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The meeting led eventually to their collaboration on the choral work Epithalamion.
The wind sang epithalamion in the trees above, and the night was a chapel in which they stood alone.
The marriage itself was celebrated in Epithalamion.
Epithalamion 1978.
The Epithalamion written in their honor by Claudian survives.
The poem is often grouped with Spenser's poem about his own marriage, the Epithalamion.
Four years later, in 1595, Spenser published Amoretti and Epithalamion.
It was printed as part of a volume entitled "Amoretti and Epithalamion.
Epithalamion for baritone solo, chorus, flute, piano, and strings (1957)
Mead: An Epithalamion.
Epithalamion I, Op.
Epithalamion for mixed chorus a cappella (1984)
"Epithalamion," similar to "Amoretti," deals in part with the unease in the development of a romantic and sexual relationship.
Amoretti and Epithalamion, containing:
The epithalamion written for the occasion by Stilicho's court poet Claudian survives.
Oneiromance (an epithalamion) (Switchback Books, 2008)
He commissioned his friend E. E. Cummings to write his poem "Epithalamion" as a wedding present.
E.E.Cummings' Epithalamion consists of three seven octave parts, and includes numerous references to ancient Greece.
"Introduction" and "Epithalamion," Granta (Cambridge, England), 29 November 1958.
"Aubade" and "Epithalamion," Universities Poetry 2, Keele University Press, 1959.
Edmund Spenser's Amoretti and Epithalamion: A Critical Edition.
In 1934 the press produced Epithalamion by Ida Graves, with 23 full-page wood engravings by Hughes-Stanton.
In Spenser's collected sonnets, Amoretti and Epithalamion (1595), the one numbered 33 is addressed to Bryskett.
The volume included the sequence of 89 sonnets, along with a series of short poems called Anacreontics and an Epithalamion, a public poetic celebration of marriage.
An exception is Edmund Spenser's Amoretti, where the wooing is successful, and the sequence ends with an Epithalamion, a marriage song.
One possibility is to turn a poem that has nothing to do with weddings into an epithalamium by force.
Should I be thinking about knocking off a suitable epithalamium?'
An exception was the epithalamium, a genre of poetry that celebrated a wedding.
In the hands of the poets the epithalamium was developed into a special literary form, and received considerable cultivation.
An epithalamium is a nuptial song or poem, and it's a word an academic friend of my father's used over dinner one night.
"Epithalamium" means "at the wedding couch", and hundreds of such poems constitute a genre in many countries.
"Come, Solon, take a social drop, and give us an epithalamium in your best Greek.
An epithalamium for the occasion was composed by the sophist Julius Pollux.
Epithalamium produced in London, 1963.
A musical epithalamium.
Epithalamium, Op.
He might have played up differences between the two consecutive performances of the Epithalamium over which Somarone throws his fit.
Epithalamium (1966)
Priscus Attalus gave the wedding speech, a classical epithalamium.
Epithalamium for organ (1968)
Epithalamium (1967)
Epithalamium, for string quartet (1997)
Epithalamium, Serenade for orchestra (1904)
Epithalamium of Honorius and Maria.
The Epithalamium for Isabella, or the Fatal Marriage, for theater (1762)
The poet Philip Engelbrecht dedicated an epithalamium to John and Margaret in 1514.
'Epithalamium in English, by the author of Limbomastix.'
'Epithalamium.'
An epithalamium by Catullus paints the wedding night as a time of ripe eroticism, spiced with humorous and bawdy songs from the guests.
Epithalamium in Time of War (New York: L. F. White, 1941)