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The order was given to abandon ship, with Georgic now sinking by the stern.
It is an example of georgic and pastoral poetry.
She went back the next day, and this time Georgic wore a gray cloak, but the events went as before.
Only one commentator agreed with him that it was a reference to the fourth of Virgil's Georgic poems.
The third banquet, Georgic arrived grandly, and the daughter recognized him by the hole, and they married.
Another such variant is Georgic and Merlin.
Others have also referred to the text as an early example of the oxymoronic "town eclogue," or "urban georgic".
The third day, Georgic wore a purple cloak, and he stopped and borrowed a long iron fork that a man was using on the stove.
Georgic for a Forgotten Planet (2008)
Once the Georgic entered service, Homeric became surplus on the Atlantic and she was sent cruising full-time.
In January 1933 the Georgic began to sail the Southampton to New York route.
Greatships.net - Postcards of Georgic.
Any georgic or realist focus on agriculture is absent "his cornfield is just part of a landscape where middle-class people take their leisure.
Next, Saturn's son, dispatch their golden kin Whom Virgil lauded in Georgic lay!
"Octavian in the Fourth Georgic", Classical Quarterly, Vol.
On 12 December, it was the turn of the SS Georgic with 1,200 horses that would have been used on the Western Front.
The poem is rooted the Virgilian georgic and Augustan literature; it is one of the first long poems published by Smart.
With these words Smart also introduces the georgic basis of the poem and that he would "teach" how to farm hops in order to use them to flavor alcoholic drinks.
Oceanics keel was dismantled and the steel was used in two new smaller motor ships: Britannic (III) and Georgic.
Georgic and Merlin is a French fairy tale collected by François Cadic in "La Paroisse bretonne".
The flotilla sent included the large troopships Georgic, Duchess of York, Franconia, RMS Lancastria and Oronsay.
When she was sent, Georgic asked the bird for a horse, a sword, and a black cloak; he took her on his horse and carried her to the place, where he called for the dragon.
In August 1939 the Georgic returned to the Liverpool to New York route and made five round trips before being requisitioned for trooping duties in the conflicts of World War II.
However, this examination admittedly does not focus on the poem as a georgic, but emphasizes an Augustan nature of the poem, especially its potential as a satirical attack upon John Philip's Cyder (1708).
On 10 May 1934 the ship became part of the fleet of the newly amalgamated Cunard-White Star Line, and Georgic joined the Britannic on the London, Southampton, New York route.