Poets are the most down-to-earth, loyal, steady people that have ever been. |
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Poets can play significant role by creating public awareness in this regard, he said. |
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Poets are selfish, self-centred people who regard neighbours as noisy interruptions rather than deserving objects in need of a helping hand. |
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This is the finest moment of Dead Poets Society, the story of a thoroughly unorthodox teacher at a thoroughly orthodox boys' prep school. |
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Poets were pop stars, now they're weird beardies in bondage to an ancient craft that nobody deigns to understand. |
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Poets who perform their work involve themselves in a first-hand experience. |
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The Live Poets will battle it out in verse and rhyme at the popular Poetry Slam, next Wednesday, June 19, at the Rous Hotel in Lismore. |
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You can sample a pint or two at Two Poets Pub or sip bubbly at the Champagne Bar. |
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Poets may fable of such a will, that it makes the very heavens conform to it. |
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Poets composed hundreds of verses on the love story and many types of Chinese opera tell the story. |
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Poets do such things, so sometimes do aestheticians, and so does Stephen Dedalus in Ulysses. |
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In 1911 she joined the Guild of Poets, the founders of Russian Acmeism, along with Gumilev and Mandelstam. |
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Poets turned to the syllabic meters of folk poetry, and the old Osmanli literary style gave way to the more direct language characteristic of most Western poetry. |
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Poets in this tradition are less likely to abominate the larger society than to ignore it altogether and to concentrate on a narrow range of personal and domestic subjects. |
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My paperback copy of his Lives of the Poets runs to 1097 pages and offers a tour of English-language poetry from the fourteenth century to more or less the present day. |
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Poets of the Mughal durbar likened our muslins to baft hawa. |
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Poets will compete at local Poetry Slams in order to make the ICT Slam Team. |
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Poets laureate of Sierra Leone include the Italian authors Roberto Malini and Dario Picciau. |
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Poets work language to shape poems, to bring language into the condition of poetry. |
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They began to study Johnson's works with an increasing focus on the critical analysis found in his edition of Shakespeare and Lives of the Poets. |
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Johnson's works, especially his Lives of the Poets series, describe various features of excellent writing. |
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Wales's greatest poet worked during the period of the Poets of the Nobility. |
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From the Vale of Clwyd, Iolo Goch bridged between the period of the Poets of the Princes and Poets of the Nobility. |
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Poets mined his dictionaries, often drawing upon the lexicography in order to express word play. |
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Ptr's poems have appeared in Hobo Jungle, Curare, and Stained Sheets, and in anthologies from Brownstone Poets and Great Weather for Media. |
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The sorts of lyric poetry found later in the Churchyard Poets would, in the Restoration, only exist as pastorals. |
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Poets and artists were among the early visitors to Helvellyn at the beginning of the nineteenth century. |
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It takes its name from the adjacent lake, and has associations with the Lake Poets. |
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Poets like Virgil, Horace, Ovid and Rufus developed a rich literature, and were close friends of Augustus. |
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The Earliest Poets wrote praise poems for rulers and lords of Welsh dynasties from Strathclyde to Cornwall. |
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There she met expelled student Billy Childish and was associated with The Medway Poets. |
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Poets occupy a condition of production, scholars, of reception, but they share a codependence of doing and making. |
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The next period is the Poets of the Princes, when Welsh rulers fought each other and the English in shifting alliances. |
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Of literary figures after the Lake Poets among those most closely associated with Keswick was the novelist Hugh Walpole. |
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Among Keswick notables before the Lake Poets was Sir John Bankes, a leading Royalist during the English Civil War. |
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Poets most closely associated with it are Craig Raine and Christopher Reid. |
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Tudur Aled was himself a nobleman and one of the greatest of the Poets of the Nobility. |
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There's a Trashball machine at the Warehouse Theater and at the restaurant Busboys and Poets in Washington. |
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The beauty of the Lake District has also inspired many other writers over the years, beyond the core Lake Poets. |
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Poets now used their bardic names to disguise their identity in competitions, and continued to use them when they became well known. |
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Poets and artists from ancient times to the present have derived inspiration from Greek mythology and have discovered contemporary significance and relevance in the themes. |
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Byron did not visit the Lakes, but he ridiculed the isolation and narrowness of mind of the older Lake Poets, as well as of their abandonment of radical politics. |
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In Scotland the poetry of Robert Burns revived interest in Scots literature, and the Weaver Poets of Ulster were influenced by literature from Scotland. |
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Hip-hop owes a serious debt to The Last Poets and their formula. |
