Her poetry displays an adroit mastery of simple language and an eye for the fine threads woven into ordinary lives. |
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Jim's juvenilia, in general, are lacking in distinction, but they do chart a rapidly maturing interest in poetry. |
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The job will be done soon, my text and poetry books unpacked and ranged along new shelves where I can get at them once more. |
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A close friend of Erasmus and gifted student of law and Greek, More translated Lucian and wrote English and Latin poetry. |
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The event was a fantastic success with students dancing, rapping and performing poetry against racism. |
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Vordul's verse is uninspiring and sounds much more like spoken word poetry, rather than a proper rap. |
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I'm the only president whose ever written a novel and I've written a book of poetry in the past as well. |
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She took tea with her remaining admirers, but in the age of beat poetry and the apolitical pursuit of rapture, seemed something of a relic. |
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She has written five books of poetry and a clip file shows she has been receiving accolades for years. |
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While in prison, he has written five books of poetry and has contributed to several periodicals. |
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In Hegelian aesthetics, the sacred art of the sublime can only be the art of poetry. |
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Central to Welsh culture is the centuries-old folk tradition of poetry and music which has helped keep the Welsh language alive. |
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Both will respond to activities such as poetry read aloud, choral readings with repetitious phrasing, and intentional changes of voice. |
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You've been affluential in both the realms of music and writing, as well as spoken word and poetry. |
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Like a lunatic's ravings, his writing is inscrutable, absurd, yet shot through with phrases of visionary clarity and unpredictable poetry. |
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During ancient times, groups of Kathaks allegedly roved around the country recounting the epics and myths through poetry, music and dance. |
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Published fiction, poetry, and autobiographical writings appear in both the English and Afrikaans languages. |
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If passion, poetry and raw emotion are lacking in the current scene, there's something to be said for learning from the masters. |
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This is almost an encyclopedia of rhetorical strategy and poetic form, from the sonnet and the Keatsian ode to concrete poetry and acrostics. |
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This fascination with themselves results in keeping diaries or writing poetry. |
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We wish to assure the public that the teaching, reading and writing of poetry are alive and well at Rio Rancho High School. |
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He performs his poems and children join in, writing their own poetry or reading his aloud. |
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Standing before those who had come to read out their poems, she recollected images about poetry reading sessions. |
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I was glad I had read widely and learnt poetry and parts of the Book Of Common Prayer by rote. |
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The identifiably Yiddish and Hebrew elements within his poetry serve to interrogate the homogeneity and wholeness of English. |
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I wouldn't exactly say that I am an avid reader of poetry, but I do read it, irregularly. |
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Indeed, the use of alliteration in Old English poetry and in Piers Ploughman might also have influenced his poetic style. |
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They also gained wider audiences through public readings in both poetry and prose. |
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Hence, perhaps, her later insistence on singing to the captive audiences at her poetry readings. |
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Traditional poetry, with its innate rhythm and alliteration, as well as free verse focusing on social issues, flowed from her pen. |
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It was poetry that, without being distinctively Wordsworthian, could hardly have existed without Wordsworth. |
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His voice was strong and the way he worded things made it sound like poetry. |
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This is a rare instance of direct personal allusion by Sep, wherein he discusses the role of poetry as devotion. |
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He may even relish having some time to walk, read poetry, enjoy a glass of Burgundy and relax without the red boxes. |
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He projects a tremendous sound across all registers of the instrument, while conveying the poetry of the score. |
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Although so little of his work has survived, it is clear that Philitas' influence on Hellenistic and Latin poetry was very great. |
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When Marcus founded Irish Writing in 1946, he courted writers of short stories and poetry, rather than novelists, to fill its pages. |
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Chapters encouraged the singing of other nationalist songs or recitations of nationalist poetry during meetings. |
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Their gift was to leave indelible memories of the beauty of English poetry on all who sat at their feet. |
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His poems written in Latin hexameter followed the classical models of poetry. |
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This interpretation holds water, but it doesn't account for the poetry, the hilarity, and the glimmers of hope that underpin the film. |
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The scholarship provides free entry to all lectures, poetry readings, exhibitions and concerts during the week of the Summer School. |
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The division of a line of poetry into feet is much like the division of a musical phrase into bars. |
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Azhakappan had created poetry on celluloid with his camera, recreating natural scenes with a natural feeling. |
