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Page "Elizabeth I of England" ¶ 61
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poet and colonist
* 1578 – George Sandys, English colonist and poet ( d. 1644 )
He was also the great nephew of both George Sandys ( 2 March 1577 – March 1644 ), an English traveller, colonist and poet ; and of Sir Edwin Sandys ( 9 December 1561 – October 1629 ), an English statesman and one of the founders of the London Company.
George Sandys ( 2 March 1577 – March 1644 ) was an English traveller, colonist and poet.
Robert Hayman ( 14 August 1575 – November 1629 ) was a poet, colonist and Proprietary Governor of Bristol's Hope colony in Newfoundland.

poet and Edmund
* 1896 – Edmund Blunden, English poet, author and critic ( d. 1974 )
After his death, Gosse was portrayed as a despotic father of uncompromising religious views in Father and Son ( 1907 ), the literary masterpiece of his son, poet and critic Edmund Gosse.
Edmund Spenser, a famous English poet best known for his epic poem ' The Faerie Queene '
** Edmund Cooper, British author & poet ( d. 1982 )
* October 21 – Edmund Waller, English poet ( b. 1606 )
* Edmund Waller of England ( 1606 – 1687 ), Member of Parliament and poet
* March 3 – Edmund Waller, English poet ( d. 1687 )
* January 13 – Edmund Spenser, English poet ( b. 1552 )
** Edmund Bolton, English historian and poet ( d. 1633 )
Edmund Charles Blunden, MC ( 1 November 1896 – 20 January 1974 ) was an English poet, author and critic.
Washington University professor Joseph Lowenstein, with the assistance of several undergraduate students, has been involved in editing, annotating, making a digital archive of the first publication of poet Edmund Spencer's collective works in 100 years.
The English epic poet Edmund Spenser further embellished this myth at the opening of Book V of The Faerie Queene ( 1596 ), where he claims that Astraea left behind " her groome | An yron man ", called Talus.
The church of St John the Divine, Kennington, which was to be described by the poet John Betjeman as " the most magnificent church in South London ", was designed by George Edmund Street ( architect of the Royal Courts of Justice on Strand, London ), and was built between 1871 and 1874.
* Edmund Campion, poet and martyr
Sir Edmund William Gosse CB ( 21 September 1849 – 16 May 1928 ) was an English poet, author and critic ; the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes.
Other members of White's graduating year included Edmund Clarence Stedman, the poet and essayist, Wayne MacVeagh, Attorney General of the United States and U. S. Ambassador to Italy, and Hiram Bingham II, the missionary, collectively comprising the so-called " famous class of ' 53 ".
Its most infamous use was by Humphrey Gilbert during the wars against the native Irish in Munster in the 1560s and 1570s, actions which earned the praise of the poet Edmund Spenser in his A View of the Present State of Ireland in 1596.
The poet Edmund Spenser left an account of it:
* Other candidates include Thomas Barlow ( 1607 – 1691 ), bishop of Lincoln ; Timothy Bray ( 1480 – 1539 ), abbot of Heath, Derbyshire ; and Edmund Waller ( 1606 – 1687 ), poet and politician.
The novel partly takes its inspiration from Father and Son, the autobiography of the English poet Edmund Gosse, which describes his relationship with his father, Philip Henry Gosse.
It is the burial place of the author G. K. Chesterton, Edmund Burke and the poet Edmund Waller, for whom a tall stone obelisk was erected over the tomb chest in St Mary and All Saints churchyard.
The well-known poet Edmund Blunden was his tutor at Merton, and regarded his poetic talent highly.
Among her social circle were Edmund Wilson, Berenice Abbott, and the Dadaist artist and poet Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, whose biography Barnes tried to write but never finished.