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Early in his career he composed in the tradition of the Poets of the Princes but he was among the first to sing the praises of the nobles and others using the cywydd meter. |
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Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey became known as the Lake Poets. |
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Poets include Robert Louis Stevenson, Vachel Lindsay, Christina Rossetti, Hilda Conkling, Edward Lear, Eugene Field, and more, including some treasured lesser known authors. |
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In all, at least nine of the Poets Laureate graduated from Cambridge. |
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Poets in literate societies have sometimes copied the epic format. |
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Nuyorican Poets Cafe Short Story Slam winner Sierra Kay's new suspense novel From Behind The Curtain is to be released this month, it was reported on Tuesday. |
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Poets expressed their points of view in other forms, usually public or formally disguised poetic forms such as odes, pastoral poetry, and ariel verse. |
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By the wonderful new single, April, there is a full string section, pedal steel guitar as well as the harmonica, guitars and drums that normally make up The Lake Poets band. |
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Like the Lake Poets in the previous century, he wrote enthusiastically about the Lake District, and its scenery and atmosphere often found their way into his fiction. |
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This was the favourite metre of the Poets of the Nobility, the poets working from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries, and it is still used today. |
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Poets recited their versifications in love of the nation, as symbols of the country's earlier Bedouin life such as race camels and falcons lined up nearby. |
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I love Tom Waits and have always been interested in Burroughs and the beat poets. |
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As she points out, most poets these days begin with autobiographical material. |
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The hybridisation is typically trilingual in the northern Italian macaronic poets involving Latin, Italian, and Po Valley dialects. |
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Once the poets and the sages were held to be pleasing triflers, fit for hours of relaxation in the lulls of war. |
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But the argument against poets and mimesis is made not only poetically but also mimetically. |
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Why write a scientific book about a subject best left to poets and songwriters? |
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Relaxed into a postmodern shapelessness, however, the poetry lacks the form that gave high modern poets such magnificent bearing. |
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The translation was made by an array of the most able scholars and poets of the time. |
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The seminar room has wallcharts of poets, artists, historical and scientific discoveries. |
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I certainly saw North Beach as a poetic place, as poetic as some quartiers in Paris, where great poets and painters had found inspiration. |
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Bly is a native Minnesotan and the roster of Minnesota poets of any accomplishment is not long. |
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Homer haunts the imaginations of countless poets, translators and adapters in English. |
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New writers and visiting poets are always welcome and anyone is invited to come and share a poem during the open reading. |
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The Jones's wanted their daughter to be well-read in the European tradition of Shakespeare, Milton, and other major novelists and poets. |
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These poets, it must be remembered, emerged out of a highly politicized milieu, where socialism was the word of the hour. |
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Too overt or apprehensible a verbal pattern seems old-fashioned to many poets. |
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The bi-monthly is planning to compile a listing of poets now active and writing in English. |
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In addition, he anticipated the modern poets in objurgating the custom of garnishing poems with archaisms. |
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Using the language of the Romantics or the Victorian poets, as so many Indo-English poets have done and still do, is disastrous. |
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Many are poets or aspiring poets, many are gay, and all take turns in a comical round-robin of flirtation, consummation, and rejection. |
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The radio play became an art form in its own right and attracted novelists and poets as well as dramatists. |
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I believe our filmmakers, writers, poets, and visual and performing artists do us proud, alongside those of anywhere in the world. |
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Until now, Burke has refused to let Ransom distinguish scientists from poets, for the metonymic nature of language constrains both parties. |
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This is not to say that most poets do not utilize such tools as metaphor, simile, assonance, and other poetic techniques. |
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But does anyone remember when poets aimed for a big audience and wrote about public events? |
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The Greek writers of lyric poetry are separated from the Latin poets he considers his own. |
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The poem as philosophical-historical sundial clearly applies to great European lyric poets such as Rilke and Celan. |
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The bay was the laurel with which poets and victorious warriors and athletes were crowned in classical times. |
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Her grandparents once entertained poets and artists in their salon, discussing the merits of T. S. Eliot. |
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We are on the lookout for the most talented young poets in our region's schools. |
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Maria has prepared literal versions of many Hungarian poets over the years. |
