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Ellen's Isle (Gaelic: Eilean Molach, 'shaggy island') on Loch Katrine was a stronghold of Clan McGregor.[2] [3] [4]The first hint of The Lady of the Lake occurs in a letter from Scott to Lady Abercorn dated 9 June 1806, where he says he has 'a grand work in contemplation … a Highland romance of Love Magic and War founded upon the manners of our mountaineers'. [5]
The Lady of the Lake (French: Dame du Lac, Demoiselle du Lac, Welsh: Arglwyddes y Llyn, Cornish: Arlodhes an Lynn, Breton: Itron al Lenn, Italian: Dama del Lago, Vietnamese: Hồ trung yêu nữ) is a title used by multiple characters in the Matter of Britain, the body of medieval literature and mythology associated with the legend of King Arthur.
The Speeches at Prince Henry's Barriers or The Lady of the Lake, a masque or entertainment written by Ben Jonson; The Lady of the Lake, a poem by Sir Walter Scott; The Lady of the Lake, a dramatic version of Scott's poem, by Edmund John Eyre. Lady of the Lake (Sapkowski novel), a novel by Polish fantasy writer Andrzej Sapkowski
La donna del lago (English: The Lady of the Lake) is an opera composed by Gioachino Rossini with a libretto by Andrea Leone Tottola (whose verses are described as "limpid" by one critic) [1] based on the French translation [2] of The Lady of the Lake, a narrative poem written in 1810 by Sir Walter Scott, whose work continued to popularize the image of the romantic Scottish Highlands.
The caoineadh has been described as the greatest poem written in either Ireland or Britain during the eighteenth century. [1] Eibhlín composed it on the subject of the death of her husband Art on 4 May 1773. It concerns the murder at Carraig an Ime, County Cork, of Art, at the hands of the Irish MP Abraham Morris, and the aftermath.
Poem Film(s) Lady Clare (1842), Alfred, Lord Tennyson: The Lady Clare (1919) The Lady of the Lake (1810), Sir Walter Scott: The Lady of the Lake (1928) Lalla Rookh (1817), Thomas Moore: Lala Rookh (1958) "The Law of the Yukon" (1907), Robert W. Service: The Law of the Yukon (1920) The Light of Asia (1879), Edwin Arnold: Prem Sanyas (1925)
Le Lac (English: The Lake) is a poem by French poet Alphonse de Lamartine.The poem was published in 1820. [citation needed]The poem consists of sixteen quatrains.It was met with great acclaim and propelled its author to the forefront of famous romantic poets.
Auld Robin Gray is the title of a Scots ballad written by the Scottish poet Lady Anne Lindsay in 1772. [1] According to the Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women, Lindsay's song began as a song sung by Sophia Johnston of Hilton . [2] Robin Gray is a good old man who marries a young woman already in love with a man named Jamie.