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         Symons Arthur:     more books (47)
  1. Biography - Symons, Arthur (1865-1945): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  2. The symbolist movement in literature. by Arthur Symons by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1919-01-01
  3. Cities and sea-coasts and islands. by Arthur Symons. by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1918
  4. The symbolist movement in literature. by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1899
  5. Lesbia and other poems. by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1920-01-01
  6. Cities And Sea-coasts And Islands by Symons Arthur 1865-1945, 2010-10-15
  7. Colour Studies In Paris by Symons Arthur 1865-1945, 2010-10-15
  8. Studies in the Elizabethan drama by Arthur Symons 1865-1945, 1919-12-31
  9. Cesare Borgia by Symons Arthur 1865-1945, 2010-10-15
  10. The Renaissance by Pater Walter 1839-1894, Symons Arthur 1865-1945, 2010-09-29
  11. Tristan and Iseult; a play in four acts by Arthur Symons 1865-1945, 1917-12-31
  12. Essays By Leigh Hunt by Hunt Leigh 1784-1859, Symons Arthur 1865-1945, 2010-09-29
  13. Charles Baudelaire a study by Arthur Symons. by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1920-01-01
  14. The toy cart. a play in five acts. by Arthur Symons. by Symons. Arthur. 1865-1945., 1919-01-01

81. English 137
18721956), A Defence of Cosmetics (1894), Diminuendo (1896), Oscar Wilde (18541900), The Decay of Lying (1889); Arthur Symons (18651945), A Word on
http://65.107.211.206/cv/courses/137.90.html
English 137: English and American Non-Fiction
Professor Landow
Topic for 1990: Sages, Satirists, and Wisdom Speakers
Week 1 (Wednesday, 5 September, through Monday, 10 September) What is nonfiction? Reading: Tom Wolfe, The Pump House Gang; . Jonathan Swift, "A Modest Proposal" and "An Argument against Abolishing Christianity." Week 2 (Wendesday, 12 Septembe, through Friday, 14 September) The Modern Sage as Exegete of the Real: Joan Didion, The White Album Week 3. (Monday, 17 September, through Friday, 21 September), Wisdom Speakers : Michel de Montaigne, "Of Cannibals;" Samuel Johnson (17091784), Rambler (175052) nos. 2, 4, 6, 8, 14, 2829; Adventurer (175354) nos. 45, 84, 111; Idler (175860) nos. 32, 4951, 60. [First exercise due] Week 4. (week of Monday, 24 September) Victorian Sages (I): Carlyle and Nightingale. Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present; "Signs of the Times;" "Characteristics;" Nightingale, Cassandra Week 5 (Week of Monday, 1 October) The Victorian Sage (II): Ruskin. Ann Radcliffe, selections from Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) (handout); and John Ruskin, "Traffic;" selections from

82. Poe: Troubled Mind
According to Arthur Symons (1865 1945) 'The foundation of The Fall of the HouseOf Usher is Fear in its most intense and ineradicable form, fear that
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/9235/poe.HTML
Poe: The Troubled Mind of the Writer
The stories of Edgar Allan Poe are so filled with cruelty and sadism that they suggest a psychological unbalance on the part of the author. His violent themes of entrapment - a tortured prisoner in a dungeon of the Spanish Inquisition, a man sealed alive in the wall of a tomb, and a premature burial of a young woman who apparently dies of an epileptic coma raises questions about the author's motivation. Was it a sign of the times or was it his personality? A study of Poe's life suggests that his fascination with violence and terror of being buried alive was not a reflection of the literary movement of the time, but a reflection of his tortured mind. Poe was raised in an atmosphere of death and alienation. His mother died on December 8, 1811 when Edgar was three years old, leaving him an orphan (his father died in October 1810). At this time, his world was split apart. His sister Rosalie was adopted by Mr. William Mackenzie and his wife, and Edgar was taken by Mr. John Allan and his wife Frances. Edgar had a brother named William Henry Leonard Poe (born in 1807 and died of tuberculosis in 1831) but it is unknown where he lived (Hammond, pp. 4-5). Edgar was raised in an affluent setting. Although the Allans were loving, they never legally adopted him and they often reminded him of his social standing. As Poe grew older, the distance between Mr. Allan and him steadily increased until a hopeless split developed. Poe was further influenced by the premature death of Frances Allan, who had made a deep impression on him, and later, the death of his wife at a very young age. All of these women had died of the same illness, tuberculosis.