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It is the job of poets and mystics to show us the ordinary and everyday in a magical light. |
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Meanwhile soldier poets wrote odes and sapphics based on dead forms borrowed from the Greeks while laying plans to translate the Aeneid. |
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One of our great poets has well and finely said that freedom is not a gift that tarries long in the hands of cowards. |
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Strippers, dead poets and baby-faced gangsters helped make 2002 a memorable year for theatre in Toronto. |
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There are poets, playwrights, essayists and those who can write articles on various topics among them. |
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There were ballades, chants royal, kyrielles, sestinas, triolets, villanelles, and virelais to play with, and poets of varying merit had a go. |
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Poems such as the Welsh Gododdin testify to the celebration of the warrior ideal and its powerful attraction for poets. |
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Michael Madhusudan and Romeshchandra Dutt were major writers in Bangla, apart from being minor poets in English. |
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In 1934, he wrote a scholarly article justifying Plato's banishment of the poets in the Republic. |
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The bardic elements ring clear in the early work of both poets and became an essential part of whatever either moved on into. |
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The most famous early bardic poets, Taliesin and Aneirin, wrote epic poems about Welsh events and legends around the seventh century. |
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Ph.D. programs in literature are not designed to produce poets and novelists, but Yale seems to matriculate a considerable share. |
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In pagan times poets were thought to be gifted with second sight, able in a trance or frenzy to foretell future events. |
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Of the few poets whose work has survived from the sixth and seventh centuries, the most notable is Pindar. |
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I take this to be basic to poetry and to art in general, though I realize that this is not true for many poets, at the moment. |
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I was influenced by the beat poets and the Southern writers like William Faulkner and Flannery O'Connor. |
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If you fancy a change from the sea theme, there are selections of poems from a number of poets with local connections of one sort or another. |
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Worst of all, it enhances the belief that we should expect little of the poem and of poets. |
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Many of his poems show an intense distrust for machinery, which is not surprising for poets of that age. |
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Influenced by the beat poets like Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and Ted Jones, McGough would write late into the night. |
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Of the Middle English poets, Chaucer is the one who displays most knowledge of wine, although he tends to mention different wines only briefly. |
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North Beach was home to the beat poets, who some say launched the youth revolution. |
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They were the forerunners of the poets and political activists of African-American culture. |
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Kathleen Jamie is the latest in a line of present-day poets who are attracting large audiences to the Grasmere readings. |
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Able only to mumble coded secrets, poets often seem the village idiots so wickedly satirized by Woody Allen's Love and Death. |
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However, most artists, poets and writers tend to create winter sceneries that mark what is popularly known as the wintriness of the season. |
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Imagery is of central importance to all three poets, and their use of images is daring, varied, and frequently recondite. |
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Journalists, novelists, poets, playwrights, historians, and film-makers have all reconstructed the affair and put it to various uses. |
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Composers, linguists, wordsmiths, poets, and all those in a creative sphere are all in their own way pursuing happiness and fulfillment. |
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These wordsmiths include poets, novelists, literary critics, newspaper and magazine journalists, and many professors. |
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In Ancient Greek poetry, poets used epithets to make names fit the metrical patterns they composed within. |
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During the nineteenth century almost all poets wrote poetry in dramatic form. |
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Members include a variety or writers and would vary from scribblers to novelists, poets, and writers of short stories and writers for children. |
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Brown comes alive as he talks of the Romantic poets and their exploration of what it means to be British. |
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What he admired in these poets was their inventive use of word and sound in every device of onomatopoeia, alliteration, pun and palindrome. |
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Whether the laureate speaks for poets, poetry, or the public isn't entirely clear. |
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The Anacreontic poems were later discovered to have been composed by a number of poets over seven centuries. |
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Hrothgar's hall resounds with the laughter and songs of poets, who retell the famed history of the Danish tribe. |
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She was worshipped by poets, and had two sisters of the same name connected with leechcraft and smithwork. |
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Down through the ages philosophers and poets have mused on humankind's anomalous place within the natural order. |
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No reader will fail to discover unfamiliar poems and poets, old favorites that have never before been anthologized, and new enthusiasms. |
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Shiites highlighted the Arab roots of Shiism and defended Shiite poets of the Abbasid period whom Sunni writers depicted as shuubis. |
