Lyric+poem

  • 91Левензон, Борис Львович — Борис Левензон Boris Levenson Полное имя Борис Львович Левензон Дата рождения 10 марта 1884(1884 03 10) Место рождения …

    Википедия

  • 92Ottorino Respighi — in the 1920s in the company of his wife Elsa Olivieri Sangiacomo Ottorino Respighi (Italian pronunciation: [ottoˌɾiːno ɾesˈpiːɡi]; 9 July 1879 – 18 April 1936) was an Italian composer, musicologist and conductor. He is best known for… …

    Wikipedia

  • 93Les Troyens — (in English: The Trojans ) is a French opera in five acts by Hector Berlioz. The libretto was written by Berlioz himself, based on Virgil s epic poem The Aeneid . Written between 1856 and 1858, Les Troyens was Berlioz s largest and most ambitious …

    Wikipedia

  • 94Gui de Cavalhon — Gui de Cavalhon, Cavaillo, or Gavaillo (fl. 1200 ndash;1229 [According to Egan, 43 n1, documents mention him frequently between 1205 and 1224.] ) was a Provençal nobleman: a diplomat, warrior, and man of letters. He was probably also the Guionet… …

    Wikipedia

  • 95Pushkin, Aleksandr — (1799 1837)    Russia. Writer. His lyric poem The Gypsies took three years to write and was completed in 1827, depicting the Romanies of Bessarabia as ideal representatives of a natural state of human society. While celebrating the freedom of the …

    Historical dictionary of the Gypsies

  • 96minstrelsy — n song, ballad, recitative, lyric poem, poem, epic poem, rhapsody …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 97ode — /oʊd / (say ohd) noun 1. a lyric poem typically of elaborate or irregular metrical form and expressive of exalted or enthusiastic emotion. 2. (originally) a poem intended to be sung. 3. regular (or Pindaric) ode, a complex poetic type, consisting …

  • 98strophe — /ˈstroʊfi / (say strohfee) noun 1. the part of an ancient Greek choral ode sung by the chorus when moving from right to left. 2. the first of two metrically corresponding series of lines forming divisions of a lyric poem (the second being the… …

  • 99Lucas, Henry — (?1740 1795)    Born at Dublin, the son of Dr. Charles Lucas, M.D., the Irish patriot, he graduated M.A. from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1762. He became a student at the Middle Temple but abandoned law for literature. Nothing else about him is… …

    British and Irish poets

  • 100Epode — Ep ode, n. [L. epodos, Gr. ?, fr. ?, adj., singing to, sung or said after, fr. ? to sing to; epi upon, to + ? to sing: cf. F. [ e]pode. See {Ode}.] (Poet.) (a) The after song; the part of a lyric ode which follows the strophe and antistrophe, the …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English