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"poetess" Definitions
  1. a female poet

268 Sentences With "poetess"

How to use poetess in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "poetess" and check conjugation/comparative form for "poetess". Mastering all the usages of "poetess" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Tova, a simple name, a popular name, not quite suited to a young poetess.
Famous poetess Anna Enquist will be the curator, I will design the always moving letters and it will open this spring.
She describes Austen as "an authoress," an antiquated feminine form that, like "poetess," serves to trivialize Austen as a woman writer.
Turkish designer Bora Aksu said he was inspired by Romani poetess Bronislawa Wajs, known as Papusza, for his spring line rich in floral prints, lace and embroidery.
"Thy Power, O Liberty, makes strong the weak, and (wond'rous instinct) Ethiopians speak," African-American poetess Phillis Wheatley wrote about her aspirations for liberty in her poem America.
Smith's version of "When Doves Cry" has a heaping dose of her characteristic theatricality, plus all the gravity a punk poetess with a half-century of experience can imbue.
Marina ticks all the boxes for the prototypical heroine of novels set in this period: Her parents are liberal aristocrats, while she is a radical poetess — gorgeous, red-haired and curvaceous.
Angélica and Lola Torrente prefigure Angélica and María Font, José Arco anticipates Ulises Lima and a toothless Tiresian poetess named Estrellita gives a foretaste of Tinajero; but these characters, archetypes for Bolaño, are integrated here into a narrower time frame.
It used to be that poet was a masculine term and therefore if you were a woman poet, you have to be a poetess, which sounds really Victorian and like you spend a lot of time on a fainting couch.
Narrated by Aemilia Bassano Lanier, a cross-dressing poetess of Jewish descent living on the periphery of the court of Queen Elizabeth at the turn of the 17th century, Sharratt's historical novel is not just a response to the enigmas surrounding Shakespeare's sonnets but also an absorbing bildungsroman that grapples with strikingly contemporary issues of gender and religious identification, definitions and discrimination.
Dhanadeva, a writer who praises Vijja as a talented poetess, also mentions a poetess called Vijayanka (Vijaya), who excelled in the Vaidarbhi style. Dhanadeva's writings do not clarify if these two women poets are the same person.
It was Nagadeva who systematized Mahanubhava. Mahadamba was a leading poetess of the movement.
Her poetry is simple and melancholic. She will be remembered as the first Albanian poetess.
Margaret Junkin Preston was the daughter of a former president of Washington College, and became a major nineteenth century literary figure, known nationally as the "Poetess of the South" and "The Poetess of the Confederacy". Margaret Junkin's sister Elinor was the first wife of Stonewall Jackson.
Felicia Morris, better known by her stage name, The Poetess, is an American rapper and radio personality.
At this church took place the wedding of Juana de Ibarbourou, the most famous Uruguayan poetess, in 1921.
Dr. , who translates the contemporary Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai into Catalan, Tel Aviv-based Israeli poetess, Sivan Beskin, who translates the contemporary Israeli poetess Leah Goldberg into Russian and Lithuanian, and, Berkeley, California-based Prof. Dr. Chana Bloch, who translated into English the works of contemporary Israeli poets Yehuda Amichai and Dahlia Ravikovitch.
In 2019 he has composed the music for the book (+Audio cd) "Eco nel vento", by Italian poetess Tania Cantone.
"Cesárea Tinajero", the lost poetess character from the novel The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño was based on Concha Urquiza.
Sukhvinder Amrit (born 1963) is a Punjabi poet and Ghazal singer. In November 2017 she was among nine female poets who received a Sulabh Sahitya Akademi Award at the All-India Poetess Conference.60 poetesses receive awards, The Tribune, 11 November 2017.Swati Walia, 3-day All-India Poetess Conference concludes, 13 November 2017.
Phoebe Cary (September 4, 1824 – July 31, 1871) was an American poetess, and the younger sister of poetess Alice Cary (1820–1871). The sisters co-published poems in 1849, and then each went on to publish volumes of their own. After their deaths in 1871, joint anthologies of the sisters' unpublished poems were also compiled.
Queen's Gate () is a 1999 poetry collection by Danish poetess Pia Tafdrup. It won the Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1999.
Adine Riom, née Alexandrine Louise Claudine Broband (25 October 1818, Le Pellerin – 28 August 1899, Nantes) was a French writer, poetess, and playwright.
1914) and his humorous poems, "stories by Akjagül", "Communar", poem "On Fire"; Alty Garlyýew and his plays "Cotton, Annagül", "Aýna", 1916; the first Turkmen woman, playwright and poetess Towşan Esenowa (b. 1915) and her comedy from the collective farm life "The daughter of a millionaire", the poem "Steel Girls", "Lina".Sidelnikova L.M. The Way of the Soviet Poetess. Ashgabat, 1970.
Anjali Narzary is an Indian Bodo language poetess. She is recipient of Sahitya Akademi Award for her poetry "Ang Mabwrwi Dong Daswng" in 2016.
407, 433-34. A contemporary Qing poetess, Wang Zhenyi, considered her to be an emblematic "banished immortal" (謫仙, zhexian), akin to Li Bai.
Margalida Caimari i Vila (1839, Cuba – 1921, Palma de Mallorca) was a poetess of the Renaixença and social benefactor linked to Mallorca, Catalonia and Cuba.
Rajashekhara, a noted Sanskrit poet and dramatist of the 9th-10th century, mentions a poetess called Vijayanka, who belonged to the historical Karnata region (in present-day Karnataka). This region was a part of the Chalukya territory, and based on similarity of names, some modern scholars - such as M. B. Padma of University of Mysore - have identified this poetess with the Chalukya royal Vijaya-Bhattarika. A verse, attributed to Rajashekhara in Jalhana's Suktimuktavali, compares Vijayanka to Sarasvati, the goddess of wisdom and learning. Vijayanka, in turn, has been identified by some scholars with Vijja, a Sanskrit poetess known from major anthologies of Sanskrit verses.
Shankar was the father of Hindi poet Hari Shankar Sharma, grandfather of Hindi's poet and writer Kripa Shankar Sharma and great-grandfather of Hindi's poetess Indira Indu.
She had, before leaving Scotland, written some creditable verses, but it was not until she came to Canada that her merits as a poetess were fully acknowledged.
Ponmudiyār (Tamil: பொன்முடியார்) was a poetess of the Sangam period, to whom 4 verses of the Sangam literature have been attributed, including verse 14 of the Tiruvalluva Maalai.
Velliveethiyār (Tamil: வெள்ளிவீதியார்) was a poetess of the late Sangam period, to whom 14 verses of the Sangam literature have been attributed, including verse 23 of the Tiruvalluva Maalai.
292 (Czerniaków seems to confirm that Arnsztajnowa died in the Ghetto along with another poetess, Henryka Łazowertówna, 19091942; and the novelist Gustawa Jarecka, 19081943). Cf. Aleksander B. Skotnicki, et al.
Marula (IAST: Mārulā; fl. 13th century or earlier) was a Sanskrit-language poetess from India. Her verses are included in early medieval Sanskrit anthologies, including Sharngadhara's Paddhati and Jalhana's Suktimuktavali.
She is professor in philosophy at Sindh University Jamshoro. She is poetess, columnist and writer. She is author of book 'Ojagiyal Akhyun Ja Sapna'. Sindhu is women rights activist as well.
Deknong Kemalawati (2 April 1965, Meulaboh, Aceh) is one of the leading poetess of modern Indonesia, chairman of the Art Council Banda Aceh, winner of the Literary Prize of the Government of Aceh.
She and her partner (Ankie Peypers, a Dutch poetess) moved to France in the early 1990s. In 1997, Dekker returned to sculpting, a trade which she continued in until her death in 2003.
'Vasalis' is a Latinization of her last name 'Leenmans'. The 'M' does not stand for 'Maria' as is sometimes incorrectly reported. The poetess initially wanted to publish her work without revealing that her poems were written by a woman. When, through Simon Vestdijk (a Dutch novelist), she had the chance to make her debut in the literary magazine 'Groot Nederland', they did not allow her to sign her work with merely her initials, the poetess decided to write and publish under a pseudonym.
Ethereal poetess in Leave it to Psmith, who reveals a deeper side of her nature as "Smooth Lizzie", an expert jewel-thief. Engaged to Cootes, a card-sharp with little in the upper storey.
Steinvör Sighvatsdóttir (early 13th-century - 17 October 1271), was the politically most influential woman in Iceland in the Age of the Sturlungs. She was also a skáldkona (poetess), and the only woman listed in Skáldatal.
Otilia Cazimir Otilia Cazimir (pen name of Alexandra Gavrilescu; February 12, 1894 - June 8, 1967) was a Romanian poet, prose writer, translator and publicist, nicknamed the "poetess of gentle souls", known as a children's poems author.
St. Dymphna's name derives from the Irish damh (poet) and suffix -ait (little/feminine), therefore meaning "poetess." It is also spelled Dimpna, Dymphnart, Damnat, Damhnait or Dympna. and is pronounced or in English and in Irish.
He first married Chitralekha, a dancer and daughter of Malayalam poet Vallathol. The marriage did not last long and they separated soon. Then he married a poetess, Susheela who was a school teacher. That marriage also failed.
Mehdigulu Khan Javanshir (, ; 1763 or 1772–1845) was the last khan of the Karabakh Khanate, functioning as its head from 1806 up to his flight in 1822. His only known issue was Khurshidbanu Natavan - famous Azerbaijani poetess.
Hrothsvitha was a canoness from 935 - 973, as the first female poetess in the German lands, and first female historian Hrothsvitha is one of the few people to speak about women's lives from a woman's perspective during the Middle Ages.
Death of a Poetess is a 2017 Israeli film, directed and written by Efrat Mishori and Dana Goldberg. The lead roles in the film are played by Evgenia Dodina and Samira Saraya. The film premiered at the 2017 Jerusalem Film Festival.
The collected poems were composed by 157 poets, of which 14 are anonymous and at least 10 were poetess. Some of the authors of the poems, such as Kapilar and Nakkirar, have also written poems that are part of other anthologies.
Ousha bint Khalifa Al Suwaidi (Arabic: عوشه بنت خليفة السويدي) also known as Fatat Al-Arab (Girl of the Arabs), Ousha Al Sha'er (Ousha the Poet) (1 January 1920 - 27 July 2018) was a poetess from the United Arab Emirates.
Chefone blames Mimaroben, who, with the pilot Isagel, is taken away. The commander deals as best he can with the increased despair and moral deterioration among those aboard, depicted in a scene in a hall of mirrors, where Daisy Dodd, her lesbian partner, and the passengers dance, and the blind poetess speaks of her cult of Light, which has replaced Mima. The body of the dead chief technician is shot into outer space in the direction of the star Rigel. The 20th anniversary of the voyage is celebrated, and the blind poetess ecstatically sees the city of heaven, but is taken away.
Yanette Delétang-Tardif (Roubaix, 18 June 1902 – Paris, 1976) was a French poet, translator into French of Spanish and German works, painter and illustrator. She was a very productive and reputed author of poetry, however she appeared sometimes as a restricted poetess.
Portrait of Bianca Laura Saibante by Clementino Tomitano Bianca Laura Saibante (born 1723, died 1797) was an 18th-century Italian poetess and playwright. Born into a wealthy family, she is considered one of the founders of the Accademia Roveretana degli Agiati in Rovereto.
Ana de Castro Egas was a Spanish poetess and biographer of the Spanish Golden Age. The only text known by Castro Egas is the Eternidad del rey nuestro señor don Felipe III (Eternity to the King our Lord Don Felipe III), published in 1629.
The show was presented by Richard Fairbrass and Gabrielle Richens, with Melanie Winiger starring as the Poetess, ruler of the Palace. Minor characters include Zioto who starts the time during the Palace challenges, Abdullah, the timekeeper in the Desert Duels who fires a rifle to indicate the start and end of the clock, the Forgemaster who runs the Forges Room, Zach and Ramm (identified by video cameras attached to their heads), who act as the "eyes and ears" of the Poetess and allow her to watch the progress made by the two teams, and Meliha, a guide who guides teams between houses in the Palace.
Gatehouse has the second oldest average population of towns in Scotland. Jeanie Donnan, (1864-1942), "The Galloway Poetess", was born here before moving to Whithorn in Wigtownshire where she lived on George Street and where she is commemorated by a plaque. She wrote poetry about local events.
At the age of ten, thanks to her mother's teaching and guidance on verse and poetry, she became famous in the poetry culture of Việt Nam, and came to be known as Vân Đài, poetess (nữ sĩ Vân Đài) of the pre-war period (thời tiền chiến).
A fictionalized version of Díaz Varín appears in Alejandro Jodorowsky's autobiographical film Endless Poetry (2016), where she is played by Pamela Flores. Jodorowsky represents her as a Chilean Bukowski and the first punk poetess (probably based on how beat literature has inspired punk and cyberpunk literature).
In 2014, Mishori founded a film production company with filmmaker Dana Goldberg, Gypsycam, for experimental and independent cinema. They produced several short films together. In 2018, they released the feature film Death of a Poetess, starring Evgenia Dodina and Samira Saraya. In 2018, Mishori received the Landau Arts Award.
Rachel Bluwstein in kibbutz Degania Alef, 1919–1921 Rachel Bluwstein Sela (September 20 (Julian calendar), 1890 – April 16, 1931) was a Hebrew-language poet who immigrated to Palestine, then part of the Ottoman Empire, in 1909. She is known by her first name, Rachel ( ), or as Rachel the Poetess ( ).
Nina Baym, Women Writers of the American West (University of Illinois Press 2011): 290. In 1930 she married architect Ralph Holt Howes."Sues to Force Howes to Quit Second Wife" New York Times (January 4, 1930): 4. via ProQuest"Poetess Propitiated" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (May 8, 1930): 3.
Ayesha Durrani, also known as Aisha-i-Durani and Aisha Durrani, was an 18th- century Afghan poetess during the time of the Durrani Empire. A number of her poems were compiled into a manuscript in 1882, and Durrani is credited with founding the first school for girls in Afghanistan.
Cleitagora or Clitagora or Kleitagora () was a lyric poetess mentioned by Aristophanes in his Wasps and his lost play the Danaïdes; a fragment of Cratinus also mentions her. She was called a "female Homer". A drinking song named "Cleitagora" is mentioned in Aristophanes' Lysistrata. Suda wrote that she was a Spartan.
In addition to the selected works below and his illustrations, Shoberl's editing is still being viewed. The Forget-Me-Not publications are being digitised because of their value.Harris, Katherine D. "Forget-Me-Not: A Hypertextual Archive of Ackermann's 19th-Century Literary Annual", January 2007, Poetess Archive. General editor Laura Mandell.
In 1924, Polish poetess Kazimiera Iłłakowiczówna published an anthology of poems in honor of Mgr. Budkiewicz's life and death. Modeled after the traditional ballads of the Polish peasantry, the collection was titled Opowieść o moskiewskim męczeństwie ("The Story of the Moscow Martyr")."A New Polish Martyrology", The Tablet, 12 April 1924.