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In the past, there has been poetry, short stories, recounts of an event, etc. |
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The modern period has witnessed the emergence of many new forms of poetry and popular fiction. |
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The spectacle of poetry used as an amatory tool is one of those historical legacies much in evidence when poetry goes public. |
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During the nineteenth century almost all poets wrote poetry in dramatic form. |
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The wind harp achieved its popularity in Romantic poetry largely because of its symbolic relationship with the forces of Nature. |
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He writes books of poetry but his contact with classical music had been rather limited thus far. |
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There were other events there on the weekdays, such as poetry readings and open mic nights. |
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He translated a wide range of Greek programs, including Greek tragedies, modern Greek poetry and the lyrics of rebetika songs. |
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Christ's body as a necessary conduit in the relationship between the human and the divine finds frequent reiteration in Herbert's poetry. |
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A collection of poetry readings read to a background of traditional Irish airs and classical music was launched in Sligo last week. |
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The golden measure of poetry does not yet exist, only the rhythm of the maracas, the exact sound of the kettledrum. |
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Those who still admire Ezra Pound's pretentious poetry will presumably enjoy listening to him reciting while thumping on a kettledrum. |
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The poetry readings, lunchtime concerts, museum exhibits and jam sessions add to this week of swing in the spring. |
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Today, Dave is a lobster fisherman, while Maureen is both a fisher and a writer of short stories, novels, poetry, and children's literature. |
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His poetry continued as it began, very alert to Art as politically acquiescent, complicit or compromised. |
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I know because I was 18 and keeping a diary of my experiences, wise thoughts and bad poetry. |
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Hermetic poetry was a poetry that sought, not to describe or represent, but to evoke. |
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So aleatoric poetry could be described with historical exactitude as a rigmarole. |
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Not even a pounding migraine will keep me from posting bad poetry for y'all. |
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Conductus texts are in Latin and represent some of the best examples of new poetry of the time. |
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Such songbirds were considered the most elegant and refined of pets, a living reference to traditional Chinese art and poetry. |
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The first issue features an eclectic mix of fiction, poetry, and photographs tucked between the covers of a neat and stylish A5 booklet. |
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Mansfield, born in turn-of-the-century New Zealand, was one of the first modern short story writers to fuse prose and poetry. |
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The boy who gave it all up for something different, he is a legend, both as a poet and a renouncer of poetry. |
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The poetry press I had run for about twenty years was in abeyance but submissions continued to arrive and one day I got this. |
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People think poetry is waffly, loose and vague but actually good poetry is utterly precise, no word is wasted. |
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So impassioned am I about Croydon that I have put together a poetry book all about it. |
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A fair portion of contemporary poetry over-relies on self-reflexive irony, tonal detachment, and an often irritating allusive erudition. |
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But over the past twenty years there has been a fundamental change in the role poetry readings play in literary culture. |
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It made the language he spoke sound harsh, abrupt, awkward, without poetry. |
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I spent, for reasons that need not concern us here, much of last night reading some of my favourite Latin poetry. |
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Who is it that decides which novels, biographies, poetry and children's books do get published? |
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Seldom had such a number of storytellers, singers and poetry reciters been together. |
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She said rural Ireland inspired her and she wrote pages of poetry about the landscape and the people. |
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During his lifetime Blake wrote many volumes of poetry and religious philosophy, and was an accomplished artist and engraver. |
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Mud, River, Stone makes light of reality without transporting us to realms of poetry, philosophy, or absurdism where this would no longer matter. |
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He has earned recognition as a Renaissance man through his contributions to the worlds of photography, film, literature, music and poetry. |
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Of course poetry is also, even largely, driven by metaphor and image, in a host of ways. |
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So that wrestling is characteristic of my religious or agnostic poetry, but not necessarily everything else I do. |
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The rhythms of both Greek and Latin poetry are based on the quantitative length of syllables, not on stress accent as are English rhythms. |
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The youth club catered for various activities like music, dance drama and poetry. |
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One afternoon was filled with poetry readings, theatrical performances and dance numbers. |
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From the moment I read that book I was enchanted with the heroism and gallantry and poetry of Collins's life. |
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They assured us we had caused no problem and continued to tell us about their open-mic nights for poetry readings every Monday. |