83. Poets' Corner - Index Of Poets - Letters S,T
Arthur Symons. (1865 1945) English Poet and Literary Critic; first touse decadent and symbolist descriptions in literary discussion
http://www.geocities.com/~spanoudi/poems/poem-st.html

84. Lancaster County Library System /All Locations
Mark Nearby SUBJECTS are Year Entries Symons Arthur 1865 1945 Criticism And Interpretation1969 1 Symons Family See Simmons Family 1 Symont Family See
http://catalog.lancasterlibraries.org/search/dSymphonic poems./dsymphonic poems/
KEYWORD TITLE AUTHOR SUBJECT CALL NO STANDARD NO Search All Libraries Childrens Materials in Lancaster County Adamstown Area Library Bookmobile-Library System of Lancaster Co. Columbia Public Library Eastern Lancaster County Library Elizabethtown Public Library Ephrata Public Library Lancaster County Library Leola Branch Library Lititz Public Library Manheim Community Library Manheim Township Branch Library Milanof-Schock Library Moores Memorial Library Mountville Area Branch Library Pequea Valley Public Library Quarryville Library Shuts Environmental Library Strasburg-Heisler Library Mark Nearby SUBJECTS are: Year Entries Symons Arthur 1865 1945 Criticism And Interpretation Symons Family See Simmons Family
Symont Family See Simmons Family
Sympathy
3 Related Subjects
Sympathy

Symphonic Jazz See Big Band Music
headings for forms and types of music that include "big band" and headings with medium of performance that include "big band"
Symphonic Poems

Symphonic Poems Orchestra See Symphonic Poems
Symphonie Fantastique Berlioz Hector 1803 1869 Analysis Appreciation
Symphonies
Symphonies Band
... Symphonies Band Excerpts Arranged

85. Archives Hub: Collections Of Sir Hugh Walpole
to them. Many of the letters are addressed to John Lane, and many ofthe papers have headings in the hand of AJA Symons. The collection
http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/colhwal.html
Archives Hub Helpdesk email archiveshub@mimas.ac.uk
Phone +44 (0)161 275 6789
Collections of Sir Hugh Walpole
Reference GB 0161 MSS. Walpole a. 1-3, b. 1-7, c. 1-24, d. 1-19, e. 1-9, f. 1-3
Title : Collections of Sir Hugh Walpole
Dates of creation : 19th-20th century
Held at : Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Extent : 65 shelfmarks
Level of Description : fonds
Language of Material : eng
Administrative/Biographical History
Sir Hugh Seymour Walpole (1884-1941) was a novelist and man of letters. Details are given in the Dictionary of National Biography
Scope and Content
A collection made by Sir Hugh Walpole of manuscripts and letters of writers and artists of the late 19th and early 20th century, with some papers relating to them. Many of the letters are addressed to John Lane, and many of the papers have headings in the hand of A.J.A. Symons. The collection consists of:
  • Papers of Lord Alfred Douglas, 1910-38 Papers of Richard Le Gallienne, 1893-1914 Papers of Stephen Phillips, 1898-1916 Papers of F.W. Rolfe 'Baron Corvo', 1881-1958 Papers of A.W. Symons, 1891-1927

86. Symons
The Tune Ìåëüíèöû. A foolish rhythm turns in my idle headAs a windmill turns in the wind on an empty sky. Why it is when
http://members.tripod.com/poetry_pearls/ePoets/Symons.htm
Russian /English English /Russian
Deutsch
/English ... only
Arthur William Symons
BOOKS on-line Idealism In the Temple The Tune The Tune
A foolish rhythm turns in my idle head
As a wind-mill turns in the wind on an empty sky.
Why it is when love, which men call deathless, is dead,
That memory, men call fugitive, will not die?
Is love not dead? yet I hear that tune if I lie
Dreaming awake in the night on my lonely bed,
And an old thought turns with the old tune in my head As a wind-mill turns in the wind on an empty sky. Idealism I know the woman has no soul, I know The woman has no possibilities Of soul or mind or heart, but merely is The masterpiece of flesh: well, be it so. It is her flesh that I adore; I go Thirsting afresh to drain her empty kiss. I know she cannot love: it is not this My vanquished heart implores in overthrow. Tyrannously I crave, I crave alone, Her perfect body, Earth’s most eloquent Music, divinest human harmony; Her body now a silent instrument, That ‘neath my touch shall wake amd make for me The strains I have but dreamed of, never known.

87. PROGRAMME Du COLLOQUE SFEVE
ArthurSymons (1865-1945) and Symbolist Theatre . 10h pause. 10h30
http://cahiers.free.fr/pre.html

Accueil
Circulaires Programme Hôtels ... Dans Montpellier
PROGRAMME du COLLOQUE SFEVE « Théâtre, musique, arts du spectacle et leur image dans la littérature victorienne et édouardienne » MONTPELLIER III 18 et 19 Janvier 2002 Organisateur : Annie ESCURET (Professeur) VENDREDI 18 JANVIER 8h30 : Accueil (Salle JOURDA B.R.E.D.) Thème de la matinée : « Arts ... et littérature victorienne et édouardienne » (sous la Présidence de Jean-Claude Amalric) 9h : Sophie MENOUX : « L'esthétique transartistique picturo-musico-littéraire de Vernon Lee » 9h30 : Tom HUBBARB : "Dance of the Marionettes : Arthur Symons (1865-1945) and Symbolist Theatre" 10h : pause 10h30 : Sylvie DECAUX : " 'Nasty Acting Editions' : les Editions théâtrales populaires de Thomas Hailes Lacy" 11h : Eleanor STEWART-TANGUY : "Theatre and Theatricality in Arnold Bennett's A Man from the North 11h30 : Win HAYES : "Sport as Spectacle : Swimming in Victorian and Edwardian Britain" 12h à 14h : repas au Restaurant universitaire Vert-Bois (qui jouxte le Campus et qui est situé à 300 m du BRED où se déroule le colloque) Thème de l'après midi: La musique et son image dans la littérature victorienne et édouardienne (sous la Présidence de Jean-Marie Baïssus) 14h : Jean-Claude AMALRIC : « Shaw, critique musical »

