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A study of George Seferis' Logbook III (1953-1955)Krikos-Davis, Katerina Hebe January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Simultanisme and surnaturalisme : Chagall, de Chirico, Apollinaire and Cubist Paris (1910-14)Hicken, A. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Maurice Maeterlinck and the development of modern dramaMcGuinness, Patrick January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Mysticism in the poetry of Kathleen RaineEl-Shaer, Mohamed Sharaf January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Keith Douglas: War PoetShearer, William James 10 1900 (has links)
<p> The dilemma of the war poet -- how "to combine two incompatibles" -- has produced several temporary alternatives and as many permanent misconceptions. For some, writers and audience alike, war poetry has come to be merely a form of propaganda, or perhaps an outlet for the emotions. For Keith Douglas, however, war was apparently a natural and a compatible subject for poetry. This study focuses upon Douglas's life, work and reputation, in an attempt to discover how, why, and to what effect he was able to solve the dilemma.</p> / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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A Study of the Relationship Between Poet and Patron During the Augustan AgeBarrett, Doreen 09 1900 (has links)
N/A / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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Aindrias Mac Cruitin : DantaMac Lochlainn, Antain January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Reading the feminine self : H.D./Freud/psychoanalysisBuck, Claire January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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"The emerging order of the poem" : a critical study of John Montague's poetry, 1958-1999Schattmann, Claudia Sybille January 2001 (has links)
This thesis explores the achievement of the contemporary Irish poet John Montague, concentrating on his major works published from the fifties to the nineties. Montague’s themes comprise not only Ireland and history, but also love, family, environment, the power and limits of poetry, the addressing of death and boyhood memories. Through close analysis of single poems and main sequences, the study attends to aesthetic, intertextual, psychological, historical and biographical issues. Its particular emphasis is on how Montague's language opens up ways of considering such issues. My readings try, therefore, to re-enact the subtle becoming and shifting that take place in individual poems and in his work as a whole. In order to illuminate the processes at work in Montague’s poetry, the chapters of the thesis are split into some that discuss themes and others that focus on volumes. Chapter one shows how Montague's concern with poetry surfaces in his work. It draws on poems from various stages in his career; the thesis also returns in subsequent chapters to Montague's addressing of poetry. The second chapter outlines Montague’s concern with exile and land in Forms of Exile and Poisoned Lands, and with family and love in A Chosen Light and Tides. Chapter three argues that Montague uses the journey as a structural device throughout The Rough Field. The fourth chapter concentrates on Montague's treatment of his family: the father in The Rough Field, A Slow Dance and The Dead Kingdom and the mother in A Slow Dance and The Dead Kingdom, which is read as the climax of Montague's return to family members. The fifth chapter analyses his main love-sequence. The Great Cloak, examines how his re-contextualisation’s of poems and use of pictorial illustration affect the reading of some love poems, and considers two love poems from Smashing the Piano. The sixth chapter demonstrates how Montague develops old and new themes in Mount Eagle and discusses how a net of crossings constitutes the collection's structural centre. The final chapter explores how in Time in Armagh Montague refines his transformation of autobiographical material into art. The analysis of Border Sick Call locates a concern with poetry itself in the late writing and brings out the sequence's shifting between the mysterious and familiar. "But in what country have we been?" is its final line, helping to define the general concern of the thesis, which is to explore the riches of the "country" mapped by Montague's poetry.
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The life and works of Johannes Michael Nagonius, poeta laureatus c. 1450 - c. 1510Gwynne, Paul Gareth January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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