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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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Sometimes they are a substitute for poets writing literary criticism. |
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Six poets Gumilyov, Akhmatova, Osip Mandelshtam, Sergey Gorodetsky, Vladimir Narbut and Mikhail Zenkevich joined forces, calling themselves the Acmeists. |
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He became the patron and mentor of the younger poets, welcoming all innovations, as opposed to Jeffers the loner whom, nota bene, he mercilessly bashed in his essays. |
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In his recent biggest-ever book, a whacking 500 pages long, entitled Dylan's Visions of Sin, he is making his case for Dylan as one of the great English-speaking poets. |
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It was an opportunity for the student poets to recite their poems. |
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Roman poets such as Catullus and Ovid celebrated the kiss and members of the populace were avid mouth-to-mouth practitioners. |
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San Francisco poets Tarin Towers and Daphne Gottlieb, Eitan Kadosh from L.A. and Phoenix's Eirein Bradley barnstormed with O'Hara through 35 U.S. cities over the summer. |
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I developed a kinship with sickly romantic poets who couldn't play games. |
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Attracted by the smooth flow and formal consistency of Arabic metrical verse, Hebrew poets adopted its rhythmical patterns, and some tunes also acquired measured rhythms. |
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Bright-coloured petals in contrast with the knotty, wrinkled old branches of the trees have provided inspiration to poets and painters for centuries. |
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The most powerful performance poets blend personal experience with political rhetoric, creating polemics that often have a bitingly satirical edge. |
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But while I have tried to put poets to as many poems as I can, most verses have remained true to their seventeenth-century nature and elude ascription. |
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The contemporary poets I most admire are similarly subtle in the ways in which they use language to transfigure our perception of the natural world. |
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Have poets accepted the mistaken notion that poetry is a dying art form? |
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The proverbial material of established older novelists and poets such as the Lowland Scots of Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott has attracted some attention. |
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An obvious device for poets and lyricists who are concerned with sound is alliteration, the repetition of initial or medial sounds in two or more adjacent words. |
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Novelists, poets and playwrights all see such biographers as parasites. |
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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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We enjoy reading and meditating on the works of the ancient philosophers and poets, and when reading modern books, prefer those by authors well grounded in the ancient canon. |
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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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He was perhaps the most original of African American poets and, in the breadth and variety of his work, assuredly the most representative of African American writers. |
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A first book of the poems, The Poetical Works of Edward Taylor, followed in 1939, after which poets and scholars began to read him and write about him. |
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On each of its four facades is the now famous and often parodied inscription a nation of poets, artists, heroes, saints, thinkers, scientists, navigators, and transmigrators. |
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There were musicians in my family, warriors, poets, lawgivers. |
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In Elizabethan masques, poets, composers, choreographers and scenic designers emulated or simulated the Golden Age, immobilising Time in terpsichorean elegance. |
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Some 39 poets, essayists, authors and playwrights will participate in it. |
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A chapter on the metaphysical poets is four-fifths Donne to one-fifth Herbert, with Marvell failing to get a look-in. |
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They found a way to combine the economic interests of publishers, bookstores, and poets to overcome the financial marginality of serious literature. |
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She was a leading light in a group of poets known as Acmeists. |
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Ezra Pound ranks among the finest poets of his generation, but his greatest trait may have been his eye for talent in others. |
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Traditional Basque folk poets improvise and sing rhymes on any subject. |
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Gathering veterans noted a focus on showcasing talented younger poets and musicians. |
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Because her poems are not strained or contrived they are devoid of the madding pursuit of the intellect or craft, which kills many of our modern poets and their poetry. |
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The most ancient poets graced their productions with apologues. |
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True poets derive their gifts from the Muse, the primitive, matriarchal Moon Goddess, once dominant but now disastrously dispossessed by male values of reason and logic. |
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A roaring fire inspires lovers and poets, but it's a costly indulgence. |
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During one hot summer in 1934, a love affair transformed a scrappy band of self-published poets into the biggest literary celebrities in the country. |
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In fact, Breathing Fire 2 takes a look at the engaging Canadian voices of poets born in 1970s, the decade that followed the beret-clad beat generation. |
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Budding Konkani poets, Prabha Rego, Della Rego, Vivek Monteiro as well as Veena, Sequeira and a few others will be reciting poems. |
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They chat about poets Byron and Shelley, while slipping into more rib-tickling impressions. |