The final scene shows the last night onboard where Isagel dances and the blind poetess sings of the joy of death. A light beam sweeps over the dead passengers and Mimaroben prepares for the end. Finally darkness descends over the occupants of the space ship, and the audience in the theatre.
He is also the founder of All India Poetess Conference. He wrote under the pen name "Lari Azad". His style is considered easy to understand, but has also been compared with high quality Hindi literature. Besides writing, he earns his living by teaching History in the historic NREC PG College, Khurja.
Papusza is 2013 Polish feature film directed by Joanna Kos-Krauze and Krzysztof Krauze, starring Jowita Budnik as lead actress. The plot revolves around the biography of Romani poetess Bronisława Wajs, better known as Papusza (rom. Lalka) within the Romani community. The film is black and white, with dialogue mainly in Romani.
The myth of Aphrodite and Adonis is probably derived from the ancient Sumerian legend of Inanna and Dumuzid. The Greek name (Adōnis, ) is derived from the Canaanite word ʼadōn, meaning "lord". The earliest known Greek reference to Adonis comes from a fragment of a poem by the Lesbian poetess Sappho (c. 630 – c.
In 1899, Fried married the amateur poetess Augusta (Gusti) Rathgeber (1872-1926) and had two daughters with her, Monika and Emerentia (dates are unknown). From 1892, Gusti Rathgeber had been married to German poet Otto Julius Bierbaum but left him when she and Fried met, and fell in love with each other.
2019, p. 23. . In December 1777 Cagliostro and Serafina left London for the mainland, after which they travelled through various German states, visiting lodges of the Rite of Strict Observance looking for converts to Cagliostro's "Egyptian Freemasonry". In February 1779 Cagliostro traveled to Mitau, where he met the poetess Elisa von der Recke.
Kala Prakash or (Kala Parkash) (2 January 1934 - 5 August 2018) was one of the best fiction writers and poetesses of Sindhi language. She was a novelist, short story writer, and poetess. She authored more than 15 books and won the prestigious Sahitya Academy Award in 1994 from the Government of India.
Since childhood, the poetess showed her poetic qualities, she composed poems ragarding the circumstances that influenced her. She has 2 sons Anvar, Almas and 2 daughters-in-law Anar, Aida, grandchildren Anel, Alan, Anita, Akhmetzhan, Aslan and Alsu. Also, the writer raised sons and daughters of his brother, who died at an early age.
Next time the building was redeveloped in 1906-1907. It was expanded by building up the third floor. The work on the project of the architect G. D. Grima was carried out by civil engineer V. A. Lipavsky. The future poetess A. A. Akhmatova (Gorenko) studied in the gymnasium during the period 1900-1905.
The Award went to Driver, directed by Yehonatan Indursky. The Best Screenplay Award jury was headed by film producer Nik Powell and also comprised filmmaker Josh Appignanesi, screenwriter Phillipa Goslett, playwright Amy Rosenthal, actor Georgia Slowe and TV producer Derek Wax. The Award went to Death of a Poetess, directed by Dana Goldberg and Efrat Mishori.
Ahlam al-Nasr is a Syrian Arabic poet, and is known as "the Poetess of the Islamic State". Her first book of poetry, The Blaze of Truth, was published in 2014 and consists of 107 poems written in monorhyme. She is considered one of the Islamic State's most famous propagandists and gives detailed defenses of terrorist acts.
Mehdigulu was born in 1855 in Shusha in the family of a Kumyk major-general, Khasay khan Utsmiyev (1808–1866)Azerbaijani generals > Maj-Gen. Khasay Khan Usmiyev (1808–1866), husband of famous Karabakh poet > Natavan. Their son, Mehdiqulu, born in 1855 in Shusha, became a Lt-Colonel > in the Russian Army. and Azerbaijani poetess Khurshidbanu Natavan.
She also played a quadriplegic's nurse in Bhansali's acclaimed drama Guzaarish. After a sabbatical, Rai made her comeback with Jazbaa (2015), a remake of the South Korean film Seven Days. In 2016, she took on the supporting part of a poetess in the romance Ae Dil Hai Mushkil, which ranks as her highest-grossing Bollywood release.
He composed a book titled Sangkhosur Badh. Hem Chandra Goswami is regarded as one of the most exceptional writers of the late 19th century and early twentieth century. He is the first sonnet writer of Assamese language. The credit of first Assamese poetess plus first Assamese short story writer amongst women went to Yamuneswari Khatoniar of Golaghat.
According to a Jain tradition, 2 of the quatrains were composed by the teacher and counselor of Thiruthakkadevar, while the rest were anonymously added. The larger Tamil tradition believes that 445 quatrains were composed by Kantiyar, a poetess and inserted into the original. The entire epic is sometimes credited to just Thiruthakkadevar by casual writers.Arathoon 2008, p.
Guzal Ramazanovna Sitdykowa (, ) is a famous Bashkir writer, poetess, publicist and translator. In 2002 she was awarded the Honor Diploma of the Republic of Bashkortostan. She is a member of the Bashkir Writing Commission and the Writing Commission of the Russian Federation. She was the leader of the Bashkir Women's Republic of Bashkortostan since 2004 until 2011.
Tasker was an admirer of the poetess Mary Robinson (1757–1800), whom he praised as the "Sweet Sappho of our Isle." Tasker was careless with his finances. The revenues of his benefice were placed under sequestration on 23 March 1780. He said that his "unletter'd brother-in-law" had obtained the sequestration in an "illegal mode" through "merciless and severe persecutions and litigations".
Since 2013 the BANTU collective has been hosting Afropolitan Vibes a monthly live music concert series and annual music festival in Lagos, Nigeria. On 7 July 2017 the 13 piece BANTU collective released Agberos International. The 10 track album was produced by Aman Junaid. It features Tony Allen on drums ("Niger Delta Blues") and Nigerian spoken word poetess Wana Wana ("Oni Temi").
She wrote under the pseudonym of Makhfi (, "Hidden One"), a pseudonym later adopted by her equally talented great-great-granddaughter, the gifted poetess, Princess Zeb-un-Nissa.Findly, p. 113 Salima was also a passionate lover of books and was very fond of reading. She not only maintained a great library of her own, but freely used Akbar's library as well.
14 In the following period, Akil Kahn and Zeb-un-Nissa allegedly had a brief yet failed affair,Lal, p. 16 after which Auranzeb began to distrust her and later imprisoned her.Lal, p. 17 Other theories suggest that she was imprisoned for being a poetess and a musician (both anathema to Aurangzeb's austere, more orthodox and fundamental way of life and thinking).
1056), or that Samuel was otherwise an ancestor, which would make Qasmuna an eleventh-century rather than a twelfth-century poet, but the foundations for these claims are shaky.María Ángeles Gallego, 'Approaches to the Study of Muslim and Jewish Women in Medieval Iberian Peninsula: The Poetess Qasmuna Bat Isma`il', MEAH, sección Hebreo, 48 (1999), 63-75 (pp. 70-72).
It features Tony Allen and Nigerian spoken word poetess Wana Wana. In September 2020 BANTU released "Everybody get Agenda" a long player that showcases the band's tightly knit horn section accompanied by driving rhythms and socio political lyrics that address issues of police brutality, corruption, urban alienation, xenophobia and migration. The album also features Afrobeat artist Seun Kuti on the song "Yeye Theory".
Essays on Canadian Writing. limited access. 75: 118–141 The inclusion of two of her poems in W. D. Lighthall's anthology, Songs of the Great Dominion (1889), signalled her recognition. Theodore Watts-Dunton noted her for praise in his review of the book; he quoted her entire poem "In the Shadows" and called her "the most interesting poetess now living".
Emily Pauline Johnson (10 March 1861 – 7 March 1913), also known by her Mohawk stage name Tekahionwake (pronounced dageh-eeon-wageh,literally 'double- life'),"Tekahionwake: an Indian Poetess in London," Pauline Johnson Archive: Tekahionwake. Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University. Retrieved 15 November 2009. was a Canadian poet, author ,and performer who was popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
In November 1822 Rudolf Ackermann published Forget-Me-Not: A Christmas and New Years Present for 1823. This was the first literary annual.History:A "Small" Genre Succeeds, Harris, Katherine D. "Forget Me Not: A Hypertextual Archive of Ackermann's 19th-Century Literary Annual", Sept 2007, Poetess Archive. General editor Laura Mandell, accessed June 2010 From the first edition he employed Frederic Shoberl as editor.
Erzya practices Christianity (Eastern Orthodox and Lutheranism brought by Finnish missionaries in the 1990s) and Ineshkipaza, a native monotheistic religion with some elements of pantheism. Almost all national-oriented intellectuals practice Ineshkipazia or Lutheranism. Mariz’ Kemal, well-known Erzyan poetess, is also an organizer of traditional Erzyan religion communities. This phenomenon appeared after formation of Mordovian diocese of ROC in 1990.
Gona Kacha Reddy and Vitalanatha contributions include the completion of the Uttarakaanda section in the Ranganatha Ramayanam. Ranganatha’s version was the first and foremost Ramayanam written in Telugu literary history by Gona Budda Reddy. His sister, Kuppambika is known to be the first Telugu poetess as per Buddapuram inscriptions. Kuppambika married Malyala Gundadandadeeshudu, who was also known as Danda Senani.
Some time before 1878, he opened his own restaurant, Le Faisan d'Or (The Golden Pheasant), in Cannes. On 28 August 1878, he married Delphine Daffis. She has been described as "a French poetess of some distinction and a member of the Academy". Escoffier apparently won her hand in a gamble with her father, publisher Paul Daffis, over a game of billiards.
Anne Sexton Songs (1977), for mezzo- soprano and piano. Three songs after the American poetess, premiered by singer Sheila Allen in July 1977 at Tanglewood. Arcadia, for cello quartet. A single- movement work which, the composer says, "was pronounced too difficult by the people for whom I wrote it, and … has never been performed." Mountain Roads (1998), for saxophone quartet.
Adile Sultan was a poetess and a scholarly, cultivated, and pious woman renowned for her benevolence, good works, and charity. She penned beautiful elegies to her husband when he died. Those in her service and in close relations with her always spoke with pleasure of her and her polite manners. She was also in the habit of smoking the water pipe.
Aben Kandel (15 August 1897 – 28 January 1993) was an American screenwriter, novelist, and (earlier in life) boxer. He was screenwriter on such classic B movies as I Was A Teenage Werewolf, Joan Crawford's final movie Trog, and one of Leonard Nimoy's first starring vehicles, Kid Monk Baroni. He is the father of poetess Lenore Kandel and screenwriter Stephen Kandel.
She was chosen by "Organization of Afro- Asian Writers" in 2005 and According to Egypt's "Culture and Information Minister" Muhammad Majdi Marjan who heads the Organization:Muslimah Writers Alliance Muslim Women Making History Tahereh Saffarzadeh The letter reads in part, > "In a bid to commemorate the leading and elite women of letters we have > chosen the internationally renowned Iranian poetess Tahereh Saffarzadeh, > with whose long history of struggles the entire Islamic Ummah is familiar, > as the leading woman in the Islamic world and at the international scene of > 2005." According to Organization of Afro-Asian Writers:Taherehsaffarzadeh.ir > Tahereh Saffarzadeh the great Iranian committed poetess and writer is an > exalted example for the muslim believing women, that all muslims honour her > status and due to her political fighting background, and her profound > knowledge, this year she was elected to be celebrated by this organization.
Ancient Sumerian bas-relief portrait depicting the poetess Enheduanna Women in ancient Sumer could buy, own, sell, and inherit property. They could engage in commerce and testify in court as witnesses. Nonetheless, their husbands could divorce them for mild infractions, and a divorced husband could easily remarry another woman, provided that his first wife had borne him no offspring. Female deities, such as Inanna, were widely worshipped.
In the third showcase are the gifts which Kaputikyan received from Avetik Isahakyan, Sergei Parajanov, Vazgen I, Paruyr Sevak, and Siamanto among others. The fourth showcase houses Kaputikyan's awards, including the "Badge of Honour", "Friendship of Nations" and "October Revolution". In the fifth showcase are the tickets of memberships. In the hallway is a plaster bust created by the poetess’ son, the famous sculptor, Ara Shiraz.
Prentice was also a poet, whose best-known poem, "The Closing Year" (written on New Year's Eve 1836) would be included in one of McGuffey's Readers. He also befriended and was a mentor to poetess Mary Louisa Chitwood (1832-1855). Prentice became known for militant editorials before elections, which varied little over the next 25 years despite his changing party affiliation. He initially promoted the Whig Party.
Then, her poems regarding the eternity of life, the sublimity of love, and the glory of patriotism thrilled readers. With patriotic fervor she wrote war songs, the inspiring words of which stirred California youth for the cause of The Union in the days of the American Civil War. She was called "The California Poetess". Her poems were recited in the schools and taught by teachers of elocution.
Nāzo Tokhī (نازو توخۍ), commonly known as Nāzo Anā (, "Nazo the grandmother"), was an Afghan poetess and a writer in the Pashto language. Mother of the famous early-18th century Afghan King Mirwais Hotak, she grew up in an influential family in the Kandahar region. She is remembered as a brave woman warrior in Afghan history and as the "Mother of the Afghan Nation".
Akbar's forces betrayed Yousuf, and imprisoned him for the rest of his life. It is narrated that Habba Khatoon, Yousuf's love interest and a well known poetess of Kashmir, had opposed Yousuf's travel to Delhi, for she sensed Akbar's offer as a bait. She later made mentions of this in her writings. Chaks successfully resisted the attempts of Babur and Humayun to annex Kashmir.
Apollo's children who became musicians and bards include Orpheus, Linus, Ialemus, Hymenaeus, Philammon, Eumolpus and Eleuther. Apollo fathered 3 daughters, Apollonis, Borysthenis and Cephisso, who formed a group of minor Muses, the "Musa Apollonides". They were nicknamed Nete, Mese and Hypate after the highest, middle and lowest strings of his lyre. Phemonoe was a seer and a poetess who was the inventor of Hexameter.
I cannot remember when a piano forte artist came over better. San Francisco Globe, US: She is a poetess, one of the greatest piano-artists of the day. Winnipeg Free Press, Canada: Stands absolutely in the front rank of any living pianist in the world today. Toronto World, Canada: To be capable of perfection in such gems of musical art establishes Miss Goodson among the genuine artists.
The novel is a radical departure from the works which made her famous. During the 1970s, Susann had spoken of future works. They included a novel about brothers who have their show business start in vaudeville, to be called The Comedy Twins; a novel about a poetess, The Heroine; a continuation of the story of Neely O'Hara's sons; and her autobiography.Ventura. The Jacqueline Susann Story, p. 160.
Agora of Smyrna Head of the poetess Sappho found in ancient Smyrna. Roman marble copy of an original statue from the Hellenistic period, at the Istanbul Archaeology Museums. In 133 BC, Eumenes III, the last king of the Attalid dynasty of Pergamum, was about to die without an heir. In his will, he bequeathed his kingdom to the Roman Republic, and this included Smyrna.