88. G_symons
The summary for this Russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://members.tripod.com/poetry_pearls/Gallery/G_symons.htm

Arthur William Symons

Library

Catalog

Gallery
© 1999 Elena and Yacov Feldman
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89. ƒLƒƒƒvƒVƒ‡ƒ“
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.yushodo.co.jp/pinus/54/talk/cap/c2.html
ƒA[ƒT[EƒVƒ‚ƒ“ƒY @Symons, Arthuri1865-1945j

90. William Butler Yeats Collection

http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/yeats.wb.html
Yeats, W.B., 1865-1939
Collection, 1872-1970
11 boxes (4.62 linear feet) and 1 galley folder Acquisition: Purchases, 1950-1980
Access: Open for research
Processed by: Chelsea Dinsmore, 2002
RLIN Record ID:
Table of Contents
Biographical Sketch
Scope and Contents

Folder List

Index of Correspondents
...
Index of Works
Biographical Sketch
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) was born in Dublin, Ireland, the eldest of four children born to Susan Pollexfen and John Butler Yeats. While the family lived primarily in Dublin and London, time spent with relatives in County Sligo influenced Yeats' dreams and aspirations. In Sligo he learned the folk lore, myths, and legends which provided the structure and background for so much of his poetry. An uninspired student, Yeats spent five years at the Godolphin Day School while his father studied painting in London. Upon the family's return to Ireland in 1880 he attended Erasmus High School before being sent to the Metropolitan Art School. His artistic talent proved to be as indifferent as his scholarship, but he came away from the experience with a lifelong friend in his fellow student George William Russell. Russell may have provided impetus to what became Yeats' lifelong interest in mysticism and the occult. Yeats' first published poems appeared in The Dublin University Review in 1885. By 1889 Yeats was able to publish an entire volume of poems

91. Browning Family Collection

http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/browning.html
Browning Family
Collection, 1816-1935
8 boxes (3.33 linear feet), 1 oversize folder, 1 galley folder,
2 oversize bound volumes Acquisition: Purchases and gifts (1952-1986)
Access: Open for research
Processed by: Chelsea S. Jones, 1999
RLIN Record ID:
Table of Contents
Biographical Sketches
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 1806-1861
The eldest of twelve children, Elizabeth Barrett Moulton-Barrett was born in 1806 to Edward Moulton-Barrett and his wife in Durham, England. The family's considerable wealth came largely from a Jamaican sugar plantation and in 1908 the family acquired a 500-acre estate near the Malvern Hills. Elizabeth received an excellent education at home, studying Greek and Latin as well as modern languages, read widely, and participated in family theatrical productions. Though she lead a generally healthy childhood, the family doctor began prescribing opium for a nervous complaint around 1821; the death of her mother in 1828 seemed to aggravate that condition. Forced to sell the estate due to severe financial losses in the early 1830s, Barrett's father resettled his family in London and in 1838 Elizabeth's first volume of poetry

92. Browning Family: An Inventory Of Their Collection At The Harry Ransom Humanities

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00020/00020-P.html
Non-Frames Version Frames Version Raw XML File (58k)
Browning Family:
An Inventory of Their Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Descriptive Summary
Creator: Browning Family Title Browning Family Collection Dates: Abstract: English poets Elizabeth Barrett, 1806-1861, and Robert Browning, 1812-1889, eloped to Italy in 1846, after Barrett's father refused them permission to marry, and remained there for the rest of Elizabeth's life. The Browning Family Collection contains a quantity of correspondence between various members of the Browning family as well as works by Elizabeth, Robert, Robert's father and sister, and Robert Barrett Browning. Quantity: 8 boxes (3.33 linear feet), 1 oversize folder, 1 galley folder, 2 oversize bound volumes Identification: Repository: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Sketches
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 1806-1861
The eldest of twelve children, Elizabeth Barrett Moulton-Barrett was born in 1806 to Edward Moulton-Barrett and his wife in Durham, England. The family's considerable wealth came largely from a Jamaican sugar plantation and in 1908 the family acquired a 500-acre estate near the Malvern Hills. Elizabeth received an excellent education at home, studying Greek and Latin as well as modern languages, read widely, and participated in family theatrical productions. Though she lead a generally healthy childhood, the family doctor began prescribing opium for a nervous complaint around 1821; the death of her mother in 1828 seemed to aggravate that condition.

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