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Yet poetry journalism has not followed suit, particularly in the literary quarterlies and in general circulation organs. |
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Songs were sung, jigs and reels danced out and some excellent poetry was recited. |
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Such methods went on to form the basis of the first written English poetry, Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse. |
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But while his poetry can be overly abstruse, his literary criticism is accessibly sophisticated, if not uniformly engaging. |
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My best friend Larry and I were attending weekly open mic poetry readings at one of the local watering holes. |
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Have you ever gotten up in front of a crowd for anything like karaoke, poetry readings, or open-mic stand-up comedy? |
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Not content with just voicing his creativity through music, Enik has also commenced writing a book of poetry. |
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Songs have been sung in its honour, jigs written, and screeds of poetry composed. |
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Qureshi thus highlights a particular element of Piombino's work, lyricism, which is often repressed in criticism about language poetry. |
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The principal gave a little speech on creating the right mood for serious poetry. |
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You're quick to write something that the rest of the world doesn't accept as poetry, quick to separate yourself from the average joe. |
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Other scholars of Philippine culture have also recognized the need to study songs and poetry as repositories of history. |
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Obviously, in poetry where this was one of the most important mechanisms, the kennings for very common nouns are various and inventive. |
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Her poetry has been published in variety of journals, magazines and anthologies. |
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Shane Rhodes has published poetry, essays and reviews in magazines, journals and newspapers across Canada. |
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In this period he combined philological studies with the composition of poetry in Latin and Italian. |
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Without further ado, he was allowed to continue his recitation of Belli's poetry. |
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It gives incomers to the highlands and islands a link to their adoptive country that's very much more real than blood or poetry. |
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If you think this is worthless junk, wait until I post all my high school poetry! |
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For the past couple of years a poetry festival has been held in Riccione, a resort town on the Adriatic coast in Emilia Romagna. |
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Both free verse and rhymed poetry styles are studied, including cinquain, haiku, tanka, rhopalic, echo and refrain poems, acrostics, alphabet and dictionary poems. |
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Perhaps these relatively new ways of regarding poetry have not cost it too dearly. |
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Her poetry, essays, and short fiction have appeared in many magazines and have been reprinted in the Pushcart and Best American Poetry anthologies. |
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Horace, on the other hand, can be said to represent the more innovative vein of Latin poetry, a vein that looked towards the Alexandrian poets as models and predecessors. |
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Both composers have the gift of following the twists and turns of often complex poetry without resorting to faux recitative or to dropping a melodic thread. |
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Or, the documentation we are left with was written centuries after the events, often in poetry, often wrong. |
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At the age of thirteen, Zeami first met Nijo Yoshimoto, once regent of the Northern Court and leader of the Nijo school of court poetry as well as a practitioner of renga. |
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Pierson's scrawled-letter drawings in ink and graphite, sometimes accompanied by expressionist renderings of faces, hands and objects, recall works of concrete poetry. |
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This would contain short stories, poetry, yarns, jokes, etc. |
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I wrote reams of poetry in my sixth form days, as a lot of people do. |
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However therapeutic, poetry does not suffer the reality principle gladly. |
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Services could include requested pieces of music, readings or poetry, and range from being simple, quiet affairs to New Orleans-style funerals complete with jazz band. |
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My poetry rejects all excessive remoteness from reality and takes pleasure in bringing things and men closer in an effort to achieve universal coherence and harmony. |
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He makes allusions to poetry, classical music and protest culture. |
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For 45 minutes, I get to aerate my brain, turn the world upside down, revel in music, poetry, humor. |
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To this day, my mother can recite the Hebrew poetry of Bialik, which she learned in the dp camps of postwar Germany. |
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Not the best poetry you've ever heard, but it is pristine apostolic reformational doctrine, because the end point of justifying righteousness is conformity to the Saviour. |
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The bar also claims that it hosted the first-ever poetry slam 28 years ago. |
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Tyson gave his roast in the form of iconic poetry, drawing on The Iliad, Shakespeare, and Emily Dickinson to deliver his barbs. |
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As a result, the museum decided to improve amenities such as the store and restaurant, and to host events including poetry readings, recitals, and concerts. |
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They shot to the top of the bestseller lists after he offered free drink to anyone buying his books at bookstore poetry readings. |
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Other events will include a Victorian picnic cricket match, concerts and poetry readings, horse-drawn carriage rides, guided walks and a rowing club regatta. |
