User:Reconsideration2/French poetry

__NOINDEX__

The Penguin Book of French Verse 4

 * Hartley, Anthony, editor, The Penguin Book of French Verse: 4: The Twentieth Century, Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1967

TO end of REVERDY, p xiv


 * 1918?????? * Léon-Paul Fargúe, Poèmes PROSE OR POETRY????????
 * 1929??????? * Léon-Paul Fargúe, Sous la lampe PROSE OR POETRY????????

New Oxford Companion to Literature in French


DONE: up to page xlv / Done up to early 1800s (bottom of page)

Authors from chronology and book

 * Guillaume Amfrye, abbé de Chaulieu (1639-1720), French poet


 * Jean-Baptiste, abbé Du Bos (1670-1742), diplomat, historian and critic


 * Antoine Houdart de La Motte (1672-1731), French poet, playwright and critic


 * Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset (1709-1777), French poet and playwright


 * La Chaussée -- author of verse plays


 * Jean-François Marmontel (1723-1799), French writer and critic
 * Jean-François, marquis de Saint-Lambert (1716-1803), French soldier, aristocrat, philosophe, author of moralizing stories and poet


 * Pierre Le Tourneur, also known as Pierre-Prime-Félicien Le Tourneur (1736-1788), French translator of prose and verse
 * Évariste-Désiré Parny (1753-1814), French


 * 1778-1784 ????? ** Évariste-Désiré Parny, Poésies érotiques, France
 * Jacques Delille (1738-1813), French poet

Nobel laureates in French

 * Sully Prudhomme, 1901 Nobel prize bibliography (doesn't distinguish between prose and poetry)
 * Frédéric Mistral, French, wrote in Occitan, not really French, should be in "Other" languages
 * Maurice Maeterlinck, 1911
 * Romain Rolland, 1915
 * Anatole France, 1921, French poet, journalist, and novelist
 * Henri Bergson, 1927 not a poet
 * André Gide, 1947, apparently not a poet, but wrote about poetry
 * François Mauriac, 1952, not a poet
 * Albert Camus, 1957, not a poet
 * Saint-John Perse, 1960, poet, already covered
 * Jean Paul Sartre,, 1964, not a poet
 * J. M. G. Le Clézio, 2008, not a poet

Poetry Foundation
ARTAUD---


 * 1896 BIRTHS * Antonin Artaud (died 1948), French essayist, critic, dramatist, poet, novelist, screenwriter, translator, actor and very influential drama theorist


 * 1948 DEATHS * Antonin Artaud, (born 1896), French essayist, critic, dramatist, poet, novelist, screenwriter, translator, actor and very influential drama theorist

=Random House Book=

é É  è  â  ç


 * * Guillaume Apollinaire, pen name of Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky, Poemes a Lou, published posthumously, France

Footnote

 * 1975 * Jean Daive, [trying to figure out how to type this: verticle line with v stuck to the top and ^ stuck to the bottom, then the following marks] >>

Chronological list

 * 1925 * Robert Marteau, French novelist, writer, translator, art critic and poet


 * 1877 BIRTHS

Oscar Lubicz-Milosz

=Hollier book=

Raw data

 * 1931 * Louis Aragon, Persecuteur Persecute -- CHECK THIS !!!!!!!!! (30 or 31?? "Persecute Persecuteur"???)---


 * 1933 * Patrice de La Tour du Pin, La Quête de Joie


 * 1942 NOT SURE IF ONLY ONE AUTHOR, INCLUDES ANDRE FRENAUD * André Frénaud, Poesie 42

Danish literature

 * Thomas Kingo, Spiritual Chorus 1673-1681, p 170
 * Thomas Kingo, Morning and Evening Songs, 1677-1684


 * 1807 -- Adam Oehlenschläger, Palnatoke; Denmark -- 183 (a tragic play)
 * 1808 -- Adam Oehlenschläger, Axel and Valborg; Denmark -- 183 a play
 * 1809 -- Adam Oehlenschläger, Correggio, a tragic play, about the life of the Italian painter Correggio; composed in Switzerland, where the author was a guest of Madame de Staël; Denmark -- 183
 * 1811 Staerkodder, another tragedy, same author; Denmark -- 184

-- Giovanni Bach, Richard Beck, Adolph B. Benson, Axel Johan Uppvall, and others, translated in part and edited by Frederika Blankner, The History of the Scandinavian Literatures: A Survey of the Literatures of the Norway, Sweden, Denamark, Iceland and Finland From Their Origins to the Present Day, Dial Press, 1938, New York


 * YEAR?????? * Johannes Ewald, Complete Works, first volume


 * 1802 * Adam Oehlenschläger, Guldhornene; Denmark
 * 1803 * Adam Oehlenschläger, St. John's Eve; Denmark
 * 1803 * Adam Oehlenschläger, Poems, including the lyric drama "St. Hansaftenspil"; Denmark
 * 1805 * Adam Oehlenschläger, Poetical Writings, lyrical and descriptive poems, including the author's masterpiece, "Aladdin, or the Wonderful Lamp"; Denmark
 * 1818 * Adam Oehlenschläger, The Little Shepherd Boy; Denmark
 * 1819 * Adam Oehlenschläger, The Gods of the North; Denmark
 * 1823 * Adam Oehlenschläger, The Gospel of the Year; Denmark


 * 1828 * Christian Winther, Woodcuts, poems about rural, idyllic lives of idealized peasants; Denmark
 * 1833 * Frederik Paludan-Müller, The Dancer; Denmark
 * 1834 * Frederik Paludan-Müller, Love and Psyche; Denmark


 * 1839 * Bernhard Severin Ingemann, Morning and Evening Songs; Denmark
 * 1839 Bernhard Severin Ingemann, The Shulamite and Solomon, a cycle of erotic poems; Denmark


 * 1840 * Johan Ludvig Heiberg, Husband and Wife; Denmark
 * 1841-1848 -- Frederik Paludan-Müller, Adam Homo, called his masterpiece, a long narrative poem in three volumes, about an ordinary, contemporary man, successful in worldly ways but spiritually decadent and constantly making compromises at the expense of his conscience and dignity; Denmark
 * 1842 * Andreas Nicolai de Saint-Aubain, E Bindstouw, a series of stories and poems, sometimes humorous, sometimes melancholy; Denmark
 * 1848 * Adam Oehlenschläger, Poetical Art; Denmark
 * 1849 * Adam Oehlenschläger, Ragnar Lodbrok; Denmark
 * 1850 * Adam Oehlenschläger, died in January while his son read to him a passage from the author's Socrates on the immortality of the soul


 * 1853 * Frederik Paludan-Müller, Luftskipperen og Atheisten; Denmark
 * 1854 * Frederik Paludan-Müller; Denmark:
 * Ahasverus, a dramatic poem
 * Kalanus, about an Indian ascetic with high ethical values
 * 1856 * Christian Winther, The Flight of the Deer, his most famous poem; Denmark
 * 1861 * Frederik Paludan-Müller, Benedict of Nursia; Denmark