poet and Spenser
* Ben Jonson – playwright and poet, imprisoned for the 22 September 1598 killing of his fellow actor Gabriel Spenser in a duel.
* Robert B Parker seems to have named his detective hero " Spenser " after an English poet as a deliberate tribute to Marlowe.
* January 13-Edmund Spenser, English poet ( born 1552 )
* William Drummond of Hawthornden ( 1585 – 1649 ), Scottish poet, influenced by Spenser ; best known for illustrated essay, Cypresse Grove
In " An Eye For An Eye ", Spenser quotes something from Edmund Spenser, a famous 16th century poet, so that may be where the name originated as the spelling is the same.
When introducing himself, he often said " Spenser with a ' S ', like the poet.
* No 5 Bell: Edmund Spenser, poet, 1552 – 1599
Edmund Spenser, the poet, made the district famous in his epic The Faerie Queene.
The second is from the View of the Present State of Ireland, written by English poet Edmund Spenser, who fought in the campaign:
Gloriana was the name given by the 16th-century poet Edmund Spenser to his character representing Queen Elizabeth I in his poem The Faerie Queene.
Through Lord Burghley he obtained, in 1580, the post of secretary to the new Lord Deputy of Ireland, Lord Grey de Wilton, and thus became a fellow worker with the poet, Edmund Spenser.
George married Elizabeth Spencer ( related to poet / author Edmund Spenser ), who like her husband was a patron of the arts.

poet and wrote
This seems odd when one recalls that he wrote poetry longer than any other major English poet: `` Domicilium '' is dated `` between 1857 and 1860 '' ; ;
Ahmed was a poet who wrote a number of political and lyrical works under the name Bahti.
The chief authorities on the career of Alaric are: the historian Orosius and the poet Claudian, both contemporary, neither disinterested ; Zosimus, a historian who lived probably about half a century after Alaric's death ; and Jordanes, a Goth who wrote the history of his nation in 551, basing his work on The Trojan War.
129 ) indicate that the poet, his brothers and Pittacus made plans to overthrow him and that Pittacus subsequently betrayed them ; Alcaeus and his brothers fled into exile where the poet later wrote a drinking song in celebration of the news of the tyrant's death ( frag.
* Anton Alexander Graf von Auersperg ( 1806 – 1876 ) – Austrian poet who wrote under the pseudonym of Anastasius Grün.
Mozart wrote to his father in May 1783 about Salieri and Lorenzo Da Ponte, the court poet: " You know those Italian gentlemen ; they are very nice to your face!
" Swedish author August Strindberg wrote: " Linnaeus was in reality a poet who happened to become a naturalist ".
* Archibald MacLeish wrote a poem entitled " You Also, Gaius Valerius Catullus ," where he addresses the poet.
" Of the Australian national flag, the Australian poet Banjo Paterson wrote in 1893: The English flag may flutter and wave, where the world wide oceans toss, but the flag the Australian dies to save, is the flag of the Southern Cross.
The Scottish poet William Soutar also wrote over one hundred American Cinquains ( he labelled them Epigrams ) between 1933 and 1940.
Chaucer was a courtier, leading some to believe that he was mainly a court poet who wrote exclusively for nobility.
In 1841, the German linguist and poet August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben wrote the lyrics of " Das Lied der Deutschen " to Haydn's melody, lyrics that were considered revolutionary at the time.
Constantine FitzGibbon, Thomas ' first in-depth biographer, wrote " No major English poet has ever been as Welsh as Dylan ".
Ernest Lawrence Thayer ( August 14, 1863 – August 21, 1940 ) was an American writer and poet who wrote " Casey at the Bat ".
* The Italian Renaissance poet Lucrezia Tornabuoni chose Esther as one of biblical figures on which she wrote poetry.
Francis Scott Key ( August 1, 1779 – January 11, 1843 ) was an American lawyer, author, and amateur poet, from Georgetown, who wrote the lyrics to the United States ' national anthem, " The Star-Spangled Banner ".
This early form of democracy was recorded by the philosopher Rousseau, by the poet Wordsworth, by the dramatist Tirso de Molina and by the composer Iparraguirre, who wrote the piece called Gernikako Arbola.
In the 1890s, English socialist poet Edward Carpenter and Scottish anarchist John Henry Mackay wrote in defense of same-sex love and androgyny ; Carpenter and British homosexual rights advocate John Addington Symonds contributed to the development of Havelock Ellis's groundbreaking book Sexual Inversion, which called for tolerance towards " inverts " and was suppressed when first published in England.
He once wrote a paper under a pseudonym derived from Kobayashi Issa, a famous Japanese haiku poet.
It thus became expected that educated Europeans should learn at least some Italian ; the English poet John Milton, for instance, wrote some of his early poetry in Italian.
The poet Richard Barnfield wrote that Dowland's " heavenly touch upon the lute doth ravish human sense.
His brother George wrote that John " feared that he should never be a poet, & if he was not he would destroy himself ".
Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat, a poet from Hindustan who visited at the time wrote: " Dine and drink in Kabul: it is mountain, desert, city, river and all else.

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