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He took to spending his summers in Germany, studying all manner of language arts, literature, and poetry, and even taking a course in Sanskrit for a time. |
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He hosted a poetry contest and a talent show, acted as a chaperone for dances, and attended football games. |
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A few passages of Irish heroic poetry that survive from the prehistoric period employ an alliterative line very much like the one used by Old English poets. |
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Brilliant as an exponent of the virtues in Spenser, Dante, Chaucer, Lewis could not write his own poetry. |
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The publication of the list was apparently timed to coincide with the launch of a website that promises to sell every book of poetry in the English language over the internet. |
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Potokar's poetry seems rather abstract, at times cryptic, but at the same time palpable and relentless in its attempt to fight despair and solitude. |
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Most of the so-called absurdists never bothered to light just one little candle in the darkness of existence, because cursing the darkness had become their poetry. |
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Later European languages, in admiration of Greek and Roman poetry with their quantitative meters, have often tried to replicate the musical character of ancient verse. |
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For Dryden, the contrast between the First and Second Temples is symbolic of the relationship between contemporary Caroline poetry and that of the great Jacobeans. |
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Her collections of poetry Evening, Rosary, White Flock, Plantain, Anno Domini MCMXXI, bringing Acmeist clarity to the delineation of personal feeling, won her enormous renown. |
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Rather, we might follow the example of one especially history-aware acquaintance, who has been assiduously preserving letters, scraps of poetry and journal jottings. |
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She manages to capture his mad rantings with a kind of macabre poetry. |
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Expect a barrage of rapid-fire rhymes, punchy poetry and syllables. |
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Heller is both a poet and critic, that well-plumed rara avis who flies effortlessly between poetry and criticism and adroitly links their dual legacies. |
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But unlike the tradition of poetry as a rarefied pursuit, the Liverpool poets took their writing to the stage and rapidly developed a huge following. |
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What roles does affliction, the suffering constrained by the sense of God's palpable absence, play in divine providence, according to Herbert's poetry? |
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She also writes poetry and has kept a diary since she was 9 years-old. |
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These include poetry readings, concerts of romantic music, films, street theatre and special masses at St Valentine's church for engaged couples and wedding anniversaries. |
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The unity of the piece shifts from its poetry to its formal presence to its material, before landing on laboriousness as its central preoccupation. |
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The more marginal space of poetry, therefore, might rather be that of a dissensus, of which the pull toward margins would be a figurative representation. |
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The poetry of this Staffordshire circle embraces the non-court, recusant and social milieu of the first Lord Aston, his children, their spouses and friends. |
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Yiddish survives in music, poetry, literature, and even English. |
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A welter of poems, plays, epics and narrative poetry came into existence all at once, altering the landscape of literary activity in Bengal forever. |
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Fork in hand, napkin in lap, and a wine glass to toast, Dijon is a reminder of the poetry and elegance that lies in food. |
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Possibly because of his anticlericalism, he was able, despite his emigre status, to publish some of his poetry in communist Poland. |
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Some of these popular conceptions can be gleaned from the poetry of Homer and Hesiod. |
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The poetry abounds in textual difficulties and consequently interpretations vary. |
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It preserves a collection of Welsh prose and poetry, notably the tales of the Mabinogion and Gogynfeirdd poetry. |
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The First World War was also responsible for a new kind of military depiction, through poetry. |
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The most important eisteddfod is the National Eisteddfod of Wales, the largest festival of competitive music and poetry in Europe. |
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Surviving Welsh poetry and the Welsh Triads portray Cadwallon as a heroic leader against Edwin. |
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Welsh poetry also frequently refers to Macsen as a figure of comparison with later Welsh leaders. |
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Local poets and writers hold poetry evenings in the town, and music festivals are organised at Cyfarthfa Castle and Park. |
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Doggerel is poetry that is irregular in rhythm and in rhyme, often deliberately for burlesque or comic effect. |
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The salmon is an important creature in several strands of Celtic mythology and poetry, which often associated them with wisdom and venerability. |
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The core tradition was praise poetry and the poet Taliesin was regarded as the first in the line. |
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These payments varied according to how long a poet had been in training and also the demand for poetry at particular times during the year. |
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It is said that he was exiled to south Wales for overstepping the mark in his poetry and spent the rest of his life outside Gwynedd. |
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Not all of the poetry which survives from this period belongs to the tradition of the praise poetry of the nobility. |
