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Betsy Fagin (born 1972) is an American poet. She is the author of Fires Seen From Space (Winter Editions, 2024) All is Not Yet Lost (Belladonna, 2015), Names Disguised (Make Now Books, [1] 2014) as well as numerous chapbooks including Poverty Rush (Three Sad Tigers, 2011), the science seemed so solid (dusie kollektiv, 2011), Belief Opportunity (Big Game Books Tinyside, 2008), Rosemary Stretch ...
In the novel The Tragedy of the Korosko (1898), by Arthur Conan Doyle, characters quote the poem by citing Canto LIV of In Memoriam: "Oh yet we trust that somehow good / will be the final goal of ill"; and by citing Canto LV: I falter where I firmly trod"; whilst another character says that Lord Tennyson's In Memoriam is "the grandest and the ...
All that glitters is not gold" is an aphorism stating that not everything that looks precious or true turns out to be so. While early expressions of the idea are known from at least the 12th–13th century, the current saying is derived from a 16th-century line by William Shakespeare , " All that glisters is not gold ".
Not All [Those] Who Wander Are Lost, or similar may refer to: The second line of J. R. R. Tolkien's poem "The Riddle of Strider" from The Fellowship of the Ring; Not All Who Wander Are Lost, by Chris Thile, 2001 "Not All Who Wander Are Lost", a song on the 2007 album The Last Kind Words by Devildriver
"All Is Not Lost" is an alternative rock song performed by the band OK Go from their 2010 album Of the Blue Colour of the Sky. A music video released on August 9, 2011, features the band dancing the song with the dance company Pilobolus .
John C. Bogle described the poem as "beautifully captur[ing] the thinking of Schumpeter and Keynes", who espoused, respectively, "entrepreneurship" and "animal spirits": both ideas of the market place. [8] T. S. Eliot included the poem in his 1941 collection A Choice of Kipling's Verse.
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... All Is Not Lost is the first full-length album by Architect. It was released on January 23, 2007.
The original lyrics, authored by Wybicki, are a poem consisting of six quatrains and a refrain quatrain repeated after all but the last stanza, all following an ABAB rhyme scheme. The official lyrics, based on a variant from 1806, [8] "Poland has not yet died" suggesting a more violent cause of the nation's possible death. [9]