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  2. The Life That I Have - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Life_That_I_Have

    "The Life That I Have" was an original poem composed on Christmas Eve 1943 and was originally written by Marks in memory of his girlfriend Ruth, who had just died in a plane crash in Canada. [1] On 24 March 1944, the poem was issued by Marks to Violette Szabo , a British agent of Special Operations Executive who was eventually captured ...

  3. Sadakichi Hartmann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadakichi_Hartmann

    Hartmann was a philosophical anarchist who traveled in the New York anarchist social circle as a friend of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman and as a drinking buddy of Hippolyte Havel. [6] Though he was on the outskirts of the movement, he attended anarchist meetings, performed at the New York Ferrer Center , and met with Peter Kropotkin ...

  4. Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_Lovers_and_a...

    The poem has six stanzas of four lines each, featuring slant rhyme. [2] The regularity of the four-line stanzas, according to Linda Wagner-Martin, serves to suggest "a grim insistence". [2] The poem's literary allusions include references to Herman Melville's Moby Dick, William Shakespeare's The Tempest, and T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land. [3]

  5. Erec (poem) - Wikipedia

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

    Erec is the last of a collection of poems attributed to Hartmann in this MS. There are four sets of fragments: [28] [29] MS K (Koblenz, Landeshauptarchiv, Best. 701 Nr. 759,14b), a double folio from the first half of the 13th century. The dialect is Rhine Franconian from an Upper German original. [28] This MS is closest to Hartmann in date and ...

  6. Silvia Federici - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvia_Federici

    Silvia Federici (born 1942) is an Italian-American scholar, teacher, and feminist activist based in New York. [1] She is a professor emerita and teaching fellow at Hofstra University in New York State, where she was a social science professor. [2] She also taught at the University of Port Harcourt in Nigeria from 1984 to 1986. [3]

  7. The Bell Jar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bell_Jar

    The Bell Jar is the only novel written by the American writer and poet Sylvia Plath.Originally published under the pseudonym "Victoria Lucas" in 1963, the novel is supposedly semi-autobiographical with the names of places and people changed.

  8. Ariel (poetry collection) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariel_(poetry_collection)

    Ariel was the second book of Sylvia Plath's poetry to be published. It was first released in 1965, two years after her death by suicide. The poems of Ariel, with their free-flowing images and characteristically menacing psychic landscapes, marked a dramatic turn from Plath's earlier Colossus poems. [1]

  9. Mad Girl's Love Song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_Girl's_Love_Song

    Mad Girl's Love Song" is a poem written by Sylvia Plath in villanelle form that was published in the August 1953 issue of Mademoiselle, a New York based magazine geared toward young women. [1] The poem explores a young woman's struggle between memory and madness. [ 2 ]