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He was one of several Song poets who wrote elaborately punning herb-name songs and birdcall verses. |
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But other poets ensconce themselves in other carrels of the endless Borgesian library. |
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We want no more suicidal women poets, no more suicidal women, no more self-destructiveness as the sole form of violence permitted to women. |
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The new book does add some poems by a few previously included gendaishi poets and by two haiku poets and one tanka poet. |
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He did not do so, but celebrated her beauty in Old Norse stanzas, as too did his followers, the skaldic poets Armod and Oddi the Little. |
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Some indispensable American poets and critics, for example, have wished almost openly that the Southern slaveocracy had won the Civil War. |
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His influence on poets and readers of poetry is immeasurable. |
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Nennius praises him amongst the earliest Welsh poets or Cynfeirdd, a contemporary of Talhaearn, Taliesin, Bluchbardd and Cian. |
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While both are poets of exile, Dante is more of a belonger and less of a loner. |
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Congreve held fast to the Greek poets, but otherwise seems to have drowsed his way through Trinity studies. |
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Conversely, native Francien-speaking poets often displayed a degree of linguistic smugness and superiority. |
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Scottish poets who emerged in the same period included Carol Ann Duffy, who, in May 2009, was the first Scot named UK Poet Laureate. |
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The period is notable for producing one of Wales' greatest poets, Dafydd ap Gwilym. |
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The period is notable for the adoption by Welsh poets of bardic names, made popular by the eisteddfod movement. |
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Thomas was one of the most notable and popular Welsh writers of the 20th century and one of the most innovative poets of his time. |
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Modern Irish literature is often connected with its rural heritage through writers such as John McGahern and poets such as Seamus Heaney. |
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From this turnpike he walked far, only to stand in icelight where the poets and brothers rocked in the rickety porch-dark of his body. |
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In 1400, poets in the pay of Henry IV were directed to propaganda purposes. |
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Later on, poets and writers took up the theme and turned it into an iconography that exalted Elizabeth. |
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The notion of a great Elizabethan era depends largely on the builders, dramatists, poets, and musicians who were active during Elizabeth's reign. |
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His English coronation took place on 25 July, with elaborate allegories provided by dramatic poets such as Thomas Dekker and Ben Jonson. |
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The Romantic poets attempted to revive Shakespearean verse drama, though with little success. |
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During the early 19th century, Cromwell began to be portrayed in a positive light by Romantic artists and poets. |
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The poets William Blake, Wordsworth and Coleridge were amongst the pioneers of Romanticism in literature. |
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Many former Chartists went on to become journalists, poets, ministers, and councillors. |
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Your poets, spendthrifts, and other fools of that kidney, pretend, forsooth, to crack their jokes on prudence. |
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During the late 1960s the city became well known for the Liverpool poets, who include Roger McGough and the late Adrian Henri. |
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It was late in the 1960s that Maltese literature experienced its most radical transformation among poets, prose writers and dramatists. |
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The Sufi poets Shah Abdul Latif, Bulleh Shah, Mian Muhammad Bakhsh, and Khawaja Farid enjoy considerable popularity in Pakistan. |
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Charles Causley, the poet, was born in Launceston and is perhaps the best known of Cornish poets. |
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Among the most well known German poets and authors are Lessing, Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Hoffmann, Brecht and Heine. |
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By the 10th century, many Nath poets were associated with earlier Punjabi works. |
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Similarly, in an 1815 attestation, it is used to refer to Certamen Homeri et Hesiodi, a fictional contest between two historical poets. |
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Old English literature has had some influence on modern literature, and notable poets have translated and incorporated Old English poetry. |
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Some earlier Latin poets tried to make up for this deficiency by creating new compound words, as the Greeks had done. |
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Rome's leading poets had great technical skill in the choice and arrangement of language. |
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They also had an intimate knowledge of the Greek poets, whose themes appear in almost all Roman literature. |
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The main poets of this Scottish group were Robert Henryson, William Dunbar, and Gavin Douglas. |
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Widespread knowledge of Chaucer's works is attested by the many poets who imitated or responded to his writing. |
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It is difficult to find evidence that the poet shared knowledge of classical poets, such as Virgil and Ovid, with the likes of Chaucer. |
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He concluded that poets should be allowed to depict things which do not exist but derive from popular belief. |
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His satires dealt with common Elizabethan topics, such as corruption in the legal system, mediocre poets, and pompous courtiers. |
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At the beginning of the reign of James I, King of England, in 1603 Jonson joined other poets and playwrights in welcoming the new king. |