Nicoletta Pasquale was a noblewoman of Messina, a poetess and intellectual, about whose education and private life very little is known. She was mentioned by the historian Antonino Mongitore in his biographical work Bibliotheca Sicula, which in turn was used as a source for the work L'istoria della volgar poesia (History of vernacular poetry) by the literary critic Giovanni Mario Crescimbeni, first published in 1698.
Writers Vladimir Odoyevsky, Yuri Samarin, Leo Tolstoy, Yury Olesha, Mikhail Svetlov, Eduard Bagritsky, Lev Kassil, Mikhail Sholokhov, Venedikt Yerofeyev lived here; poetess Novella Matveyeva; actors Vera Pashennaya, Vasily Kachalov, Alla Tarasova, Mark Prudkin, Nikolai Khmelyov, Sofya Giatsintova, Lyubov Orlova; painter Vasily Tropinin; composer Sergei Prokofiev and many others. The street runs from Tverskaya Street in the west, to Bolshaya Dmitrovka Street in the east.
Episode 38: A new teacher named L. Bannerjee comes to teach English in place of Vinny Sir for a few weeks as Vinny is down with malaria. Miss Bannerjee is a poetess and Kiran and Nonie are in awe of Miss L. Bannerjee. Nonie finds out that her name is Lavanya. Miss Bannerjee is very stern and no one else apart from Kiran and Nonie likes her.
Urdu literature has always enjoyed patronage from successive rulers of the Qutb Shahi and Asaf Jahi era. Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah, the fifth ruler of the Qutb Shahi dynasty is regarded as one of the pioneers of early Urdu poetry. During the rule of Nizams of Hyderabad, printing was introduced in the area. The 18th century courtesan and poetess Mah Laqa Bai is also regarded as a pioneer of this time.
Nalapat Balamani Amma (19 July 1909 – 29 September 2004) was an Indian poet who wrote in Malayalam. She was a prolific writer and was known as the "poetess of motherhood". Amma (Mother), Muthassi (Grandmother), and Mazhuvinte Katha (The story of the Axe) were some of her well-known works. She was a recipient of many awards and honours, including the Padma Bhushan, Saraswati Samman, Sahitya Akademi Award, and Ezhuthachan Award.
Tsumura's 1983 biographical novel, "Shirayuri no kishi" (Precipice of a White Lily) is about a poetess from Tsumura's native Fukui; Tomiko Yamakawa (1879 - 1909). Tsumura's novel, "Ryuuseiu" (A Meteoric Shower) won the Women's Literature Prize in 1990. It depicted the Boshin War from the perspective of a 15-year- old girl. She is a member of the Japan Art Academy and was recognized as a person of cultural merit in 2016.
The word poetess was used to describe them and ridicule them and their work. This was described by Rosario de Acuña in her poem Poetisa. The group gave the women a needed outlet from the inherent sexism of Spanish society and the restrictions it put upon them. Three of the members of the group pioneered methods to deal with their adversity: Josefa Massanés, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda and Carolina Coronado.
Garza is the son of journalist Ramiro Garza and the poetess Carmen Alardín, brother of actress Ana Silvia Garza, and uncle to the actress and singer Mariana Garza. He studied acting at the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM (Spanish: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México). He made his acting debut in 1973 on the Mexican children's program Plaza Sésamo, his first telenovela was Pacto de amor en 1977.
Nilanjana Banerji, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 1 June 2010 The literary annual's popularity waned and publications ceased in England, although the genre was still popular in America for some time. The Forget-Me-Not publications are being digitised because of their value.Harris, Katherine D. "Forget Me Not: A Hypertextual Archive of Ackermann's 19th-Century Literary Annual", January 2007, Poetess Archive. General editor Laura Mandell.
Lillian Hinman Shuey, was the author of "California Sunshine","Among the Redwoods," "David of Juniper Gulch," "Don Luis' Wife," and "The Humboldt Lily." Another poetess was Mary Cameron Benjamin. Kate Douglas Wiggin was well known as a kindergarten worker and as the author of "The Story of Patsy," "The Bird's Christinas Carol," "Timothy's Quest," and other books. Virna Woods gained her first literary reputation in the field of descriptive verse.
Gore was born in 1798 in London, the youngest child of Mary (née Brinley) and Charles Moody, a wine merchant. Her father died soon afterwards, and her mother remarried in 1801, to the London physician Charles D. Nevinson. She is therefore referred to sometimes as "Miss Nevinson" by contemporary reviewers and in scholarly writings. Gore herself was interested in writing from an early age, gaining the nickname "the Poetess".
Silva Kaputikyan (); 20 January 1919 – 25 August 2006) was an Armenian poet and political activist. One of the best-known Armenian writers of the twentieth century, she is recognized as "the leading poetess of Armenia" and "the grand lady of twentieth century Armenian poetry". Although a member of the Communist Party, she was a noted advocate of Armenian national causes. Her first collection of poems were published in the mid-1940s.
She was remembered in 1938 by writer Robert Gear MacDonald in this way: > Mrs. Rogerson was not native born, she came here from Antrim County in the > north of Ireland. But she quickly and permanently identified herself with > this country, and is, in some ways, the typical Newfoundland poetess. Her > two volumes provide (with material of less value, though none of it > negligible from our point of view) some genuine things.
Three poems by Qasmūna survive, due to being recorded by two later anthologists: Al-Suyuti, in his fifteenth-century Nuzhat al-julasāʼ fī ashʻār al-nisā, an anthology of women's verse, and Ahmed Mohammed al-Maqqari, in his seventeenth-century Nafḥ al-ṭīb.James Mansfield Nichols, 'The Arabic Verses of Qasmūna bint Ismāʿil ibn Bagdālah', International Journal of Middle East Studies, 13 (1981), 155-58 (p. 155).María Ángeles Gallego, 'Approaches to the Study of Muslim and Jewish Women in Medieval Iberian Peninsula: The Poetess Qasmuna Bat Isma`il', MEAH, sección Hebreo, 48 (1999), 63-75 (p. 69). Al-Suyuti, and conceivably also al-Maqqari, seems to have derived the material from an earlier anthology of Andalusian verse, the Kitāb al-Maghrib by Ibn Sa'id al-Maghribi;María Ángeles Gallego, 'Approaches to the Study of Muslim and Jewish Women in Medieval Iberian Peninsula: The Poetess Qasmuna Bat Isma`il', MEAH, sección Hebreo, 48 (1999), 63-75 (pp. 69-70).
Based on Kavi's reading and the space occupied by the hole, some scholars have theorized that the author was "Vijjakayā", identifying her with the poetess Vijja, who in turn, is sometimes identified with Vijaya, the daughter-in-law of the 7th century Chalukya king Pulakeshin II. However, Warder notes that the word could have been another name, such as "Morikayā". Alternatively, the broken word may not be a name at all: it is possible that the sentence containing it states that "the play was composed with a sub-plot patākayā". An analysis of the play's style and language indicates that it was definitely not authored by the poetess Vijja: the play resembles the works of earlier authors such as Bhasa (3rd or 4th century). It may have been composed somewhat later by an imitative writer, but it is highly unlikely to have been composed in as late as the 9th (or even the 6th) century.
In his old age, he proposed marriage to the poetess Al-Khansa. According to the Kitab al-Aghani, she sent a slave woman to watch him urinate, saying "If his urine cuts into the ground, he has got something left in him; but if his urine trickles over the surface, there's no zip in him." The slave woman observed only a weak stream of urine, so Al-Khansa refused his offer of marriage.
Sumitra Peries (born 24 March 1934) is the first Sri Lankan female filmmaker and is known by all as the "Poetess of Sinhala Cinema". She also held the post of Sri Lanka's ambassador to France, Spain and the United Nations in the late 1990s. Of her films the more popular ones are Gehenu Lamai, Ganga Addara and Yahaluvo. She was married to the most prolific Sri Lankan film director Dr. Lester James Peries.
During the years 1926-1929 Hazaz's partner was the poetess Yocheved Bat-Miriam, with whom he made his first acquaintance already back in Russia, a few years earlier. Their only son, Nahum, was born in Paris in 1928. They separated in 1929, when Bat-Miriam left France and emigrated to British Mandate of Palestine. In 1930 Hazaz published his first book, the novel In a Forest Settlement ("ביישוב של יער") in two volumes.
A young Fanny Crosby Crosby's earliest published poem was sent without her knowledge to P. T. Barnum, who published it in his The Herald of Freedom.Crosby (1906), pp. 31–32. She was examined by George Combe, a visiting Scottish phrenologist, who pronounced her a "born poetess". She had experienced some temporary opposition to her poetry by the faculty of the Blind Institution, but her inclination to write was encouraged by this experience.
Davout family grave at Père-Lachaise Cemetery The marquise in 1882. during the performance of Édouard Pailleron's comedy Le Monde où l'on s'ennuie at the Théâtre-Français in 1881. All Paris was astonished at the Marquise's similarity with the actress Madeleine Brohan, who played the role of an old duchess with spiritual distributions. Adélaïde-Louise d'Eckmühl de Blocqueville (8 July 1815 – 6 October 1892), was a French woman of letters and a poetess.
Engraving of Garafilia Mohalbi (1831)Around 1830, Edward Gallaudet engraved Ann Halls miniature portrait of Garafilia Mohalbi. Gimber, 1831, Table of Contents The engraving became extremely popular throughout the United States and became Ann Halls most popular work. Notable poetess Hannah Flagg Gould wrote a poem about Gallaudet's engraving."Hannah Flagg Gould" The Golden Vase A Gift for the Young Boston: Benjamin B. Mussey Wm A. Hall & Co Printers, 12 Water Street: p.
Gerberga, 1501 woodcut by Albrecht Dürer Born in Gandersheim to Saxon nobles Hrotsvitha (c. 935 – 1001) was a German secular canoness, who wrote dramas and poems during the rule of the Ottonian dynasty. Hrotsvitha lived at Gandersheim Abbey. She is considered the first female writer from the German Lands, the first female historian, the first person since antiquity to write dramas in the Latin West, and the first female poetess in Germany.
She sings folk, light and classical music at All India Radio, Doordarshan and Sri Lanka Radio. She is also a poetess and writes lyrics in Awadhi, Bhojpuri and Hindi. She published her book Geet Vatika on 8 January 2010 and has received awards and citations from Sangeet Natak Acadmy, UP, Uttar Pradesh Sansthan and more. She was awarded the highest Award of the Government of Uttar Pradesh, Yash Bharati, in March 2016.
When she returned to Venezuela two years later she composed 16 pieces of musical theatre, a collaboration with poetess Olga Capriles, and the musician and composer Juan Vicente Lecuna. In 1918 she married the German Federico Wolf and they moved to Puerto Cabello. They had three children, Waldemar, Irma, and Ivan Wolf González, but divorced afterward. She went on to marry the violinist and composer José Antonio Escobar Saluzzo (1877-1970) in Caracas.
Hlaing Hteik Khaung Tin (; 1833 – 1875), commonly known as Hlaing Princess, was crown princess of Burma during the late Konbaung dynasty. She is also noted as a poetess and musician as well as one of the most beautiful women at the Mandalay royal court. Being a great talented lady, she left her name in history with a kind of still popular classical song Bawle. She wrote famous court dramas such as Vijayakārī and Indavaṃsa.
Since that time, she was well-known as Hlaing Princess. At the Rajabiseka Muddha Consecration of her father, in 1840, the King conferred the title of Thiri Thu Myatswar Ratana Devi on her, together with the conferring the title of Thiri Thuta Ratana Sandar Devi on her mother. Her mother, Anauk Nanmadaw Ma Mya Lay, was a famous poetess during the reign of King Tharrawaddy Min. Hlaing Princess is said to inherit her mother's intelligence.
Popati Hiranandani (17 September 1924 - 16 December 2005) was a prominent Sindhi language writer who authored more than sixty books during her life. She was an essayist, fiction writer, poetess, educationist, feminist and social activist. She made significant contributions to Sindhi language literature before and after the partition of India. She won several awards including the Sahitya Akademi Award (1982), Woman of the Year Award and the Gaurav Puraskar (1990) among others.
The film describes a dispute between poetess Else Lasker-Schüler and her publishers. The film takes place in Berlin before, during and after World War I it deals with the rights of the author quoting from Karl Marx: "A writer is judged as productive, not on the amount of ideas he produces, but on the amount of money his publisher is able to profit from his works."Karl Marx: Theorien über den Mehrwert, Hrsg. Karl Kautsky, 1.
On Smuttynose Island, a cottage built in the 1950s by Rozamond Thaxter, Great-granddaughter of the poetess Celia Thaxter, is open 24/7/365 to 'mariners in distress of weather'. It contains a barrel of provisions for survivors of shipwrecks. In 1995, Dr. Warren Riess, University of Maine, mounted an expedition to retrieve possible artifacts from the Nottingham Galley. He and his team were successful in the effort, and items recovered can be viewed at the Maine State Museum.
She is an author seven poetic and short-short stories collections, edited by Miho Mosulishvili. Her poems have been translated into English language by Manana Matiashvili.Who will play with me Mariam Khutsurauli is the poetess who writes remarkable verses in a dialect of Pshavi, which is a small historic region of northern Georgia. Songs by Teona Kumsiashvili Rosa canina and On motive of Pshavi which have been written on Mariam Khutsurauli's verses became hits on social networks.
Head of the poetess Sappho, Smyrna, Marble copy of a prototype belonging to the Hellenistic Period, in Istanbul Archaeology Museums Map of Smyrna and other cities within the Lydian Empire. When the Mermnad kings raised the Lydian power and aggressiveness, Smyrna was one of the first points of attack. Gyges (ca. 687–652 BC) was, however, defeated on the banks of the Hermus, the situation of the battlefield showing that the power of Smyrna extended far to the east.
A Kashmiri poetess Lal Ded was his contemporary and had a great impact on his spiritual growth.Jaishree Odin, Lalla to Nuruddin: Rishi-Sufi Poetry of Kashmir. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (2013) Some scholars argue that he was her disciple, and associate his poetry with the Bhakti movement, although others disagree. Noor-ud-Din witnessed several transmissions of Hinduism and Islam in the valley throughout his life, although he was actively involved in philosophical work and in writing Kashmiri poems.
Others reference her as Elizabeth Burke, referred to by Turtle Bunbury as a "celebrated poetess", Sir Thomas Blake and Elizabeth Burke in "The Blakes of Menlo Castle", Turtle Bunbury, 2005-2014. who later married Sir Thomas Blake, 7th Baronet of Menlo, son of Sir Walter Blake, 6th Baronet of Menlo and Anne Kirwan. They had at least a daughter, Anne, and a son, Sir Ulick Blake, 8th Baronet of Menlo.A History of Burke in Ireland, Jim Burke, p.
Ruth began writing poetry at an early age and as a teenager had aspirations to become an "authoress or poetess" . She also studied the piano beginning at age six. In 1913, she began piano lessons with Bertha Foster, who had founded the School of Musical Art in Jacksonville in 1908. In 1917, Ruth began to study with Madame Valborg Collett, who was a student of Agathe Grøndahl and the most prestigious teacher at Foster's School of Musical Art .
