ( Peregrine White and Virginia Dare ) by Rosemary and Stephen Vincent Benet, and the North Carolina Legend of the White Doe.
She was portrayed as Belphoebe or Astraea, and after the Armada, as Gloriana, the eternally youthful Faerie Queene of Edmund Spenser's poem.
She is a figure of imaginary power within the poem who can inspire within the narrator his own ability to craft poetry.
She is also mentioned in the poem Appius and Virginia by John Webster and Thomas Heywood, which includes the following lines:
She appears in the following verse from the Poetic Edda poem Völuspá, along with Urðr and Skuld:
She read a free verse poem calling for peace in the world.
She writes in a poem about her own style that " lucid and transparent / are my images ".
At 17 years old, in his journal Sirius, she published her first poem which could be translated as On his hand are many shiny rings, ( 1907 ) signing it ‘ Anna G .’ She soon became known in St Petersburg's artistic circles, regularly giving public readings.
( She noted that Song of the Last Meeting, dated 29 September 1911, was her 200th poem ).
She tells how Akhmatova would write out her poem for a visitor on a scrap of paper to be read in a moment, then burnt in her stove.
She was also invoked at the beginning of a lost poem, Rhadine (), that was referred to and briefly quoted by Strabo.
She chants a poem, and then returns to her husband Manannán, who shakes his magical cloak of mists between Fand and Cúchulainn, that they may never meet again.
She also helped to create a poem to include the Wiccan Rede within it.
" She wrote a poem entitled The Martyrdom of St. Cyprian in two books, of which 800 lines survived, and an inscription of a poem on the baths at Hammat Gader.
She wrote an epic poem combining her classical Athens educational background by doing a Homeric centos, but adding stories from the book of Genesis and the New Testament stories of the life of Jesus Christ.
She ensured the posthumous publication of his final volume of poetry, The Far Field, which includes the poem " Meditation at Oyster River.
She began writing at an early age, publishing her first poem at the age of ten and compiling a collection of poetry at 15.
Humanities scholar Camille Paglia speculated that the song's lyrics might have been partly inspired by William Blake's poem " The Mental Traveller ": " She binds iron thorns around his head / And pierces both his hands and feet / And cuts his heart out of his side / To make it feel both cold & heat.
She performed T. S. Eliot's poem The Waste Land as a one-person show at the Liberty Theatre in New York to great acclaim in 1996, winning the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding One-Person Show for her performance.
She developed a love of poetry at a young age, after discovering a poem by Tennyson on a scrap of newspaper that had been used to wrap a pat of butter ; this discovery was one of Siddall's inspirations to start writing her own poetry.
She amassed a devoted readership and attempted to begin each column with a poem.
She was the subject of an Irish poem, of which an English version was written by James Mangan from a prose translation by Eugene O ' Curry.
She wrote Scissorhands as a " love poem " to Burton, calling him " the most articulate person I know, but couldn't put a single sentence together ".

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