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Some groups of poets and genres of poetry stood completely outside that tradition. |
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This poetry looked towards a man of destiny who would free them from their oppressors. |
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Prose lacks the more formal metrical structure of verse that can be found in traditional poetry. |
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It is elaborated upon in modern English poetry, such as Tennyson's Idylls of the King and Charles Williams's Taliessin Through Logres. |
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Today, the reputation of his poetry remains high, though the exact identity of the author is more controversial. |
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Williams was given his first pastorate in 1941 in a Baptist chapel in Ynyshir, where he developed his style of poetry. |
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Although Williams' poetry was not in keeping with the tradition of the National Eisteddfod, he was still embraced by it. |
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He wrote poetry and read widely from eight or nine years of age and was especially fond of the works of John Keats and Shelley. |
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Vernon was the only person from whom Dylan took advice when writing poetry and he was invariably the first to read his finished work. |
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Within a few decades it was used to describe vistas in poetry, and eventually as a term for real views. |
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Thus such elements as collage were introduced, arising partly from an ideal of startling juxtapositions as revealed in Pierre Reverdy's poetry. |
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Samuel Beckett was also fond of Surrealists, even translating much of the poetry into English. |
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Artists who engaged with history and myth were not considered to be in tune with the times, either in poetry or art. |
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Nevertheless, it is taken very seriously, and an award of a crown or a chair for poetry is a great honour. |
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Critics have highlighted the use of metaphors in Catatonia's work, and songs have been compared to poetry by critics. |
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Other works from International Velvet were compared to poetry by Katharine Viner in The Guardian. |
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There is also a form of musical poetry known as chattista which is often performed at traditional feasts and celebrations. |
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The Cypria is one of the very first specimens of Greek and European poetry. |
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French poetry during that century was embodied by Pierre de Ronsard and Joachim du Bellay. |
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French literature and poetry flourished even more in the 18th and 19th centuries. |
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The Romans were also famous for their oral tradition, poetry, drama and epigrams. |
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Guido Guinizelli is considered the founder of the Dolce Stil Novo, a school that added a philosophical dimension to traditional love poetry. |
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However, ideals of the young women espoused by genre painting and Petrarchian poetry did not reflect the reality. |
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The latter were associations at a city level that fostered literary activities, like poetry, drama and discussions, often through contests. |
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Chinmoy has also published books, essays, spiritual poetry, plays, and commentaries on the Vedas. |
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This was the attempt to make french less flowery and more acceptable in diplomacy rather than poetry. |
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Topographical poetry is a genre of poetry that describes, and often praises, a landscape or place. |
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Norse mythology, stories of the Norse deities, is preserved in Eddic poetry and in Snorri Sturluson's guide for skalds, the Poetic Edda. |
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Landscape in Chinese poetry has often been closely tied to Chinese landscape painting, which developed much earlier than in the West. |
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Tao Yuanming has been regarded as the first great poet associated with the Fields and Gardens poetry genre. |
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Broken Vows was accompanied with poetry by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow when it was first exhibited. |
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Stesichorus exercised an important influence on the representation of myth in 6th century art and on the development of Athenian dramatic poetry. |
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The Homeric qualities of Stesichorus' poetry are demonstrated in a fragment of his poem Geryoneis describing the death of the monster Geryon. |
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Surviving fragments of poetry ascribed to Orpheus preserve some variations on the myth. |
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The poetry of the Hellenistic and Roman ages was primarily composed as a literary rather than cultic exercise. |
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Originally, Classical scholars treated the Iliad and the Odyssey as written poetry, and Homer as a writer. |
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He wrote poetry and music and his friends included the novelist Laurence Sterne, David Garrick the actor and the Duke and Duchess of Montague. |
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The earliest Greek literature was poetry, and was composed for performance rather than private consumption. |
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The earliest Greek poet known is Homer, although he was certainly part of an existing tradition of oral poetry. |
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They showered gifts upon him, including the ship in which he sailed, and he in return wrote poetry about them. |
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In 1833 Tennyson published his second book of poetry, which notably included the first version of The Lady of Shalott. |
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Colonel George Edward Gouraud, Thomas Edison's European agent, made sound recordings of Tennyson reading his own poetry, late in his life. |
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The lexicographer Suidas enumerates the works of Horapollo, the philologer and commentator on Greek poetry. |
