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  2. Don Juan (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Juan_(poem)

    Don Juan is an English unfinished satirical epic poem written by Lord Byron between 1819 and 1824 that portrays the Spanish folk legend of Don Juan, not as a womaniser as historically portrayed, but as a victim easily seduced by women. [1]

  3. Don Juan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Juan

    The first English version of Don Juan was The Libertine (1676) by Thomas Shadwell. A revival of this play in 1692 included songs and dramatic scenes with music by Henry Purcell. Another well-known English version is Lord Byron's epic poem Don Juan (1821).

  4. Nikolaus Lenau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolaus_Lenau

    The poem is archetypal of Lenau's style and culminates with the speaker dreaming of death as a final escape from emptiness. He is the greatest modern lyric poet of Austria, and the typical representative in German literature of that pessimistic Weltschmerz which, beginning with Lord Byron , reached its culmination in the poetry of Giacomo ...

  5. Dom Juan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dom_Juan

    Dom Juan ou le Festin de Pierre ("Don Juan or The Feast of Stone") is a five-act 1665 comedy by Molière based upon the Spanish legend of Don Juan Tenorio. [1] The aristocrat Dom Juan is a rake who seduces, marries, and abandons Elvira, discarded as just another romantic conquest. Later, he invites to dinner the statue of a man whom he recently ...

  6. Ottava rima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottava_rima

    He quickly produced Beppo, his first poem to use the form. Shortly after this, Byron began working on his Don Juan (1819–1824), probably the best-known English poem in ottava rima. Byron also used the form for The Vision of Judgment (1822). Shelley translated the Homeric Hymns into English in ottava rima.

  7. The Trickster of Seville and the Stone Guest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trickster_of_Seville...

    Don Juan draws his own sword and kills Don Gonzalo. With his final breath, Don Gonzalo swears to haunt Don Juan. Don Juan leaves the house just in time to find Mota and give him his cape back and flees. Mota is immediately seen wearing the same cloak as the man who murdered Don Gonzalo and is arrested.

  8. Ubi sunt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubi_sunt

    The whole of Don McLean's song "American Pie" is an "ubi sunt" for the rock and roll era. [citation needed] J. R. R. Tolkien begins Aragorn's poem Lament for the Rohirrim (in The Two Towers) with the phrase taken from the Anglo-Saxon Wanderer and continues with a series of Ubi sunt motifs. [23] Tolkien's "Oilima Markirya" poem exhibits a ...

  9. The Shipwreck of Don Juan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shipwreck_of_Don_Juan

    The Shipwreck of Don Juan is an 1840 oil painting by the French artist Eugène Delacroix. [1] It depicts a scene from Lord Byron epic poem Don Juan. [2] Don Juan and others are adrift in the Mediterranean in a ship's boat following a shipwreck. It was exhibited at the Salon of 1841.