Salvà's poetry is linked to a contemplation of the nature of her native landscape. Overcoming Franco's Catalan censorship, the publishing house began to print her complete works in 1948. Salvà became a reference for the new generations who visited Llucmajor in the 1940s and '50s. In addition to Josep Carner, who considered her an extraordinary poetess and fought to share her work, her most intimate personal and literary interlocutor was "in whom she had full, unlimited confidence".
Education, in the strict sense of the word, she had very little. Except for a lower Gymnasium education, she was mostly self-taught, and yet she was greatly appreciated in her lifetime by poets and writers much more soundly academic than herself, such as Petar II Petrović Njegoš, Branko Radičević, Ivan Mažuranić, and Ljubomir Nenadović. When Njegoš first met her in Vienna, he said: I'm a poet, she is a poetess. Were I not a bishop, Montenegro would now have a princess.
The set was composed just five months before Schumann's attempted suicide and confinement to a mental institution. The set is dedicated to "the high poetess" Bettina von Arnim. Schumann's wife, Clara Schumann, wrote in her private diary, "dawn-songs, very original as always but hard to understand, their tone is so very strange." The Swiss composer Heinz Holliger wrote a work for orchestra, choir and tape in 1987 under the same title, ', which quoted Schumann and the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin.
On May 16, 1889 the Times again wrote that The Bard had still not raced and later reports show him standing at stud at his owner's Pennsylvania breeding farm. The mainstay of Alexander Cassat's horse breeding operation, and after his death in 1906, for his son Edward, The Bard sired a number of successful runners including Gold Heels, the 1902 American Champion Older Male Horse, and the filly, Poetess, winner of the 1897 Alabama Stakes. The Bard died in 1907.
Im penned the following sijo upon the death of famed gisaeng, Hwang Jini. The following two poems were exchanged between Im Che and his lover, gisaeng Hanu (한우; 寒雨). Im was known for his liaisons with Hanu and Hwang Jin Yi. The term in line 3, ch’an bi (찬비), literally translates as “freezing rain.” It uses the same Chinese characters as the poetess’ name (寒雨), but with a different pronunciation, and was intended by both poets as a pun.
Eliza A. Pittsinger (March 18, 1837 - February 22, 1908), known as "The California Poetess", was an American poet. She was born in Massachusetts and came to California from her home in Chesterfield in 1852, making the voyage around the horn. At the outbreak of the American Civil War, she devoted her whole energies for a time toward molding the public sentiment for The Union. After a visit home to Massachusetts, she was married, but her life proving unhappy, she was soon divorced.
404 By that time her reputation as a poet was already established; Betje Wolff called her "the greatest poetess of our country".Meijer Drees, p. 572 (quote from a letter of Wolff's to Van Merken, 2 Januari 1777) She died in Leiden, but was buried in the Oude Kerk, Amsterdam, where her husband was later buried as well. A plaque for the couple was placed in the Oude Kerk in 1828 by a Leiden society, to the right of the organ.
87 and also helped Chandra Kumar get a job at the zamindari of Gouripur. Chandra Kumar's work as gomastha, on a monthly salary of eight rupees, included visits to different villages to collect taxes. It was on these visits that he had occasion to hear kavigan and pala gan, which he started writing down. Meanwhile, Dinesh Chandra Sen came across Chandra Kumar's essay, 'Mahila Kavi Chandravati' ('Chandravati, the Poetess') in the Falgun 1320 BS (1913 AD) issue of the Saurabh.
Davidson died at Plattsburgh on August 27, 1825, at the age of 16 years and 11 months of tuberculosis, then known as consumption, although it has been speculated that her condition may have been linked to anorexia nervosa.Vincent, Patrick H. Lucretia Davidson in Europe: Female Elegy, Literary Transmission and the Figure of the Romantic Poetess. Section 6. Davidson wrote prolifically in her short life, and her surviving poems, of various lengths, number 278, among these being five pieces of several cantos each.
Sunshine Crossed Moonlight and Me, Amir Kabir Publications-Iran, 2009 9\. What Is The Taste Of Secret ?, Cultural- Scientific Publications-Iran, 2009 10\. Shy Guest , Cultural-Scientific Publications-Iran, 2009 11\. Only Daddy Can Wake me Up, Iranian Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults, 2009 12\. Every Year Before The First Bell, Beh Nashr Publications-Iran, 2010 13\. Let's Paint The Sky, Madreseh Publications-Iran, 2010 14\. Madam Poetess And Mr. Beethoven, Beh Nashr Publications-Iran, 2011 15\.
Writers and poets from the entire country were called to write screenplays for partisan films. Arsen Diklić penned March on the Drina and Destination Death in 1964 while Antonije Isaković wrote Partisan Stories (1960). Velimir Bata Živojinović rose to fame as one of the most recognizable faces of partisan films. In the sixties he played in Brat doktora Homera (1968) and Bloody Tale (1969), film based on the song of the same title by the celebrated Yugoslav poetess Desanka Maksimović.
He died in 1056 of natural causes. It has often been speculated that Samuel was the father or otherwise an ancestor of Qasmūna, the only attested female Arabic-language medieval Jewish poet, but the foundations for these claims are shaky.María Ángeles Gallego, 'Approaches to the Study of Muslim and Jewish Women in Medieval Iberian Peninsula: The Poetess Qasmuna Bat Isma`il', MEAH, sección Hebreo, 48 (1999), 63-75 (pp. 70-72). Kfar HaNagid, a moshav in modern Israel, was named after him.
At Gavelby's Auction House, Homer and Mr. Burns lose to tech mogul Megan Matheson at bidding for Joan Miró's painting The Poetess, with which Homer is obsessed, to the point of attempting to steal the painting at the end of the auction. Once the painting arrives at her home, Megan finds out that it has been stolen. Detective Manacek is called to solve the case. Manacek goes to Megan's due to insuring the painting for double the price she paid of $30 million.
There is an evidence by Korney Chukovsky who at the first half of 1960s had told to Margarita Aliger that he had received a letter from Moravskaya several years before. By his words, in Chile Maria Moravskaya had married local postman. confirms this too; at "The list of names" published in his book named "Acumiana. Встречи с Анной Ахматовой" 1889 – 1958 stated as years of life of Moravskaya, who was "a poetess and member of the first Guild of poets".
Her treatment of the subject is markedly in stark contrast to the anti-war stance of soldier poets such as Owen and Siegfried Sassoon. Many of these men found her work distasteful, Owen in particular. His poem Dulce et Decorum Est was a direct response to her writing, originally dedicated "To Jessie Pope etc.". A later draft amended this as "To a certain Poetess", later being removed completely to turn the poem into a general reproach on anyone sympathetic to the war.
While many of her sources were widely recognised, at many points throughout her advice book she failed to reference who she is quoting or borrowing from. In many passages, she paraphrased ideas to suit her own needs, making other's work her own. Numerous sections of her essays contain poetry, and while some scholars call her a poetess, none of the verses were her own. While she combined many poems, and altered lines and stanzas, she always conserved the overall meaning of the work.
In April 2000, two army officers who disturbed an Indo-Pak mushaira at the JNU campus were beaten up by agitated students. The officers were angered by anti- war poems recited by two Pakistani poets and disrupted the . They were enraged at the recited lines of a poem by progressive Urdu poetess, Fahmida Riaz ("It turned out you were just like us") and interpreted the lines as a criticism of India. One of them started to shout anti-Pakistan slogans.
Dunara was built Russell, 1980, 76Woollahra Council say 1882-4 by distinguished physician, MLA and philanthropist, Sir Charles McKellar. The house was the birthplaceRussell, 1980, 67 and the childhood home of his daughter, Dorothea, the famous poetess. It is a good example of the spacious and well crafted residence of the period.AHC from nominator, modified Read, S., 11/2006 Dorothea Mackellar was born on 1 July 1885 at the family home, Dunara, built by the Mackellars on at Rose Bay/Point Piper.
And so after her death, Canfeda took control of the imperial harem. Canfeda along with mistress of financial affairs Raziye Hatun, the poetess Hubbi Hatun, and other musahibes (favourites) of Murad III, appears to have been very powerful and influential during the latter's reign. She managed to win the trust of her former adversary, and even to increase her influence on palace affairs under her protection. As a clever intrigue Canfeda used her proximity to the dynasty women to receive bribes and expensive gifts.
Gumilyov's war poems were assembled in the collection The Quiver (1916). Gumilyov's wife, the poetess Anna Akhmatova, began writing poems during World War I that expressed the collective suffering of the Russian people as men were called up and the women in their lives bade them goodbye. For Akhmatova, writing such poems turned into her life's work and she continued writing similar poems about the suffering of the Russian people during the Bolshevik Revolution, the Russian Civil War, the Red Terror, and Joseph Stalin's Great Purge.
Moti Laxmi Upasika (1909–1997) was the first poetess and short story writer in the modern period. Satya Mohan Joshi (born 1920) is a poet, historian and cultural expert. The epic Jaya Prakash (published in 1955) about the last Malla king of Kathmandu, and Aranikoya Swet Chaitya (published in 1984) about the Nepalese artist Araniko who went to China in the 13th century, are two of his many notable works. Ramapati Raj Sharma (born 1931) is a poet whose works draw inspiration from nature.
Sometimes, this is not the case: (, actress), (, poetess; e.g. Anna Akhmatova insisted on being called (, masculine) instead). Even in cases where the feminine term is not seen as derogatory, however, there is a growing tendency to use masculine terms in more formal contexts that stress the individual's membership in a profession: (, "At age 15 she became a piano teacher/m", formal register). The feminine form may be used in less formal context to stress a personal description of the individual: (, "Nastia became a teacher/f", informal register).
Boys was born in 1873 in Litchfield, Minnesota, the daughter of Isaac Hancock Riddick and Alice Esther Wood Riddick. Her mother died shortly after Florence's birth; her father, a Methodist minister, remarried in 1876. Her brother Carl W. Riddick served one term in the United States Senate, representing Montana, and his son was politician and aviator Merrill K. Riddick. In 1896 Florence Riddick graduated from her parents' alma mater, Albion College in Michigan, where she was editor of the school newspaper and "class poetess".
According to later stories now generally accepted as only legend, Dante also kept up a correspondence with Nina of Sicily,She is only called Monna Nina by Dante, the "of Sicily" coming from Leo Allatius, Poeti antichi (Naples: 1661). the first Italian poetess, and with whom he fell in love. Their relationship became well-known and she grew in fame because of his writings so that she was called la Nina di Dante. She took up poetry, apparently, as a result of his influence.
In 1822 he was the founding editor of Ackermann's Forget-Me-Not which was an annual, a new type of publication in England.Contributions to annuals and gift-books, James Hogg, Janette Currie, Gillian Hughes, p.xiv, 2006, accessed June 2010 This was the first literary annual in EnglishA "Small" Genre Succeeds, Harris, Katherine D. "Forget-Me-Not: A Hypertextual Archive of Ackermann's 19th- Century Literary Annual", Sept 2007, Poetess Archive. General editor Laura Mandell, accessed June 2010 Shoberl continued to edit the annual until 1834.
She played in the film Glada hälsningar från Missångerträsk by Martina Haag, and she has also toured with Giron sámi teáhter. Märak presented an episode of Sveriges Radios show Sommar i P1 on 30 July 2015. In 2016, she played the role of Evelina Geatki, a poetess and Sami activist in the Swedish-French series Midnattssol (aka Midnight Sun and Jour Polaire). She featured in Eanan, a song by Canadian EDM/Hip-hop group A Tribe Called Red from their Album We Are the Halluci Nation.
In autumn of 1919 when the attack of the West Russian volunteer army began Virza lived in Riga and worked in the editorial staff of the military newspaper Latvijas Kareivis (Soldier of Latvia) together with his friend poet Viktors Eglītis and fellow writer Aleksandrs Grīns. During this period he met poetess Elza Stērste and the couple married after a year in autumn 1920. From 1921-1922 Virza worked as a director of Latvian press office in Paris. In 1922 their daughter Amarillis was born.
Gordon's moods alternated between enormous frustration and great hope for the future. He believed that an idealistic new generation of creative Jews would emerge in the Land of Israel, with a high sense of morals, a deep spiritual commitment, and a commitment to their fellow human beings. Toward the end of his life, however, he preferred to isolate himself in nature. From a letter he wrote to Rachel the Poetess, it seems that he grew more and more frustrated with people's petty squabbles and selfish interests.
The Patiṟṟuppattu poems were composed by several poets and a poetess, signifying the scholarly role accepted for women in ancient South India. The poems praise the rulers and heroes in the form of a hagiography, but the core seems to be based on real history. They mention the Hindu deities Shiva, Murugan and Korravai (Uma, Durga), and their worship by warriors and the king. The poems, the epilogues, and the colophons included in the manuscripts are also of significance to ancient culture and sociological studies.
Control tower Santiago–Rosalía de Castro Airport (, ) , previously named Lavacolla Airport and also known as Santiago de Compostela Airport, is an international airport serving the autonomous community and historical region of Galicia in Spain. It is the 2nd busiest airport in northern Spain after Bilbao Airport. It has been named after the Galician romanticist writer and poetess, Rosalía de Castro, since 12 March 2020. The airport is located in the parish of Lavacolla, 12 km from Santiago de Compostela and handled 2,903,427 passengers in 2019.
He was born in Jalandhar, India to noted writer in Punjabi, Mohinder Singh Sarna and Punjabi poetess and translator Surjit Sarna, and did his schooling from St. Joseph's Academy, Dehradun. Later he joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1980. He was the longest-serving spokesperson of the Indian Foreign Ministry (six years), under two prime ministers, three foreign ministers and four foreign secretaries, till the end of his term in September, 2008.Navtej Sarna, longest serving foreign ministry spokesman, ends tenure Monday Hindustan Times, 14 September 2008.
Cecília Benevides de Carvalho Meireles (7 November 1901 - 9 November 1964) was a Brazilian writer and educator, known principally as a poet. She is a canonical name of Brazilian Modernism, one of the great female poets in the Portuguese language, and is widely considered the best female poet from Brazil, though she combatted the word poetess because of gender discrimination. She traveled in the Americas in the 1940s, visiting the United States, Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay and Chile. In the summer of 1940 she gave lectures at the University of Texas, Austin.
After the four challenges are complete, the Poetess asks the active team their fourth and final jidi, before revealing which jidis were answered correctly. The four answers form a sequence, and the team must determine the next number in the sequence if they wish to skip a time- consuming part of the game later on. The sequences are usually complicated enough to be unsolvable without at least three of the jidi answers. They are not told whether the answer to the sequence is correct; they must tell it to the Forgemaster in the Forges Room.
In 2017, Saraya played the role of Rauda in Shaby Gabizon's film, Longing. Her performance in Dana Goldberg and Efrat Mishori's 2017 film, Death of a Poetess, won Saraya the Best Actress Award at the Jerusalem Film Festival. The film tracks two simultaneous timelines, following Yasmine (Saraya), a nurse from Jaffa, and the last day in the life of Lena Sadeh (Evgenia Dodina), a world-renowned brain researcher, whose paths cross tragically. Saraya improvised the scenes in which her character was under police interrogation, a performance for which she reaped high praise from reviewers.