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Epic poetry in Latin continued to be written and circulated well into the 19th century. |
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Thus, it was Charlemagne's weak successor, Louis the Pious, who destroyed his father's collection of epic poetry on account of its pagan content. |
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Strabo was an admirer of Homer's poetry, perhaps a consequence of his time spent in Nysa with Aristodemus. |
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Although a native speaker of Greek, Claudian is one of the best Latin poetry stylists of late antiquity. |
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Claudian's poetry is a valuable historical source, though distorted by the conventions of panegyric. |
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Among his first published works were poetry, as well as writings on law and administration. |
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Carlyle's invented style was epic poetry combined with philosophical treatise. |
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Under extravagant and rich popes, Rome was transformed into a centre of art, poetry, music, literature, education and culture. |
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The Veps are the only Baltic Finnish people with no significant corpus of Kalevala meter oral poetry. |
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In Finland the most famous collection of folk poetry is by far the Kalevala, which is the national epic of the country. |
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By the 1880s, the age of the great novelists was over, and short fiction and poetry became the dominant genres. |
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Eventually he devoted his time to poetry, in which he praised Germany in Latin. |
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In Switzerland it is mostly expressed in music, dance, poetry, wood carving and embroidery. |
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They introduced such important literary forms as epic and lyric poetry, history, tragedy, and comedy. |
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Instead, the new wave of poetry, from the war poets, was written from the point of view of the disenchanted trench soldier. |
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In the modern period, Odin has inspired numerous works of poetry, music, and other forms of media. |
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Both Brothers were attracted from the beginning by all national poetry, whether in the form of epics, ballads or popular tales. |
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In Yuan poetry, the main development was the qu, which was used among other poetic forms by most of the famous Yuan poets. |
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One of the key factors in the mix of the zaju variety show was the incorporation of poetry both classical and of the newer qu form. |
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Kublai was well versed in Chinese poetry, though most of his works have not survived. |
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He was also known for his poetry, which constitutes a major contribution to the development of Portuguese as a literary language. |
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He patronised troubadours, and wrote lyric poetry in the troubadour tradition himself. |
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In 1923, his first commercial poetry collection, Newfoundland Verse, was released. |
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Bahamians have created a rich literature of poetry, short stories, plays and short fictional works. |
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Haiti has always been a literary nation that has produced poetry, novels, and plays of international recognition. |
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Thus, there are many works in the nature of epic poetry in the Thai language. |
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Iranian literature is one of the world's oldest, dating back to the poetry of the Avesta. |
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He ended up reading philosophy and theology and he was fascinated with art, literature, poetry and science. |
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Yermak is an important heroic figure in Russian history, depicted in film, literature, poetry, song, and paintings. |
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There are many folk songs and much poetry about Yermak which contribute to our vision of the hero. |
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It was the height of the English Renaissance, and saw the flowering of English literature and poetry. |
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Venice also inspired the poetry of Ezra Pound, who wrote his first literary work in the city. |
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Much of the texts are based on poetry and laws traditionally preserved orally. |
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The Victorian poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson retold the legends in the poetry volume Idylls of the King. |
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He shows the ways in which American poetry has inherited Webster and drawn upon his lexicography in order to reinvent it. |
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The alternation of the strong and weak beat is fundamental to the ancient language of poetry, dance and music. |
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Blackstone revelled in Charterhouse's academic curriculum, particularly the Latin poetry of Ovid and Virgil. |
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He relegates fictions like fairy godmothers and mermaids and unicorns to the realms of poetry and literature. |
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Reading the classics, poetry and a vast range of English literature consumed much of his time. |
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She took a lively interest in affairs of state, and was a patroness of theatre, poetry and music. |
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He often engaged in discussion and debate with his students and gave high importance to their studies in history, poetry, and ritual. |
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However, the Lexicon Technicum neglects theology, antiquity, biography, and poetry. |
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Literary criticism in the 20th century gradually drew attention to the links between Victorian poetry and modernism. |
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Within its formal structure, her poetry is ingenious, witty, exquisitely wrought, and psychologically penetrating. |
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As at 2015 the position is an honorary one, and the office holder is left to decide on which occasions they will produce poetry. |