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That this judgment was widely shared is indicated by the admitted influence he had on younger poets. |
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The most important poets of this era include Edmund Spenser and Sir Philip Sidney. |
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As a result of such intensive study, Milton is considered to be among the most learned of all English poets. |
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The Romantic poets valued his exploration of blank verse, but for the most part rejected his religiosity. |
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It is considered by critics to be Milton's major work, and it helped solidify his reputation as one of the greatest English poets of his time. |
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Similarly, some of the poets who published with the Restoration produced their poetry during the Interregnum. |
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A recording of Larkin reading the poems from his final collection, High Windows, was published in 1975 as British poets of our time. |
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He also studied many languages and read works by English, French, Italian, Latin, and Greek poets. |
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Byron is regarded as one of the greatest British poets and remains widely read and influential. |
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In Canto III of Don Juan, Byron expresses his detestation for poets such as William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
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This is typical of romantic poets, as they aimed to accentuate extreme emotion through the emphasis of natural imagery. |
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He had been inspired by a series of recent lectures by Hazlitt on English poets and poetic identity and had also met Wordsworth. |
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Vincent Millay, and poets in other languages such as Jan Kasprowicz, Rabindranath Tagore, Jibanananda Das and Subramanya Bharathy. |
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Many of the younger Russian poets and writers such as Konstantin Simonov were influenced by Kipling. |
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As in the Serenade, Britten set words by a range of poets, who here include Shakespeare, Coleridge, Keats, Shelley, Tennyson and Wilfred Owen. |
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The best known of the Cavalier poets are Robert Herrick, Richard Lovelace, Thomas Carew, and Sir John Suckling. |
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The French Revolution was an especially important influence on the political thinking of many of the Romantic poets. |
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Particularly notable was the development of the dramatic monologue, a form used by many poets in this period, but perfected by Browning. |
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In the second half of the century, English poets began to take an interest in French Symbolism. |
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Northern Ireland has produced a number of significant poets, the most famous being Nobel prize winner Seamus Heaney. |
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Others poets from Northern Ireland include Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon, James Fenton, Michael Longley, and Medbh McGuckian. |
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Cricket is the subject of works by noted English poets, including William Blake and Lord Byron. |
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The Irish poets of the late 17th and 18th centuries moved toward more modern dialects. |
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Irish poets portrayed their Pictish counterparts as very much like themselves. |
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Jaishankar Prasad, Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala', Mahadevi Varma and Sumitranandan Pant, are the four major Chhayavaadi poets. |
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Li Po is the most musical, most versatile, and most engaging of Chinese poets, a Mozart of words. |
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Among other Scottish poets published in Ulster were James Hogg and Robert Tannahill. |
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Rumi wrote some of the finest Persian poetry and is still one of the best selling poets in America. |
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Important collectors, dealers, and Modernist artists, writers, and poets had fled Europe for New York and America. |
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Eliot's essays were a major factor in the revival of interest in the metaphysical poets. |
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Despite these recent developments, Larkin and his circle are nonetheless still firmly rejected by modernist critics and poets. |
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Despite controversy about his personal life and opinions, Larkin remains one of Britain's most popular poets. |
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The story of Medea, in particular, caught the imagination of the tragic poets. |
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Critics frequently rank him as one of the best poets of his generation, and one of the twentieth century's greatest writers. |
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Teachers Miss McLeod and Pauline Mayne introduced him to the poets Hopkins and Eliot. |
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In the late sixteenth century James VI became patron and member of a circle of Scottish court poets and musicians known as the Castalian Band. |
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In contrast to the Classical tradition, which used syllabic metre, vernacular poets tended to use stressed metre. |
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However, they shared with the Classic poets a set of complex metaphors and role, as the verse was still often panegyric. |
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This period was marked by the work of the first named female Scottish poets. |
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Arguably his claim to immortality chiefly rests on these volumes, which placed him in the front rank of lyric poets. |
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He also adapted work by Scottish renaissance poets such as MacDiarmid, Sorley Maclean and William Soutar. |
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In the Historia Brittonum, attributed to Nennius, there is a reference to several poets in this area during the 6th century. |
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Though Thomas wrote exclusively in the English language, he has been acknowledged as one of the most important Welsh poets of the 20th century. |
