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Pre-Mallarme work

 Subject
Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:

Centuries of Books & Manuscripts: An Exhibition on the Occasion of the Fiftieth Anniversary of Hough / Carroll L ; Havel V ; Beckett S ; Johns J., 1992

 Item
Identifier: CC-18886-19264
Scope and Contents

This catalog was printed at The Stinehour Press in Vermont and was given to the Sackners on the occasion of the Stinehours' visit to the Archive. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1992

Hand of the Poet, The / Carroll L., 1995

 Item
Identifier: CC-09883-10079
Scope and Contents

Exhibition consisted of original manuscripts by 100 masters from John Donne to T.S. Eliot. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1995

Tale in Tail(s): A Study Worthy of Alice's Friends / Anonymous; Carroll L., 1991

 Item
Identifier: CC-26270-26737
Scope and Contents

Describes the discovery by two high school students of mouse-shaped poems within Lewis Carroll's the classic "mouse's tail poem" of Alice in Wonderland. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1991

The Pattern Poem / Church, Margaret; Simmias of Rhodes; Theocritus; Porphyrii PO; Forunatus V; Alcuin; Willis R; Puttenham G; Herbert G; Herrick R; Washbourne T; Crompton H; Brome A; Traherne T; Shipman T; Ayres P; Carroll L., 1944

 Item
Identifier: CC-37087-38929
Scope and Contents This is a Ph.D. thesis whose purpose was to trace the appearance of shapes in English poetry in the 16th and 17th centuries. Church found that the pattern poetry had its origins in Greek and Hindi literature. Greek literature contains six examples of pattern poetry: an axe, an egg, a pair of wings, a shepard's pipe, and two alters. Church defines Carmina Quadrata as verses that contain as many lines as each line contains letters. Within these boxlike poems are acrostics, telestichs, and many pictures and designs. The pictures are formed by either capitalizing the letters which outline the figure or by writing them in inks of various colors. Quincunx are poems arranged in oblique lines that can be read from either the upper or lower levels to make sense with either choice (p.51). Pattern poems reached the Anglo-Saxon literature in the 8th century. Alcuin of York wrote two Carmina Quadrata addressed to the cross. Hrabamus Maurus was one of Alcuin's followers. In 1573, pattern poetry...
Dates: 1944