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Ruskin also penned essays and treatises, poetry and lectures, travel guides and manuals, letters and even a fairy tale. |
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He composed elegant if largely conventional poetry, some of which was published in Friendship's Offering. |
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During his years there, he won school prizes for English essay writing, and Latin and English poetry. |
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The mood of Arnold's poetry tends to be of plaintive reflection, and he is restrained in expressing emotion. |
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He felt that poetry should be the 'criticism of life' and express a philosophy. |
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Although Arnold's poetry received only mixed reviews and attention during his lifetime, his forays into literary criticism were more successful. |
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His poetry also abounds with direct quotations from everyday life, skilfully woven into the body of the poem. |
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Nicholson's personal collection of published poetry was acquired by the John Rylands Library, Manchester, from his family. |
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Parallel Gregory Fellowships also existed in music and poetry at the University. |
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The rightmindedness, the virtue, and the subtlety of the interpreter became the new key to the validity of poetry in the Platonic republic. |
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Most evidence for Leland's life and career comes from his own writings, especially his poetry. |
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At which Miss Sara Derwent laughed, and asked who wrote that very pretty poetry? |
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It was impossible to avoid pagan terminology altogether, however, and the Seventy relaxed their vigilance when dealing with poetry. |
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The only book of poetry in the whole lot was a shop-soiled copy of The Poems of George Herbert in the World Classics series. |
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It was the translation of Ovid, Lucan, Seneca, and Virgil that gave English Elizabethan poetry the startword. |
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The goddess Brig was a triple goddess of poetry, smithcraft and healing, along with her two sisters of the same name. |
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I am advertised that there is one, which by art trochilic, will draw all English surnames of the best families out of the pit of poetry. |
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I write not this with the least intention to undervalue the other parts of poetry. |
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In order to keep his intellect undulled by the routine of his dreary work, Matthew Arnold was wont to write a few lines of poetry each day. |
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Adorno's Aesthetic Theory devotes its attention to the dialectic evolving from this aporetic foundation of poetry. |
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There also will be pre-Columbian music by South in the North Project, poetry, children activities, tamales and atole. |
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His aestheticized Black Woman knows nothing of the real daily work of black women that enable him to devote time to his poetry. |
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The appearance of secular Hebrew poetry in tenth-century al-Andalus began a tradition that lasted five centuries on the Iberian peninsula. |
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Ramathi said she has been a fan of World War I poetry and novels from a very young age. |
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Laskey, who earned a degree in psychology, enjoys painting and poetry. |
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Stepto's range as an Americanist, including his belief in theory as a dynamic force, makes him an excellent reader of my poetry in process. |
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Yeats hoped that the mystical system revealed in A Vision would influence more than his own poetry. |
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That is left to less religious and secular Yiddishists who love the literature, love the poetry and love the songs. |
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The final chapters deal with drama, fiction, poetry, and prose of the Qing Dynasty. |
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Two years before he had also edited an anthological study for the Guanda publishing house of Italian twentieth-century poetry. |
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According to Potts, Heaney's poetry exemplifies the move away from anthropocentrism which an ecologically sound 'post-pastoral' calls for. |
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The rationalists belonging to it rejected the anthropomorphist language and sexual symbolism of kabbalah, and by extension Shabazian poetry. |
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Chesterton is read as a theologian, not just an aphorist, essayist, and author of fiction, poetry, and drama. |
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And it is by asserting its own autonomy that poetry can offer this redressive healing. |
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In gathering together the recent reedit of Marais's poetry, the team of Kannemeyer et al. |
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It is as though poetry teases her mercilessly for the intricate reflexiveness of her dealings. |
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If the Mason Cities of our country are ever to reflower, they need peace and poetry and music-the mist and all. |
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His short fiction and poetry have also appeared in The Amherst Review, Appalachia, Caveat Lector, The Aurorean, and other magazines. |
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Languidness develops as a central idea in Decadent poetry as a refuge from an increasingly frenzied materialistic age. |
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Later that same day there was poetry in a local laundrette and open-air singing in Cotteridge Park by the CBSO Community Choir. |
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In his hands, language became a kind of bebop zaum or lettrist poetry that's as likely to be nonsense as it is to be incantation. |
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It is only between IRL drudgery and the absurd limitlessness of the Net that Vierkant finds his poetry. |
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Landon's vacillating judgments so far on the subject of Wordsworthian poetry and poetics should lead us to expect that this speaker attitudinizes as carelessly as the rest. |
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