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His position as one of the great modern poets has been much discussed, and he remains popular with the public. |
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Throughout the period of conquest the Welsh poets kept alive the dream of independence. |
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He was one of the major English language and European poets of the 20th century. |
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She read the Young Irelanders' poetry to Oscar and Willie, inculcating a love of these poets in her sons. |
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When Lowell agreed to finance an anthology of Imagist poets, Pound's work was not included. |
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The era saw a rise of poets and novelists who wrote in Finnish, notably Aleksis Kivi and Eino Leino. |
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Much Middle Scots literature was produced by makars, poets with links to the royal court. |
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Prominent Latin poets of late antiquity include Ausonius, Prudentius, Claudian, and Sidonius. |
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Adam Mickiewicz, a principal figure in Polish Romanticism, widely regarded as one of the greatest Polish and European poets of all time. |
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In addition to the seven main ranks, variously named ranks below these seem to be names for unskilled poets, the taman, drisiuc, and oblaires. |
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In the case of poets, a poet with skill qualifications but who did not have proper training was a bard. |
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The first describes the roles and status of the church, poets and various other professionals. |
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The final primarily with the status and duties of poets although it contains other material as well. |
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The earliest praise poetry to survive is by the poets Taliesin and Aneirin. |
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From the middle of the 16th century onwards, a decline is seen in the praise tradition of the poets of the nobility, the cywyddwyr. |
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Cynghanedd and traditional metres are still used today by many Welsh language poets. |
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He is widely recognised as one of the foremost Scottish poets of the 20th century. |
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Morgan was also influenced by the American beat poets, with their simple, accessible ideas and language being prominent features in his work. |
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In modern usage, poets of the Scots revival in the 18th century, such as Allan Ramsay and Robert Fergusson are also makars. |
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The term is normally applied to poets writing in Scots although it need not be exclusive to Scottish writers. |
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William Dunbar for instance referred to the English poets Chaucer, Lydgate and Gower as makaris. |
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In ancient Greece, the laurel was used to form a crown or wreath of honour for poets and heroes. |
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Beginning around 1994, North Korea had 6 active poets laureate who worked in the epic genre. |
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Wales has had a long tradition of poets and bards under royal patronage, with extant writing from medieval royal poets and earlier. |
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It may include other works by poets influenced by Burns, particularly poets writing in Scots. |
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There he held a gathering to which were invited poets and musicians from all parts of Wales. |
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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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The magazine discovered such poets as Gwendolyn Brooks, James Merrill, and John Ashbery. |
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Under its rules poets undertook an apprenticeship of nine years to become fully qualified. |
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Like poets, the storytellers were also professionals, but unlike the poets little of their work has survived. |
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Of the poets named here it is believed that work that can be identified as Aneirin's and Taliesin's have survived. |
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The poets of this period were professionals who worked in the various princely courts in Wales. |
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The poets organised themselves into a Guild to protect their professional status, and from time to time their rules were revised and updated. |
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The work of numerous poets of this period survives, some are anonymous, but very many are identified. |
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At his death the elegies his fellow poets wrote in his memory attested to his greatness as a poet. |
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A native of Llangollen, Gruffudd Hiraethog was one of the foremost poets of the sixteenth century to use the cywydd meter. |
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Some groups of poets and genres of poetry stood completely outside that tradition. |
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But it was in private poetic bouts with fellow poets that the satire tradition flourished. |
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Amongst the most important are Trioedd Ynys Prydain, or the Welsh Triads, a compendium of mnemonics for poets and storytellers. |
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Her Enid was a literary influence on Tennyson, and her theories and sources influenced European artists, poets and writers. |
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The Modern Literary Archives are home to the work of some of the most important Welsh poets and authors. |
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The Archives of Welsh Authors include the work of authors, poets, playwrights, scholars, journalists and archdruids of the Gorsedd. |
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Among all our Victorian poets none is or was so fitted for the writing of odic poems as Matthew Arnold. |
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One of the spurs to the active and generous patronage of poets must have been the prospect that one's name and deeds would live forever. |
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This attracted scholars, scientists, poets, artists, and artisans of all kinds. |
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