William Radcliffe and Constance Radcliffe, A History of Kirk Maughold, Manx Museum and National Trust: Douglas, 1979, p. 326 – 327 After 25 years working in London, ill-health forced her into early retirement, whereupon she returned to live on the Isle of Man in October 1949.'Fenella Meets a Poetess' in Isle of Man Daily Times, 1 December 1959 (available through the Manx National Heritage's iMuseum) Faragher lived first in Ramsey but eventually moved to Maughold, finally coming to live near to the Dhoon Church in Glen Mona.
Little is known about Qasmūna's life. Both surviving sources say that her father was Jewish and that he taught her the art of verse. Whereas al-Maqqari simply calls him Ismāʿil al-Yahudi, however, al-Suyuti calls him Ismāʿil ibn Bagdāla al-Yahudi, and says Qasmūna lived in the twelfth century CE.María Ángeles Gallego, 'Approaches to the Study of Muslim and Jewish Women in Medieval Iberian Peninsula: The Poetess Qasmuna Bat Isma`il', MEAH, sección Hebreo, 48 (1999), 63-75 (p. 70). It has been speculated that Qasmūna's father was Samuel ibn Naghrillah (d. c.
Prior Hartmann of St. Blaise's Abbey in the Black Forest was elected abbot. He brought with him from St. Blaise's a number of chosen monks, among whom were Blessed Wirnto and Blessed Berthold, later abbots of Formbach and Garsten respectively. Under Hartmann (1094-1114) Göttweig became a famous seat of learning and strict monastic observance. He founded a monastic school, organized a library, and at the foot of the hill built a nunnery where it is believed that Ava, the earliest German language poetess known by name (d. 1127), lived as an anchorite.
Shange also looks at what it means to be a black woman poet when the world of poetry is dominated by white men. Particularly during this historical moment in the late 1970s, not long after the Black Arts Movement which was a very male-dominated and patriarchal movement, Shange's position as a black woman poet is groundbreaking. She challenges the idea that words and poetry belong to men, and points to how unfair it is that when a woman does something, an 'ess' is added to the title (as in poetess)..
Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago Inanna and Ebih, otherwise known as Goddess of the Fearsome Divine Powers, is a 184-line poem written in Sumerian by the Akkadian poetess Enheduanna. It describes An's granddaughter Inanna's confrontation with Mount Ebih, a mountain in the Zagros mountain range. An briefly appears in a scene from the poem in which Inanna petitions him to allow her to destroy Mount Ebih. An warns Inanna not to attack the mountain, but she ignores his warning and proceeds to attack and destroy Mount Ebih regardless.
She directed her first feature film with this company in 2014, the documentary Se dice poeta. In it, Castañón interviews 21 women born between 1974 and 1989 to discuss their relationship with poetry, criticism, and the dissemination of their work. Taking as a starting point the question about why the term poetess may be preferred if the definition of the word poet encompasses both men and women, this documentary looks at the role of gender in the current poetic panorama in Spain. In the media she has worked at , , and .
It is clear that Don Alvaro and the Count are rivals for the Marquise's affections. They are all waiting for the new horses which will be necessary for the continuation of the journey, but Madame Cortese, who now arrives, says that she cannot understand why they have not arrived. Alvaro and Libenskof quarrel, the ladies are alarmed, and the Baron and Don Profondo are amused by the idiocy of lovers. ("Non pavento alcun periglio") A harp prelude is heard, and the poetess Corinna sings offstage of brotherly love, to everyone's delight.
Rachel the poetess As a member of the editorial staff of Davar newspaper, Zalman Rubashov later Zalman Shazar, who became the third President of Israel, encouraged her to write and publish her poetry. The private life of a Zionist poet and pioneers goes online Her early work was in Russian but she switched to Hebrew. Most of her poems were written in the final six years of her life, usually on small notes to her friends. In 1920 her first poem, Mood, was published in the Hebrew newspaper Davar.
Dora Alencar Vasconcellos (1910–1973) Dora Alencar Vasconcellos (1910–1973) was a Brazilian poet and diplomat She served as the Brazilian ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago from 1970 to her death.Molly Ahye Golden heritage: the dance in Trinidad and Tobago -1978 Page 146 "THE late Senhora Dora Vasconcellos, Brazil's Ambassadress to Trinidad and Tobago between 1970 — 1973 when she passed away in Port of Spain. She was a famous poetess and she composed among her works Cancao De Amor, the ..." Her best-known poem is "Canção do Amor", set by Heitor Villa-Lobos.
Rivers is invited to live in Henry's home until he finds his own place, but the Maartens family soon develops a fondness for Rivers, and insists that he stay with them. Rivers develops respect and fondness for the family, regarding Henry as a genius and his wife Katy as a goddess. As his attraction towards Katy grows, Rivers is simultaneously victimized by her 15-year-old daughter Ruth. After being rejected by a 17-year-old football player and scholarship winner, Ruth tries to be a dramatic poetess.
During this time she got the opportunity to meet and interview Mr. E.M.S. Namboodiripad (the former chief minister of Kerela), Kushwant Singh (Columinist), Manmohini Sahgal (Freedom fighter) and Amrita Pritam (Poetess) for various dailies and magazines. Farhat received a Media Fellowship from Oxfam to work on Violence Against Women in Southeast Asia before the campaign started in Odisha in 2004. She worked as a campaign manager for We Can, Odisha. It was during this period when she realised the plight of Muslim and Dalit women who were doubly oppressed from within and outside the community.
A courtier described her as "moonfaced",A typical Persian expression meaning exceedingly beautiful "with hair like musk" whilst one of her fathers pupils wondered how a woman of her beauty could be so intelligent. Historian Nabíl-i-Aʻzam reports the "highest terms of [her] beauty", George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston, wrote, "beauty and the female sex also lent their consecration to the new creed and the heroism… the lovely but ill-fated poetess of Qazvín".George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston's Persia and the Persian Question, vol. 1, p.
She published a complete volume of poems in 1844 and a second volume in 1847. The provincial newspapers, especially the Belfast-based Northern Whig, reprinted many, and she became widely known as 'The Blind Poetess of Ulster'. In 1845 she made her first contribution to the popular magazine Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, for which she wrote for the next 25 years. The first story of hers published there, in March 1845, was "The Lost New Year's Gift", which tells of a poor dressmaker in London and exemplifies her story-telling abilities.
Originally performed Tuesday 20 September 1670 to open the season of the Duke's Company. It initiated Behn's career working for the Duke's Company under the leadership of Thomas Betterton, who also played the role of Alcippus. The prologue included the lines "The Poetess, too, they say / Has spies abroad," referring both to Behn's gender and her past as a spy. It was spoken by the character of Falatius, who wore an eye patch, a stage prop indicating the secretary of state Lord Arlington, who supposedly abandoned her on her intelligence mission in Antwerp.
Upon her move to California, Alba joined Apprentice Alliance, as Master teacher/artist in the San Francisco-based organization training apprentices for more than three decades. Alba frequently donated workshops on photographing artworks for art groups. Alba has sponsored poetry readings and musical events at her art exhibitions in museum and gallery solo shows. A decades-long collaboration between poetess Cynthia Harris and Alba included presentations together at Cody's Books in Berkeley, Jack London Square's Barnes & Noble Bookstore in Oakland, CA, as well as Alba's museum solo in Minnesota's North County Museum of Arts.
He writes that > In this story we find, in addition to several subordinate motifs, the three > elements that constitute a detective novel: first, the murder, actually, a > series of murders, takes place at the beginning and is resolved at the end; > second, there is the innocent suspect and the unsuspected guilty party; and > third, the detection, not by the police but by an outsider, an elderly > poetess. Although, on first reading Alwyn's thesis seems plausible, convincingly argues that it is weak. If Madmoiselle de Scudéri is a detective, she is an inept one. Her attempts at solving the mystery by deduction fail.
Nikolai Tolstoy comments that > As with so many Russian children at that time, little Alexei picked up his > earliest education at home. There were lessons with his not over-strict > tutor, his mother taught him to read and write, and his step-father read > aloud to them in the evenings from the writings of Leo Tolstoy and Ivan > Turgenev (to both of whom Alexei was related through his parents). His > attention was perfunctory, and in his earliest years it was his imagination > and dreams which absorbed his energy. His mother was an amateur writer and > poetess of modest abilities but infectious enthusiasm.
Portrait of Walther von der Vogelweide, the most celebrated of all medieval German lyric poets, from the Codex Manesse The most impressive example of Early Middle High German lyric poetry is the Annolied or Song of Anno. Towards the beginning of the twelfth century A.D., the poetess Ava became the first woman to write poetry in German. During the Middle High German period, Minnesänge, songs about courtly love, were very popular. The most notable of all the Minnesänger was Walther von der Vogelweide, whose most famous Minnesang is the poem "Unter der Linden", but there were also many others.
Some of these are almost entirely obsolete now, such as sculptress, poetess, and aviatrix. If gender is relevant, the words woman or female should be used instead of "lady" ("my grandmother was the first female doctor in the province"), except if the masculine is "lord" (as in "landlady"). In the case of landlord or landlady, it may be preferable to find an equivalent title with the same meaning, such as proprietor or lessor. However, when a female is in the office of "the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod," it is changed to "the Lady Usher of the Black Rod" in Canada.
In 1988, Schilling entered the Literary Workshop of the poetess Alejandra de Groote, meeting place of the main writers and poets of the region of Valparaíso in the 1980s. In September 1989, Schilling became a columnist in the newspaper El Mercurio de Valparaíso in the Arts and Culture section, analyzing the narrative scene of the time. In 1991, he joined the team of reviewers in the book section of El Mercurio, where he published work continuously until 2002. He also collaborated for the magazine Ercilla, as a columnist of the book section, under the pseudonym of Max Demian.
Ilocano literature developed in many ways. During the 18th century, the missionaries used religious as well as secular literatures among other means to advance their mission of converting the Ilokanos to Christianity. The century also saw the publication of religious works like Fr. Jacinto Rivera's Sumario de las Indulgencias de la Santa Correa in 1719 and the Pasion, a translation of St. Vincent Ferrer's sermons into Iloko by Fr. Antonio Mejia in 1845. The 19th century likewise saw the appearance of Leona Florentino, who has since been considered by some as the "National Poetess of the Philippines".
Jeremy Mark of Number One noted, "The World Still Turns", the album's first song co-written by Minogue, is "the only real attempt at a ballad on the album", although its pace is "not especially slow and smoochy". On the seventh track "Shocked", Minogue sings she is surprised to find herself deeply in love. It has a sophisticated dance sound with electric guitars and a disco beat. "One Boy Girl" blends rhythmic new jack swing with house elements, and includes strong dance beats and a rap conversation between Minogue and American rapper The Poetess, who was uncredited.
As early as 1908[Letter 1908, Nov. 23d, St. Joseph, Missouri [to] Editors, Scribners Magazine [manuscript], (An inquiry about the return of the manuscript The Bab.) Constance Faunt Le Roy Runcie attempted to publish a romance novel about the Bab and "Persia's celebrated poetess Zerryn Taj", a handwritten text by Constance Fauntleroy Runcie, circa < 1908. while living in Missouri, USA. The Indianapolis Star, Indianapolis, Indiana, 28 September 1913, printed a story "Number Thirteen by the Master of Mysteries" on pages 64 and 67 of which discusses a note that seemed to indicate the involvement of a Baha'i woman in a situation.
Degania Alef website: History That is at the place where the Jordan River emerges from the Sea of Galilee and therefore had the Arabic name Bab al-Tumm, "Gate of the Mouth".Henry Stewardson, The Survey of Western Palestine: A General Index..., An Index of the Arabic and English Name Lists, p. 82. Palestine Exploration Fund, 1888 :Prominent early members The poetess Rachel Bluwstein, the "prophet of labor" A. D. Gordon, and paramilitary commander and leading Zionist Joseph Trumpeldor all worked at Degania Alef. Zionist pioneer and future Israeli politician Yosef Baratz was among the founders of Degania Alef.
Nazo Ana became a learned poetess and courteous person; people knew her by her loving and caring nature. Nazo's father had paid close attention to her education and upbringing, inducing learned men in Kandahar to educate her fully. She came to be regarded as the "Mother of the Afghan Nation", gaining respect through her poetry and her strong support for the Pashtunwali code. Nazo called for Pashtunwali to be made the law of the confederacy of Pashtun tribes, and she arbitrated conflicts between the Ghilji and Sadozai tribes so as to encourage their alliance against the foreign Persian Safavid rulers.
After her death, in 1667 an authorised edition of her poetry was printed entitled Poems by the Most Deservedly Admired Mrs. Katherine Philips, the Matchless Orinda. The edition included her translations of Pompée and Horace. Edward Phillips, nephew of John Milton, placed Katherine Philips high above Aphra Behn, writing in Theatrum poetarum (1675), a list of the chief poets of all ages and countries, that she was "the most applauded...Poetess of our Nation". The literary atmosphere of her circle is preserved in the excellent Letters of Orinda to Poliarchus, published by Bernard Lintot in 1705 and 1709.
Song dynasty widows who returned to their original family enjoyed the protection of the laws on property rights, which made their remarriage easier. The neo-Confucians challenged such laws, arguing that these widows should stay with their husbands' families to support them. While it was normal for widows to remarry in the early Song period, remarriage became a social stigma in later eras due to the influence of Confucians; this led to hardship and loneliness for many widows. The Song poetess Li Qingzhao, after her first husband Zhao Mingcheng died, remarried briefly when she was aged 49, for which she was strongly criticised.
Magali Herrera was born in 1914 in Rivera, Uruguay to a notable local family. She was an autodidact who worked in a variety of media prior to creating the visual works for which she is known. She was a precocious writer of poems and stories, which were never published, and also wrote for several daily papers, working as a journalist. She enjoyed organizing poetry evenings and befriended well known Uruguayan poetess Juana de Ibarbourou She began painting intermittently in the early 1950s but it wasn't until 1965, after a period of severe depression, that she began to paint regularly.
The All India Mahila Empowerment Party was launched at The Lalit in New Delhi on 12 November 2017 in the presence of important personalities from different fields, including cricketer Mohammed Azharuddin, tennis player Sania Mirza, film stars Sunil Shetty, Bobby Deol, Aftab Shivdaasani, Zeenat Aman, Poonam Dhillon, choreographer Farah Khan, and Urdu poetess Lata Haya. The prime agenda of the party, as stated, is empowering women, irrespective of caste, creed and region. In its launching ceremony itself, the party has taken up the issue of women's representation in the Indian parliament, demanding the implementation of the Women’s Reservation Bill.
Babette Glück remained in Galicia as a governess to a family of Polish aristocrats. As time went on she felt demeaned and missed the freedom she had before becoming a governess. Her earliest poems date from her stay in Galicia, describing how poetry restored her hope and gave her courage to go on living. During the 1830s she focused her poems on social issues; in ["To the Men of Our Time"], the 17-year-old offers a rebuttal to critics of women's emancipation, while ["The Poetess"] told of her predicament in being deprived of a literary ancestry.
