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The 15th Hopkins Summer School
Hopkins 2002 Festival
July 19 - 26, 2002
Advance programme here
English poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote some of his finest poetry in Monasterevin, Ireland. Each year, a vibrant literary festival commemorates the poet's links with this Irish town. The GM Hopkins Society join with visitors, lovers of Hopkins's poetry to celebrate the vision of this poet on the web, and in Monasterevin.
Sorry, we have moved.Visit, bookmark our new website
http://www.gerardm ...
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Aspects of E.M. Forster
:start:
Start
Biography
Pictures
Writings
Bibliography
Board
Links
Quiz
Numbers
Guestbook
Further Notices
For anyone interested in researching Forster, this site, complete with photographs, book purchasing information, and related links is an excellent resource. (Bedford/St. Martin's, Fiction: E.M. Forster, 2000, 3 Dec. 2000, )
Welcome to Aspects of E.M. Forster. This site has b ...
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Deutsch Welcome to Earth | Moon: A Ted Hughes WebsiteLast update: 6 April 2006
(News)
This site is dedicated to the work of the British poet Ted Hughes (1930 – 1998). It is intended for readers, students and scholars alike.
Throughout these pages, publications intended or suitable for children have been marked with a small moon symbol .
Quick Links
Ted Hughes: Collected Poems for Children – Review by C. Kazzer; Review by Ann Skea
»Ted Hughes & the Classics« – Conference, Edinburgh Un ...
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Gerard Manley Hopkins
Gerard Manley Hopkins is one of the great unsung poets, virtually unknown in his lifetime. We have his poetry today only because it was collected and published by his friends after his death. It has some of the obsessive ornateness and sentimentality of the Victorians, but also a startling musicality which is ahead of its time and ours.
Hopkins began his adult life, like many others of his time and middle-class background, as an earnest student at Oxford, concerned with ...
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Paul Delany, Introduction to In the Year of Jubilee, by George Gissing. (London: J.M. Dent, 1994)
1. Gissing in the Suburbs. In June 1893 George Gissing came back to London after living for two years in Exeter, and took lodgings with his second wife at 76 Burton Road, Brixton. Before he moved to Devon Gissing had been a north-of-the-river person, writing working-class novels about seedy areas like Clerkenwell (in The Nether World). Now he realised that in South London there was a new territory ...
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Pine Valley
Poems by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Winter with the Gulf Stream
The boughs, the boughs are bare enough
But earth has never felt the snow.
Frost-furred our ivies are and rough
With bills of rime the brambles shew.
The hoarse leaves crawl on hissing ground
Because the sighing wind is low.
But if the rain-blasts be unbound
And from dank feathers wring the drops
The clogged brook runs with choking sound
Kneading the mounded mire that stops
His channel under clammy ...
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Return to
Renascence Editions
The Beggar's Opera
John Gay
Transcribed, with an Introduction, Notes, and Bibliography,
by R.S. Bear,
University of Oregon,
August 1992;
html version created November 1995.
Note on this edition:
This text was prepared by R.S. Bear from a 1921 B. Huebsch edition of the 1765 text. The text is in the public domain; markup is copyright © The University of Oregon, 1995. Additions, emendations, or commments to the Publisher.
Skip to:
Act I.
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THE GEORGE GISSING WEBSITE
English Novelist and Man of Letters (1857-1903)
This site celebrates Gissing's achievement and publishes material on Gissing's life and works. It also acts as a clearing-house for information about Gissing studies.
George Gissing was a late-Victorian English writer best remembered for his novels New Grub Street and The Odd Women, but these are the highlights of a career which, though short, was marked by relentless industry: he wrote another 21 nov ...
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