Fables et Poèmes choisis de CIGAL


Book Description

CIGAL, poète, nous propose un premier recueil de ses Fables et Poèmes écrits au gré de ses humeurs et de ses déboires. Il visite, en alexandrins, un monde souvent amusant, parfois triste, où les animaux illustrent une nature humaine tendre et cruelle.Les humeurs de CIGAL sont changeantes. Ce premier recueil le conduit à une mue annonciatrice de nouvelles aventures.Pour les suivre... retrouvez la fable du mois sur www.fablesdecigal.com.




À Dieu vat (2011-2012) - Poèmes choisis


Book Description

Chaque chose fait son temps. C'est le mot de la fin et il n'y a pas l'ombre d'un gros ou p'tit chagrin. Quant faire son beurre, l n'est pas la question. L'humilit abreuve nos amours foison. M me l'oubli est un leurre. Il sustente la m moire. Reprenons vite espoir, car elle a tr s grand coeur.




Calendar


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Le mystère d'Adam


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Walt Whitman Among the French


Book Description

As the first full treatment of Walt Whitman's French sources and his later impact on French writers, this book revises our image of the poet and challenges many critical assumptions. Originally published in 1980. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.




The Modern Language Journal


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Includes section "Reviews".










The Road from Paris


Book Description

'For the best part of a thousand years English poets have gone to school to the French,' declared Ezra Pound in 1913. Whatever the truth of this assertion for all of English literature its accuracy for Pound's own period is well established. Both he and T. S. Eliot wrote frankly of the debt which they owed to their French predecessors and this fact has long been recognised by students of English literature. With the recognition of this influence went the assumption that Eliot and Pound were themselves responsible for its transmission from France to England. That this was not so is demonstrated by the documents reprinted in this volume. Dr Pondrom presents a selection of extracts and complete essays and letters by the critics and poets who together were principally responsible for channelling into English writing the ideas and theories of the French poetic avant-garde.