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“The world is very quiet without you around.” — Lemony Snicket “We only part to meet again.” — John Gay “Sometimes, when one person is missing, the whole world seems depopulated.”
Edmund Vance Cooke (June 5, 1866 – December 18, 1932) was a 19th- and 20th-century poet best remembered for his inspirational verse "How Did You Die?" Cooke was born in Port Dover, Canada West. In 1898 he married Lilith Castleberry, with whom he had five children. He later read his poems on radio station WWJ in Detroit, Michigan.
The Patience Strong Bedside Book (1953) "Beyond the Rainbow" (1957) The Blessings of the Years (1963) Come Happy Day (1966) Give me a Quiet Corner (1972) A Joy Forever (1973) With a Poem in My Pocket (Autobiography, 1981) Poems from the Fighting Forties (1982) Fifty Golden Years (1985, to commemorate her fiftieth anniversary as Patience Strong)
Short-Lived Creatures; Echo; Grain of the Wood; Of a Private History; This Is the Poem I Made Then; I Go Out the Door; The Man Who Came Back from the Lunar Colony; 5 a.m. Declaration; Myrtle Beach; Elves; Light and Shade; Rapunzel Summons the Prince; In Touch; My Son in Love; Barbarians; Browning, Cummings, Tennyson; To One Not Poisoned Yet; To ...
"My last words to you, my son and successor, are: Never trust the Russians." [3] — Abdur Rahman Khan, Emir of Afghanistan (1 October 1901), to Habibullah Khan "Come right out this way." [7] [8] — William Thomas Maxwell, American tracker and deputized sheriff (8 October 1901), telling the Smith Gang to surrender prior to the Battleground ...
In March 2012, Addison won her third Bram Stoker Award for How To Recognize A Demon Has Become Your Friend, a collection of reprints, new poems and short stories. In 2013, she won her fourth HWA Bram Stoker for The Four Elements , a collection of poetry inspired by the four elements released in 2012, and published by Bad Moon Books .
Millay won the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for her poem "Ballad of the Harp-Weaver"; she was the first woman and second person to win the award. In 1943, Millay was the sixth person and the second woman to be awarded the Frost Medal for her lifetime contribution to American poetry.
"Just a Common Soldier", also known as "A Soldier Died Today", is a poem written in 1987. Written and published in 1987 by Canadian veteran and columnist A. Lawrence Vaincourt, it now appears in a number of anthologies and newspapers, particularly around Remembrance Day .