Caruso, Robert, Scapigliatura (History and texts of the Italian bohemian poets and writers (1860-1880) translated into English for the first time), London, 2005.
He was dressed in dusty black like the bohemian poet he once was, his untied shoelaces flapping on the concrete floor.
She had nothing to gain by an association with a bohemian eccentric poet such as Pound, who was definitely "left bank" in his views and works.
Baylor University, a Baptist school that has been known for its politically conservative alumni, houses a shrine to a group of bohemian poets.
Melleri was an archetype of a Finnish bohemian poet.
Other pre-World War I subcultures were smaller social groupings of hobbyists or a matter of style and philosophy amongst artists and bohemian poets.
It is still about the unhappy love affair of the tubercular flower girl, Mimi, and her bohemian poet, Rodolfo.
His personal appearance often almost overshadowed his literary merits and in many ways he played the role of the "typical" bohemian poet with a turbulent private life.
In Paris, he became a bohemian poet who even flirted with Roman Catholicism (much more in fashion for experimental intellectuals then than it is now).
Opera buffs are routinely asked to accept, say, a portly tenor as a starving bohemian poet.