Kaputikyan on a 2019 stamp of Armenia A bust of Kaputikyan Kaputikyan is among the most notable Armenian women in history. She became a classic of Armenian literature during her lifetime and her poems have been included in school literature programs. Kaputikyan is often referred to in Armenian circles as Ամենայն հայոց բանաստեղծուհի, which literally translates to "Poetess of All Armenians" and imitates the "Poet of All Armenians" title given to Hovhannes Tumanyan, which itself derives from the Catholicos of All Armenians, the head of the Armenian Church. She was "one of the best-known and widely quoted Soviet Armenian poets".
After her death, he added, "Miss Crawford's work was, in fact, seen to be phenomenal." In a review of Songs of the Great Dominion in the September 28, 1889, Athenæum, Theodore Watts-Dunton singled out Pauline Johnson for special praise, calling her “the most interesting English poetess now living” and quoting her poem "In the Shadows" in full. Johnson (who had not yet published a book) considered this to be a big boost for her career, and felt herself "indebted" for the inclusion and the review.John Coldwell Adams, "Pauline Johnson," Confederation Voices, Canadian Poetry, UWO, Web, Apr.
" "The album title itself indicates that literature plays a relevant role in the band's imagery, and idea confirmed by the album's CD and vinyl leaflets. South-American authors such as Cortázar, Borges and Bolaño seem those most relevant to the band, but Kafka, Rimbaud or Valle-Inclán can also be traced easily, surely forming part of the band members' personal libraries. Films, architecture and graphic design are other sources for their influences." In fact, the album cover is "the visual poem Sion by Cesárea Tinajero, the poetess the main characters in Bolaño's The Savage Detectives look for throughout the whole novel.
She was considered to have the talent required for the international scene, but she chose to stay in Sweden. Her opera roles in the 1950s to 1970s included the blind poetess in Karl-Birger Blomdahl's Aniara,Blomdahl, Karl-Birger (1959). Aniara : en revy om människan i tid och rum : opera i 2 akter (7 scenbilder) efter Harry Martinsons versepos "Aniara". London: Schott & Co. Libris 1261304 Anne Trulove in Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress, the title role in Verdi's La traviata, Therese in Lars Johan Werle's Drömmen om Thérèse, and the Queen Mother in Georg Joseph Vogler's Gustaf Adolf och Ebba Brahe.
In October 1986, Library moved into new premises, the building of the former Serbian Crown Hotel located at 56 Knez Mihailova Street, where it is still situated. Desanka Maksimović, a famous Serbian poetess, opened the new building of Belgrade City Library at an official ceremony. The Belgrade City Library was the first public lending library in which cataloguing was computerized in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Following a referendum held on January 9, 1989, employees of 12 out of 16 municipal libraries (joined by additional two afterwards) voted in favor of integration, turning Belgrade City Library into a single network of libraries.
Kamalinee is a supporter of non-profit organizations CHORD India and World Vision, which are both involved in rehabilitation, welfare and the education of children. She produces beauty tutorial videos along with her two younger sisters, Mrinalinee and Shohinee, for Mrinalinee's YouTube channel Mirror Mirror. In 2014, she launched Chinese-American poetess Wand Ping's anthology Ten Thousand Waves in Hyderabad, India at a poetry reading event. Kamalinee was also part of the poets panel at the Bengaluru poetry festival in August 2016 where she read a selection of her poems alongside award-winning poet Dr. Neal Hall.
He is the Head of the Department of History at NREC PG College (NAAC Grade 'A' & CPE, UGC) from 1988 till date. He is also the Convener of Board of Studies in History, CCS University from 22 Aug 2018 to 21 Aug 2020 and Coordinator of RDC in History, CCS University from 22 Aug 2018 to 21 Aug 2020. He is the Founder of All India Poetess Conference, the biggest ever association of elite women of India. He is the Editor-in-Chief of an international journal "Journal of Humanities & Social Sciences" () which is being published since 2007.
The following short poem of Shilabhattarika is considered as one of the greatest poems ever written in the Sanskrit tradition. Indian scholar Supriya Banik Pal believes that the poem expresses the speaker's anxiety to be reunited with her husband. According to American author Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson, the poetess, possibly a middle-aged woman, implies that the illicit, pre-marital love between her and her lover was richer than their love as a married couple. An interpretation by the 16-century philosopher Chaitanya suggests that the verse is a metaphor for a person's desire to be united with the "Supreme Lord - the Absolute".
Mullá Husayn became the Báb's first disciple. Within five months, seventeen other disciples of Kazim Rashti recognized the Báb as a Manifestation of God. Among them was a woman, Fátimih Zarrín Táj Barag͟háni, a poetess, who later received the name of Táhirih, the Pure. These 18 disciples later became known as the Letters of the Living (each soul containing one letter of the Spirit of God, which combine to form the Word) and given the task of spreading the new faith (understood as the return or continuation of the one Faith of Abraham) across Iran and Iraq.
She appeared in the Poets of Portsmouth (1864), and the Unitarian Hymns of the Spirit (1864), and others. Several of Kimball's poems were included in Robert Hall Baynes' The Illustrated Book of Sacred Poems. “The Poetess of the Church” as she was long called, Kimball's life was largely devoted to literature and to church work. She was one of that group of nineteenth-century poets of which Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was most prominent and which ministered so greatly to the American love of poetry and appreciation of it that the members of the group were in some sense literary pioneers.
Fragment of an Attic red-figure wedding vase ( 430-420 BC), showing women climbing ladders up to the roofs of their houses carrying "gardens of Adonis" The myth of Inanna and Dumuzid later became the basis for the Greek myth of Aphrodite and Adonis. The Greek name (Adōnis, ) is derived from the Canaanite word ʼadōn, meaning "lord". The earliest known Greek reference to Adonis comes from a fragment of a poem by the Lesbian poetess Sappho, dating to the seventh century BC, in which a chorus of young girls asks Aphrodite what they can do to mourn Adonis's death. Aphrodite replies that they must beat their breasts and tear their tunics.
Upon Raziye's suggestion Murad also attached to him as one of his devotees. When Murad ascended the throne in 1574, he appointed Raziye Hatun in charges of kalfa, and of the financial affairs (vekilharc) of the imperial harem. She, Canfeda Hatun, Kethüde (mistress housekeeper) of the Harem of Murad III, and the poetess Hubbi Hatun appear to have been very powerful and influential during his reign. For a certain period Raziye was also protected by the mother of one of Sultan Mehmed III's sons, Prince Selim (died 1597); she had presented the young woman to the sultan and for this reason the prince’s mother treated Raziye as her own parent.
Prominent journalist, poet and literary critic for The Observer newspaper, Al Alvarez, called the posthumous re-release of the book, after the success of Ariel, a "major literary event" and wrote of Plath's work: > "She steers clear of feminine charm, deliciousness, gentility, > supersensitivity and the act of being a poetess. She simply writes good > poetry. And she does so with a seriousness that demands only that she be > judged equally seriously... There is an admirable no-nonsense air about > this; the language is bare but vivid and precise, with a concentration that > implies a good deal of disturbance with proportionately little fuss."Plath, > Sylvia.
The Akkadian poetess Enheduanna, the priestess of Inanna and daughter of Sargon, is the earliest known poet whose name has been recorded. Old Babylonian law codes permitted a husband to divorce his wife under any circumstances, but doing so required him to return all of her property and sometimes pay her a fine. Most law codes forbade a woman to request her husband for a divorce and enforced the same penalties on a woman asking for divorce as on a woman caught in the act of adultery. Some Babylonian and Assyrian laws, however, afforded women the same right to divorce as men, requiring them to pay exactly the same fine.
Roscoe and his wife had seven sons and three daughters, including William Stanley Roscoe (1782-1843), a poet, Thomas Roscoe (1791-1871), translator from Italian, and Henry (1800-1836), a legal writer who wrote his father's biography. Henry's wife, Maria Roscoe, née Fletcher (1798-1885), wrote a biography of Vittoria Colonna, and their son Henry Enfield Roscoe (1833-1915) was a chemist and vice-chancellor of the University of London. Daughter Mary Anne was known as a poet by her married name Mary Anne Jevons, and was the mother of William Stanley Jevons.Dictionary of National Biography, Jevons, Mary Anne (1795–1845), poetess, by C. W. Sutton.
Despite Johnson's preference for an unmarked grave, the Women's Canadian Club sought a monument for her and in 1922, a cairn was erected at her burial site with the inscription stating, in part, "In memory of one whose life and writings were an uplift and a blessing to our nation". During World War One, part of the royalties from Legends of Vancouver went to purchase a machine gun inscribed "Tekahionwake" for the 29th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Johnson left a mark on Canadian history that still carries on long after her death. The Vancouver Province headline on the day of her funeral stated "Canada's poetess is laid to rest".
It was commissioned to celebrate the coronation of French King Charles X in Reims in 1825 and has been acclaimed as one of Rossini's finest compositions. A demanding work, it requires 14 soloists (three sopranos, one contralto, two tenors, four baritones, and four basses). At its premiere, it was sung by the greatest voices of the day. Since the opera was written for a specific occasion, with a plot about European aristocrats, officers – and one poetess – en route to join in the French coronation festivities that the opera itself was composed for, Rossini never intended it to have a life beyond a few performances in Paris.
Looking back in 2007 she commented: "in those days, one was still called a 'poetess' – so it meant a lot, as a young woman poet, to begin to try to change that". Christopher James, the 2008 winner, commented "if there is an unspoken Grand Slam circuit for poetry prizes, then the National Poetry Competition is definitely Wimbledon – it's the one everyone dreams of winning". Other prestigious names to have won the competition include Ruth Padel, Jo Shapcott, Sinéad Morrissey, Ian Duhig, Colette Bryce and the poet and novelist Helen Dunmore. The competition runs annually, opening in the spring and closing at the end of October.
On it, he sees Daniel Defoe with his ears chopped off, John Tutchin being whipped publicly through western England, two political journalists clubbed to death (on the same day), and himself being wrapped in a blanket and whipped by the schoolboys of Westminster (for having printed an unauthorised edition of the sermons of the school's master, thereby robbing the school's own printer). The next contest Dulness proposes is for the phantom poetess, Eliza (Eliza Haywood). She is compared to their Hera. Whereas Hera was "cow-eyed" in Iliad, and "of the herders," Haywood inverts these to become a The booksellers will urinate to see whose urinary stream is the highest.
Based on Kavi's reading and the space occupied by the hole, some scholars have theorized that the author was "Vijjakayā", identifying her with Vijja. However, Warder notes that the word could have been another name, such as "Morikayā". Alternatively, the broken word may not be a name at all: it is possible that the sentence containing it states that "the play was composed with a sub-plot patākayā". An analysis of the play's style and language indicates that it was definitely not authored by the poetess Vijja: the play resembles the works of earlier authors such as Bhasa, and is highly unlikely to have been composed after the 6th century.
The outpourings of a mighty sympathy dictated this poem; while the fragrant incense of a nation's gratitude breathes and burns through the inspiration of this woman's pen. And well may we be proud of and rejoice in her success; for, although classed among the Southern poets, 'this star-eyed, night-haired' queen of Southern song is a native of our own grand old Kentucky; and only a few years ago, sought a home beneath sunnier skies." Gathered Leaves (Dallas), another volume, appeared in 1888. When her Gathered Leaves appeared, many notices commending the poetic merit of the book appeared in various periodicals, speaking always of her as "our gifted Texas Poetess.
Stalin gave orders to find out who organized the standing ovation and launched a campaign of blacklisting and defamation against the poetess, in which she was called, "Half harlot, half nun." In the 1974 poem Prussian Nights, Soviet dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn, a former captain in the Red Army during World War II, graphically describes Soviet war crimes in East Prussia. The narrator, a Red Army officer, approves of his troops' looting and rapes against German civilians as revenge for German war crimes in the Soviet Union and he hopes to take part in the atrocities himself. The poem describes the gang-rape of a Polish woman whom the Red Army soldiers had mistaken for a German.
Mears was born December 21, 1872, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, daughter of John Hall Mears and Elizabeth Farnsworth Mears (pen names "Nellie Wildwood" and "Ianthe", called the first Wisconsin poetess ) and youngest sister to Louise and Mary Mears. Mears studied at the State Normal School in Oshkosh,Archival Artifacts: Albee Bust and art in New York City. In New York, she studied under Augustus Saint Gaudens for two years and worked as his assistantPetteys, Chris, ‘’Dictionary of Women Artists’’, G K Hill & Co., 1985, p. 486. before heading to Paris in 1895 to continue working with Denys Puech (sometimes Puesch), Alexandre Charpentier, and Frederick MacMonnies.Petteys, Chris, ‘’Dictionary of Women Artists’’, G K Hill & Co. publishers, 1985.
In 1946, Cottle took a position as an assistant lecturer in the department of English in the University of Bristol. In 1962, he became a senior lecturer, and in 1976 a reader in mediaeval studies. He taught courses on the Greek lyric, for Professor H. D. F. Kitto, F.B.A. (1897-1982), on pre-Norman Irish art and architecture, the Anglo-Saxons, Middle English, Names, and on the Bristol Romantics. Cottle was an expert on the writings of the "Accrington poetess", Janie Whittaker (1877-1933), and the Welsh Nonconformist minister, the Revd Henry Maurice (1634-1682), an Independent, who had formerly held the living of Church Stretton, and whose journal for the year of Indulgence, 1672, belonged to him.
The Vancouver Province headline on the day of her funeral in March 1913 simply stated, "Canada's poetess is laid to rest". During the following decade, an "elegiac quality often imbued references to Pauline Johnson". To Euro-Canadians, she was the last spokesperson for a people destined to disappear: "The time must come for us to go down, and when it comes may we have the strength to meet our fate with such fortitude and silent dignity as did the Red Man his." Johnson is capable of remarkably clear dissections of the racist habits of the time, a clarity that comes out of her standpoint as a privileged Mohawk educated in both Haudenosaunee society and white Anglo-Canadian culture.
Hugo, V., Les misérables, Volume 2, Penguin Books, 1 December 1980, . During his term as director of the Vienna State Opera, Gustav Mahler mounted a new production of Euryanthe in 1903. Despite amendments in the libretto by Mahler himself (who described von Chézy as a "poetess with a full heart and an empty head") and a few changes in the score there were only five performances. Mahler realised the weaknesses of the libretto and the absurdities of the plot; in particular, in the third act, the ludicrously implausible meeting of all the characters in the middle of a rocky waste, a scene which he always alluded to as 'the merry folk reunited'.
Parveen Shakir's poetry was well-received, and after her untimely death she is now considered one of the best and "most prominent" modern poets Urdu language has ever produced. Hailed as a "great poetess," her poetry has drawn comparisons to that of Iranian poet Forough Farrokhzad, and she is considered among the breed of writers "regarded as pioneers in defying tradition by expressing the 'female experience' in Urdu poetry." Her poems were unique in the sense that they exposed and even encouraged freedom of expression among women. She did not shy away from taboo themes; instead, she claimed them and used them to create provocative poems that challenge the dependency of women on men.
