Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Now You See it: Poems. UW-Madison Libraries Parallel Press. 2005. ISBN 978-1-893311-57-2. Long for this world: new and selected poems, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2003, ISBN 9780822958147; Uses of Adversity, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998, ISBN 9780822938682; The Makings of Happiness, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1991, ISBN ...
Ronald or Ron Wallace may refer to: Ronald Wallace (theologian) (1911–2006), theologian and professor of biblical theology; Ronald Wallace (poet), American poet and professor of poetry and English; Ronald Wallace (politician) (1916–2008), mayor of Halifax, Canada, 1980–1991; Ron Wallace (singer), American country music singer
— Samuel Taylor Coleridge, English poet and literary critic (25 July 1834) "If I die, I die unto the Lord. Amen." [1] [7]: 88 [note 46] — Edward Irving, Scottish clergyman (7 December 1834) "My bedfellows are cramp and cough – we three all in one bed!" [1] [35] — Charles Lamb, English essayist and poet (27 December 1834)
Chris Acland (1996), English drummer for the band Lush, hanging [1] Art Acord (1931), American actor and rodeo champion, ingestion of poison [2] [3] Manuel Acuña (1873), Mexican poet, ingestion of potassium cyanide [4] [5] George Washington Adams (1829), American politician, lawyer, and eldest son of John Quincy Adams, drowning in Long Island ...
— Vachel Lindsay, American poet (5 December 1931), in his suicide note "You sons of bitches. Give my love to Mother." [10] — Francis Crowley, American murderer (21 January 1932), prior to execution by electrocution "If this is dying, then I don't think much of it." [12]: 33 [23] — Lytton Strachey, English writer and critic (21 January 1932)
While it is known that she died from barbiturate poisoning and alcohol, it is unknown whether it was a suicide or accident. Mustafa Zaidi died of unknown causes on 12 October 1970. Mustafa Zaidi (40), Pakistani Urdu poet from India who died in Karachi from unknown reasons on 12 October 1970. [139] [140] The case has never been solved.
Sonnets and Poems (1906) The Fragments of Empedocles (1908) Aesop and Hyssop (1912) The Vaunt of Man (1912) Socrates, Master of Life (1915) "Bryant and the Minor Poets," Book II, Chapter V of The Cambridge History of American Literature (1917–1921) The Lynching Bee (1920) Tutankhamen and After (1924) Two Lives (1925) The Locomotive-God (1927)
The poem was published in the Sangamo Journal, [2] a newspaper in which Lincoln had previously published other works. The poem uses a similar meter, sync, dictation and tone with many other poems published by Lincoln and according to Richard Miller, the man who discovered the poem, the theme of the interplay between rationality and madness is "especially Lincolnian in spirit". [3]