Al-Iṣfahānī confesses that he could not find any noteworthy poetess in the Umayyad period, because the people at that time were not impressed with the verses featuring tenderness and softness. Thus, he only records the ʿAbbāsid poetesses, with mention of the relevant fine verses or the pleasant tales, and arranges them in chronological order. There are 31 sections, addressing 32 poetesses, most of which are short and usually begin with al-Iṣfahānī’s summary of the subject. The Maqātil al-Ṭālibīyīn is a historical-biographical compilation concerning the descendants of Abū Ṭālib, who died under the following circumstances: being killed, poisoned to death in a treacherous way, on the run from the rulers’ persecution, or confined until death.
1917 drawing of Al-Khansāʾ by Kahlil Gibran Al- Khansāʾ was born and raised in Najd, Arabia, into a wealthy family of the tribe of Sulaym, and was the daughter of the head of the al-Sharid clan. According to both contemporary as well as later judgement, she was the most powerful poetess of her time. In pre-Islamic society, the role of a female poet, such as al-Khansā’, was to compose elegies for the tribesmen who fell in the battlefield. Her extraordinary fame rests mainly on her elegiac poetry composed for her two brothers, Sakhr and Mu‘āwiya, who were killed in tribal skirmishes of Banū Sulaym with Banū Murra and Banū Asad, predating Islam.
Other works Betham published in magazines anonymously, while also giving public Shakespeare readings in London. Her best-received poem was Lay of Marie (1816), based upon the story of Marie de France, the medieval poet, written in couplets, included a scholarly appendix, as recommended by Southey, who said she was "likely to be the best poetess of her age." However, Betham gave up her literary career and returned to the country after a series of aggravations, a breakdown of health, misfortunes, and family circumstances. For instance, advertisements to promote her book spelled her heroine's name Mario and misspelled her name, many printed books had become mildewed, and she was in financial distress as the result of the advertising and publication costs.
Other films in the festival included the Venice Film Festival Silver Lion Winner, Foxtrot, as well as The Waldheim Waltz, Death of a Poetess, Unsettling, The Prince and the Dybbuk and winner of FIPRESCI Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, Closeness. The Dorfman Best Film Award jury was headed up by film producer Michael Kuhn and also comprised Picturehouse Managing Director Clare Binns, actor Henry Goodman, talent agent Anita Land, journalist Andrew Pulver and film producer Michael Rose. The Award went to Three Identical Strangers, directed by Tim Wardle. The Best Debut Feature Award jury was headed up by TV producer Claudia Rosencrantz and also comprised film producer Chris Auty, actor Ben Caplan, director Paul Morrison, producer Dainne Nelmes and screenwriter Carol Russell.
The date of 1943 is again repeated in Tadeusz Kłak, "Poetka Ziemi Lubelskiej" (The Poetess of the Lublin Land), Kamena, vol. 32, No. 8 (318), 115 May 1965, p. 6. In what is perhaps the most reliable eyewitness report, that of the poet Hanna Mortkowicz-Olczakowa (19051968), at the moment of her death during the mass murder of patients at a hospital near All Saints' Church in Warsaw where she lay ill Arnsztajnowa had two books with her, Dante's Divine Comedy and her own collection of poetry published in 1932, Odloty ("Flying Away"), on the poetics of departure.Hanna Mortkowicz-Olczakowa (see Hanna Mortkowicz-Olczakowa), "Na pięterku" (Up the Little Flight of Stairs), Kamena (Lublin), vol. 27, No. 18 (208), 30 September 1960, p. 4\.
It was stated that she was imprisoned for being a poetess and a musician (both anathema to Aurangzeb's austere, more orthodox and fundamental way of life and thinking) and for being sympathetic to her brother Muhammad Akbar who was persona non–grata with the Emperor. The British had kept Bahadur Shah incarcerated at this the fort, after he was taken prisoner at Humayun tomb and later shifted to Rangoon, Burma. The Fort has been compared to the Tower of London in England where state prisoners were either tormented to death or faded away in the prison. Before India got Independence from the British Rule, prisoners from the Indian National Army (INA) were also imprisoned in this fort from 1945 until India's independence in August 1947.
During the following years, Trajković was occasionally replaced by flutists Rade Ivanović and Dragan Miloradović. In the same year they won three awards at Festival Omladina, the band released their debut 7" single, with the songs "Još malo" and "Za tebe" ("For You"), for PGP-RTB record label, and started holding regular concerts every Saturday and Sunday in Niš Youth Centre. In 1973, on the Vaš šlager sezone (Your Schlager of the Season) festival, they won the Union of Composers of Yugoslavia Award for their song "Jefimija", written by Dženan Salković and inspired by the life of medieval Serbian poetess Jefimija. They released the song on a 7" single, with the song "Pruži ruke" ("Give Me Your Hands") as the B-side.
Throughout the poem, and particularly strong in the last stanza, there is a running commentary, a letter to Jessie Pope, a civilian propagandist of World War I, who encouraged—"with such high zest"—young men to join the battle, through her poetry, e.g. "Who's for the game?" The first draft of the poem, indeed, was dedicated to Pope. A later revision amended this to "a certain Poetess", though this did not make it into the final publication, either, as Owen apparently decided to address his poem to the larger audience of war supporters in general such as the women who handed out white feathers during the conflict to men whom they regarded as cowards for not being at the front.
Barve began her career by acting for Sudha Karmarkar's Little Theatre. She also had a short stint as announcer on All India Radio, Bombay and later as a news reader on Bombay Doordarshan (India's National broadcaster), and presenter of Saptahiki. While with Doordarshan, she also performed the role of Bahinabai Choudhary, the poetess-saint, in the critically acclaimed DD produced telefilm, Bahinabai. She shot to fame with her performance in plays like the Marathi drama Ajab Nyaya Vartulacha ('Strange Justice of the Circle') in 1973, C. T. Khanolkar's adaptation of Brecht's Caucasian Chalk Circle, Mohan Rakesh's Adhe-adhure, Tee Phul Rani (Flower Queen) (1975), P.L. Deshpande's noted adaptation of G. B. Shaw's Pygmalion and in Jay Lerner's My Fair Lady.
However, the Environmental clearance for the project was not granted. The Legislative Assembly Committee on Environmental Affairs chaired by C P Mohammed MLA found the Airport Project "highly detrimental to the environment" The Project met with opposition right from its initial stages from leaders of various streams of society including Poetess-cum-Environmentalist Sugathakumari and Politician V. M. Sudheeran, Hindu Ikya Vedi's Secretary Kummanam Rajasekharan. Allegations of discrepancies in awarding clearances through easy processes have been raised, adding to the project's controversies. The Kerala State Biodiversity Board submitted a report to the government in March 2013, expressing its reservations over "the land use changes and ecological imbalance that the project will entail" On 2 April 2013, National Green Tribunal Act granted an interim stay on the project banning any construction at the site.
The Purananuru (, literally "four hundred [poems] in the genre puram"), sometimes called Puram or Purappattu, is a classical Tamil poetic work and traditionally the last of the Eight Anthologies (Ettuthokai) in the Sangam literature. It is a collection of 400 heroic poems about kings, wars and public life, of which two are lost and a few have survived into the modern age in fragments. The collected poems were composed by 157 poets, of which 14 are anonymous and at least 10 were poetess. This anthology has been variously dated between 1st century BCE and 5th century CE, with Kamil Zvelebil – a Tamil literature scholar, dating predominantly all of the poems of Purananuru sometime between 2nd and 5th century CE. While few poems are dated to the period of 1st century BCE.
He was married to the poet Faltonia Betitia Proba, and they had two sons, Quintus Clodius Hermogenianus Olybrius (consul in 379) and Faltonius Probus Alypius. His wife converted to Christianity after 353, and later Celsinus probably converted too;Michele Renee Salzman, On Roman time: the codex-calendar of 354 and the rhythms of urban life in late antiquity University of California Press, 1990, , p. 229. he probably dedicated a column ad altare majus S. Anastasiae, near the main altar of the church of Sant'Anastasia,So suggests J.F. Matthews in "The Poetess Proba and Fourth-Century Rome: Question of Interpretation", in M. Christol, S. Demougin, Y. Duval, C. Lepelley, and L. Pietri, Institutions, société et vie politique dans l'empire romain au IVe siécle ap. J.-C., Colletiones de l'École française de Rome, 159 (1992), 277-304.
A native of San Angelo, Texas, Smith is Coordinator and Executive Editor of the Dickinson Electronic Archives projects at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (IATH) at the University of Virginia. With Lara Vetter, Smith is editor of Emily Dickinson’s Correspondence: A Born-Digital Textual Inquiry (2008) from the Mellon- sponsored Rotunda New Digital Scholarship, University of Virginia Press. With teams at the University of Illinois, University of Virginia, University of Nebraska, University of Alberta, and Northwestern University, Smith worked on two interrelated Mellon-sponsored data mining and visualization initiatives, NORA and MONK (Metadata Offer New Knowledge). Smith also serves on the editorial board and steering committee of NINES (Networked Interface for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship), and is on the advisory board of the Poetess Archive.
Apparently, while acting as a liaison between Stancu and the communists he found himself caught in between as the newspaper published articles condemning the Soviet invasion of Finland; reprimanded by Paraschivescu and Gulian, Stancu decided to make a clean break with these communists (although he would eventually build a very successful literary career under the communist regime), and sacked Păun. At about the same time, Banuș, who still had doubts about Marxism (although she would eventually become an official, albeit somewhat conflicted, poetess of the regime), recorded in her diary that she felt "ashamed" to confront Păun about everything that she herself did not have the courage and energy to do. George Neagoe, "În contratimp", in Cultura, Nr. 472, June 2014 By 1940, Păun had made his choice.
One of the verses from these anthologies compares Vijja to the goddess of learning, Sarasvati, and states that she had a dark complexion unlike the goddess. This verse also mentions the famous poet Daṇḍin (a native of southern India), calling him wrong for describing Sarasvati as "all-white". The verse may be considered as evidence supporting Vijja's connections to south India, where the Chalukyas ruled, but there is no concrete proof that she was same as the Chalukya royal Vijaya-Bhattarika. In fact, such an identification results in chronological improbabilities: the poetess whose works mention the 8th century poet Dandin could not have been the 7th century royal Vijaya-Bhattarika, unless she lived until the end of the century, and deigned to notice a verse by a much younger author.
The French poet Joachim du Bellay, who lived in Rome during this period, wrote in 1555: "Yet seeing a footman, a child, a beast,/ a rascal, a poltroon made a cardinal / for having taken care of a monkey well, / a Ganymede wearing the red hat on his head / ...these are miracles, my dear Morel, that take place in Rome alone."Joachim Du Bellay, Les Regrets, Sonnet CV (Paris, 1555), cited in Robert Aldrich, Garry Wotherspoon, eds, Who's who in gay and lesbian history: from antiquity to World War II (Routledge, 2002), page 278. Innocenzo's affair with his future sister-in-law, the noted poetess and favorite in the papal court, Ersilia Cortese, resulted in scandal. Julius considered demoting him from the cardinalate after having compromised the pope's credibility.
1951 marked the beginning of a five years work on Poetess, an eight-foot granite figure, for the Ellen Phillips Samuel Memorial, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. Working upstate during the summers, de Creeft utilized his forging skills to sharpen and re-temper over two hundred points (tools) daily in the forge he built at his farm. He was awarded a commission in 1957 for a hammered-copper sculpture, Theme, for the Jewish Community Center, in White Plains, New York. He was commissioned to do the bronze Alice in Wonderland sculpture group by George T. Delacorte Jr. as a memorial for his wife, Margarita in 1956. The 12’ x 16’ bronze work, near East 74th Street in Central Park, was dedicated by Parks Commissioner Robert Moses during a gala public event in 1959.
In one of Gordon's best known novels, A Fruit from the Tree of Life, a young Jewish farmer Shiye-Mikhl Royz, fights heroically in World War Two in a Cossack division. A recurring theme of the treatment of Cossacks by Jewish writers was presenting the Cossacks as a symbol of macho masculinity, strength, virility, and aggression, displaying the qualities that the stereotypical inhabitants of the shetls were felt to lack by the more modernizing Jewish writers who condemned the Orthodox Jews who lived in the shetls as backward and lacking in vigor. In the poem Buy Cigarettes! by the American poetess Malka Lee, a young Jewish female street seller of cigarettes is very sexually attracted to a handsome, virile Cossack as she imagines his "lion's eyes" undressing her as she pats his horse.
This verse also mentions the famous poet Daṇḍin (a native of southern India), calling him wrong for describing Sarasvati as "all-white" in his invocation to the goddess at the beginning of Kavyalakshana. Jalhana's Suktimuktavali contains a variation of this verse, beginning with "Not knowing her, Vijjākā, dark as petal..."; Jalhana attributes the verse to an anonymous poet. The verse may be considered as evidence supporting Vijja's connections to South India, but there is no concrete proof she was same as Pulakeshin's daughter-in-law Vijaya. In fact, such an identification results in chronological improbabilities: the poetess whose works mention the 8th century poet Dandin could not have been the 7th century royal Vijaya, unless she lived until the end of the century, and deigned to notice a verse by a much younger author.
The stories collected from Kashmiri women from varied backgrounds and the folklore collected from the Beejbehara were then woven into a performance titled "The Kashmir Project" which brings back Lal Ded the Sufi poetess from the 14th century to journey once again through Kashmir as the witness to the present day conflict and the symbol of possible healing. UCLA APPEX – Asia Pacific Performing Artists fellowship 2004 to participate in an artists collaborative workshop in Bali, Indonesia, for 2 months and collaborate with 15 other artists from the Asia-Pacific region. This workshop was a University of California, Dept of Performing Arts initiative to enable experiments with other performing artists and to start a dialogue between the artists within Asia and with American artists. The performing artists were from Malaysia, Indonesia, China, India, Philippines and the US.
The text is not particularly strong, but greater forces than artistic value (let alone reason) formed the inspiration: Bartók was madly in love with the poetess. > INTERMEZZO The genesis of Here down in the Valley > Starting in the summer of 1915, Bartók (by that time 34 years old) undertook > collection trips of Slovakian folk music in the country while staying in the > mansion of Gombossy, the chief forester of the comitatus Zólyom, near the > town of Kisgaram (now Hronec in central Slovakia). The forester had a > fourteen-year-old daughter, Klára, whom Denijs Dille later described as of > lively intelligence and openness of character and at fourteen coquettish, > strong-willed and mischievous. She went along on Bartók's trips and although > she played piano, we can assume that her stimulating support soon extended > beyond the musical level.
"Mary Oxlie of Morpet" is credited as the author of a commendatory poem of fifty-two lines, "To William Drummond of Hawthornden," which prefaced Edward Phillips' 1656 edition of his brother-in-law's poems. In 1675, in a section of his Theatrum poetarum called "Women among the moderns eminent for poetry," Phillips describes "Mary Morpeth" as a "Scotch Poetess" who wrote "many other things in Poetry" (259) apart from the dedication, though none of these other poems are now known and the 1656 ascription identifies her as Northumbrian. The original date of the poem is conjectural, though from internal evidence it would seem to have been 1616. There is a stronger indication that Oxlie, along with other women such as Anna Hume, was part of the Hawthornden literary circle: Phillips terms her "a friend of the Poet Drummond" (259).
Foxx's own talk-radio variety program The Jamie Foxx Show airs Friday evenings on The Foxxhole with guests including musicians, actors and fellow comedians; co-hosts have included Johnny Mack, Speedy, Claudia Jordan, The Poetess, Lewis Dix, Yvette Wilson, T.D.P and Tyrin Turner. On the April 17, 2009 episode of The Jamie Foxx Show, Foxx and his co-hosts made several sexually suggestive and disparaging jokes regarding the teenage singer Miley Cyrus. Several days later Foxx issued a public apology on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in response to growing public outcry and televised criticism by Cyrus's father, country singer Billy Ray Cyrus. On April 6, 2009, Foxx, a longtime fan of country music, performed the George Strait song "You Look So Good in Love" at the George Strait Artist of the Decade All-Star Concert.
The festival marks the adoption of presiding deity, Andal, by Periyazhwar after he found her near a Tulsi plant in the garden of Vatapatrasayi Temple at Srivilliputhur on the eighth day of the Tamil month of Aadi. In poetry, 9th-century Andal became a well known Bhakti movement poetess, states Pintchman, and historical records suggest that by 12th-century she was a major inspiration to Hindu women in south India and elsewhere.Tracy Pintchman (2007), Women's Lives, Women's Rituals in the Hindu Tradition, Oxford University Press, , pages 181–185 Andal continues to inspire hundreds of classical dancers in modern times choreographing and dancing Andal's songs.Tracy Pintchman (2007), Women's Lives, Women's Rituals in the Hindu Tradition, Oxford University Press, , pages 185–187 Andal is also called Goda, and her contributions to the arts have created Goda Mandali (circle of Andal) in the Vaishnava tradition.
Post-war critics have accorded Kolmar a very high place in literature. Jacob Picard, in his epilogue to Gertrud Kolmar: Das Lyrische Werk described her both as 'one of the most important woman poets' in the whole of German literature, and 'the greatest lyrical poetess of Jewish descent who has ever lived'. Michael Hamburger withheld judgement on the latter affirmation on the grounds he was not sufficiently competent to judge, but agreed with Picard's high estimation of her as a master poet in the German lyrical canon.Michael Hamburger, review of Gertrud Kolmar: Das Lyrische Werk, in Commentary, January 1957 Patrick Bridgwater, citing the great range of her imagery and verse forms, and the passionate integrity which runs through her work, likewise writes that she was 'one of the great poets of her time, and perhaps the greatest woman poet ever to have written in German'.
Reeve began writing children's books the day Jon died as an infant in 1985. She told the Philadelphia City Paper, "I was waiting for my family to come and meet me and I just sat there and started to write this little lullaby for Johnny." ‘’The Midnight Farm’’, Lindbergh’s first published children’s book, "will comfort any child afraid of the dark," said Eve Bunting in the Los Angeles Times Book Review. Lindbergh continued the animal theme in ‘’Benjamin's Barn’’ about a young boy who discovers jungle and prehistoric creatures, pirate ships, and a princess in a big, red barn. Lindbergh turned to an American folk hero in ‘’Johnny Appleseed: A Poem’’, retelling how John Chapman traveled from the East Coast to the Midwest, planting apple seeds for future generations. An accomplished poetess, Lindbergh uses rhyming couplets to describe how spring comes on in ‘’New England in North Country Spring’’.
The recurrence of this word to signal "Indian" rather than "Canadian" in her correspondence with the editor of the most noteworthy post-Confederation literary anthology marks her unique self-placement within the country's emergent national literature. Johnson's still tentative public identification with her Native roots received considerable encouragement from English critic Theodore Watts-Dunton. His review of Songs of the Great Dominion in the prestigious London journal The Athenaeum drew heavily on Lighthall's biographical notes to focus on Johnson as "the cultivated daughter of an Indian chief, who is, on account of her descent, the most interesting English poetess now living", and quoted the entire text of "In the Shadows". The imperial metropolis's fascination with the relatively exotic aspects of the former colony would contribute substantially to Johnson's later self-dramatization for her British audiences, for whom she downplayed her English mother in order to highlight her Mohawk father.
She wrote, in the preface to her Poems, that she wrote mainly in order to educate her children, but most commentators agree that she had a larger audience in view and was considerably engaged with intervening in wider social and political issues, as she did with "The Widow's Address" when she argued on behalf of the widow of an army officer. She is an example of the eighteenth-century phenomenon of the "untutored poet, or 'natural genius'": an artist of unprepossessing background who achieved the patronage of literary or aristocratic notables.Christopher Fanning, "The Voices of the Dependent Poet: the case of Mary Barber ," Women's Writing 8.1 (2001): 81. Swift named her as part of his "triumfeminate," along with poet and scholar Constantia Grierson and literary critic Elizabeth Sican, and maintained that she was a preeminent poet — "the best Poetess of both Kingdoms"Swift, 1733, The correspondence of Jonathan Swift, ed.
In addition to her work in the orchestra, she founded the Ensemble Wien with the composer Nader Mashayekhi in 2001. The ensemble's mission is to perform contemporary music in connection with other arts or contrasting music, opening the listener's ears in a new and different way to New Music. So there were for example concerts with contemporary Japanese composers, together with European composers who were influenced by Japanese art and traditional Japanese music; or Austrian contemporary music together with Johann Sebastian Bach's The Musical Offering, or even or a portrait of the Persian poetess Forugh Farochsad, with compositions by the Persian composer Nader Mashayekhi and recitation by the actress Hanna Schygulla, to name but a few of the projects. During this time, Mashayekhi-Beer intensified her engagement with contemporary music and its instrument-specific new techniques and profited from collaborations with composers such as Hans Zender, Toru Takemitsu, Peter Ablinger etc.
Caroline Champion de Crespigny was born Caroline Bathurst at Durham in 1797Sources differ for the birth and death dates of de Crespigny. There is a baptismal record in the register of Durham Cathedral dated 24 October 1797 whilst Probate records of 28 February 1862 record her death in Heidelberg on 26 December 1861, letters of administration having been granted to her son Albert Henry. into a political and literary family. At the time of her birth her father Rt Rev Dr Henry Bathurst (1744–1837) was prebendary canon at Durham Cathedral, later becoming Bishop of Norwich. Her uncle, Allen Bathurst, 1st Earl Bathurst (1684- 1775) was a Government minister and literary patron and friend of, amongst others, Laurence Sterne and William CongreveCaroline de Crespigny: Forgotten Romantic Poetess, Krysztof Fordonski; University of Warsaw, 2013 Her mother was Grace Coote, a sister of Sir Eyre Coote, a military governor of Jamaica.
An important theme in Jin Yi's poetry was chronic illness, which was the cause of Jin's early death at twenty-five. The languor and travail of illness became a major part of Jin's deliberate self- presentation to the world as a suffering, brilliant poetess, an image popular at the time. Jin turned her literal illness into a metaphorical wasting at the hands of her passions, consciously giving greater meaning to her struggles with illness. She subverted traditional propriety with a degree of sensuality in her poems contemporarily considered "unbecoming" of a gentry wife.Yang Binbin, "A Disease of Passion: The Self-Iconizing Project of an Eighteenth Century Chinese Woman Poet, Jin Yi." On her deathbed, she wrote a poem on the novel Dream of the Red Chamber,Ellen Widmer The Beauty and the Book: Women and Fiction in Nineteenth-Century China’’ Cambridge, Massachusetts,: Harvard East Asia Center, 2006, pp.141-42.
A system of grammatical gender, whereby every noun was treated as either masculine, feminine or neuter, existed in Old English, but fell out of use during the Middle English period. Modern English retains features relating to natural gender, namely the use of certain nouns and pronouns (such as he and she) to refer specifically to persons or animals of one or other sexes and certain others (such as it) for sexless objects – although feminine pronouns are sometimes used when referring to ships (and more uncommonly some airplanes and analogous machinery), to churches, and to nation states. Some aspects of gender usage in English have been influenced by the push towards a preference for gender-neutral language. This applies in particular to avoidance of the default use of the masculine he when referring to a person of unknown gender, usually using the neuter they as a third-person singular, and avoidance of the use of certain feminine forms of nouns (such as authoress and poetess).
Born in Paris, daughter of Pierre-François Battanchon, a medical student who died in 1860, and Marie-Rose Rouvion, a pensioner who died in 1844 and married in 1822, Esquiros had four brothers - Pierre-François (who died in 1864), music teacher in Libourne and then in Bordeaux, Gabriel-Félix, professor in Geneva, Edmond, painter in Paris, and Henri, merchant in Buenos Aires - and a sister - Émilie (died in 1864), married to a certain Dubosc, landowner at Le Puy. A teacher and poetess, she met Alphonse Esquiros, a Romantic writer converted to socialism and republican ideas, with whom she married in Paris on 7 August 1847 and wrote several books: Histoire des amants célèbres and Regrets, souvenir d'enfance, before being abandoned by her husband in 1850.Vincent Wright, Éric Anceau, Jean-Pierre Machelon, Sudhir Hazareesingh, Les Préfets de Gambetta, Presses Paris Sorbonne, 2007, 482 pages, p. 195-198 Naomi Judith Andrews, Socialism's muse: gender in the intellectual landscape of French romantic socialism, Lexington Books, 2006, 179 pages .
1615-27/02/1655 in Chanteloup), Lord of Jarnac, Apremont and Saint-Aulaye, Duke of Rohan, Prince of Léon, Count of Porhoët and Lorges, Marquis of Blain and La Garnache, Baron of Mouchamps, Lord of Héric and Fresnay (in Plessé), governor and lieutenant- general of AnjouJean-Baptiste-Pierre Jullien de Courcelles, Histoire généalogique et héraldique des pairs de France, des grands dignitaires de la couronne, des principales familles nobles du royaume et des maisons princières de l'Europe, précédée de la généalogie de la maison de France, Arthus- Bertrand, Paris, 1827, vol. 8, p. 209 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──> House of Rohan-Chabot │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──> Tancrède de Rohan (1630-1649 in Paris) (His biological father is Louis Charles Nogaret de La Valette de Foix a.k.a. the Fair Candale (1627-28/01/1658), Duke of Candale) │ │ │ │ │ │ │ ├──> Benjamin de Rohan a.k.a. the Duke of Soubise (1583-09/10/1642 in London), Duke of Frontenay, Baron of Soubise │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──> Anne of Rohan (1584-20/09/1646), poetess │ │ │ │ │ ├──> John of Rohan a.k.a.
In south India, some of these women were courtesans, while others chaste. In 1909, the colonial government passed the first law banning the Devadasis practice in the state of Mysore; however, an attempt to ban Devadasis tradition in Tamil Nadu Hindu temples failed in Madras Presidency in 1927.DE Smith (1963), India as a Secular State, Princeton University Press, , pages 238-240 In 1947, the government of Madras passed legislation forbidding Devadasi practices under pressure from activists that this was a 'prostitution' tradition. However, the tradition was revived by those who consider it to be a 'nun' tradition wherein a Devadasi was a chaste woman who considered herself married to God and used temple dance tradition to raise funds as well as helped continue the arts. In poetry, 9th-century Andal became a well known Bhakti movement poetess, states Pintchman, and historical records suggest that by 12th-century she was a major inspiration to Hindu women in south India and elsewhere.
His writings of Sanskrit verses have been published as the books Purnta PratyabhijnaPratyabhijna Press Varanasi, Publishers Arun Krishna Joshi, Vijay Krishna Joshi, Nichi bag Varanasi and Samit Swatantram. Swami Muktananda, although not belonging to the direct lineage of Kashmir Shaivism, felt an affinity for the teachings, validated by his own direct experience.Lal Ded: The great Kashmiri Saint-poetess, Proceedings of the National Seminar Conducted by Kashmir Education, Culture and Science Society. p12Play of Consciousness – A Spiritual Autobiography, Swami Muktananda, p117 He encouraged Motilal Banarsidass to publish Jaideva Singh's translations of Shiva Sutras, Pratyabhijnahrdayam, Spanda Karikas and Vijnana Bhairava, all of which Singh studied in-depth with Lakshman Joo.Swami Durgananda,‘To See the World Full of Saints’ in Meditation Revolution, Brooks, Durgananda et al, pp96-97Siva Sutras – The Yoga of Supreme Identity, Jaideva Singh p iv He also introduced Kashmir Shaivism to a wide audience of western meditators through his writings and lectures on the subject.Swami Durgananda, ‘To See the World Full of Saints’ in Meditation Revolution, Brooks, Durgananda et al, pp.
Mitford was an especially prolific and successful writer in a range of genres, from poetry to drama as well as the prose for which she has been best known. Her writings have been celebrated for their spontaneous humour, combined with quick wit and literary skill. Her youthful ambition had been to be the greatest English poetess, and her first publications were poems in the manner of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Walter Scott (Miscellaneous Verses, 1810, reviewed by Scott in the Quarterly; Christina, the Maid of the South Seas, a metrical tale based on the first news of discovery of the last surviving mutineer of the H. M. S. Bounty and a generation of British-Tahitian children on Pitcairn Island in 1811; and Blanche, part of a projected series of "Narrative Poems on the Female Character", in 1813). Her play Julian was produced at Covent Garden, with William Charles Macready in the title role, in 1823; Foscari at Covent Garden, with Charles Kemble as the hero, in 1826; while Rienzi, 1828, the best of her plays, ran for 34 performances, and Mitford's friend, Thomas Noon Talfourd, supposed that its popularity detracted from the success of his own play, Ion.
A man who contributed much to the success of the Association was Dr. James Newton Matthews, of Mason, Illinois, a co-founder and one of the most popular writers of the west. Various other writers were supporters and members of the Association, and these included Dr. David Starr Jordan, Eugene F. Ware, W. W. Pfrimmer, of Kentland. Indiana, who was often elected to some position on the official board, and Captain Lee O. Harris, editor of Home and School. Judge Alfred Ellison, of Anderson, Indiana, Judge D. P. Baldwin, and Joseph S. Reed, of Sullivan, Indiana were also pioneer friends of the Association, along with Col. Coates Kinney, of Norwood, Ohio, Soule Smith, of Lexington, Kentucky, Lawrence Mendenhall, of Cincinnati, John Uri Lloyd, author of “Etidorhpa," Dr. Lawrence C. Carr, of Cincinnati, R. Ellsworth Call, a scholar and authority on college affairs, Dr. John M. Crawford, counsel to St. Petersburg, and F. F. Oldham, of Queen City, Ohio. Of the number of women in the Association, perhaps the most successful and best known were Mary Hartwell Catherwood, of Hoopeston, Illinois, Alice Williams Brotherton, the Cincinnati poetess, Idael Makeever of Nebraska, and Bessie Woolford, called the “Poet of the Ohio River".

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