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         Sappho:     more books (100)
  1. Highest Apple by Judy Grahn, 01 March, 1985
  2. Sappho of Lesbos: Her life and times, by Arthur Edward Pearse Brome Weigall, 1932
  3. Poems and fragments by Sappho, 1965
  4. Classical Age (Laurel Masterpieces of World Literature) by Lionel Casson, 1965
  5. The Other Sappho: A Novel by Ellen Frye, 01 October, 1989
  6. Sappho: The Tenth Muse by Nancy Freedman, July, 1998
  7. Sappho. Ein griechischer Sommernachtstraum. by Joachim Fernau, 01 May, 2001
  8. Sappho: A Play in Verse by Lawrence Durrell, 01 June, 1967
  9. Three Archaic Poets: Archilochus, Alcaeus, Sappho by Anne Pippin Burnett, October, 1983
  10. Herzgedanken: Das Leben der "deutschen Sappho" von ihr selbst erzählt by Anna Luise Karsch, 1981
    More books from Canada, United Kingdom, Germany and France sites

101. Sappho
You are visitor number since February 29, 1996 in the first year 40029 visits to this site -. Last update July 4, 1998. PAGE DESIGNED AND MAINTAINED BY
http://starpoet.com/sappho/sappho.htm
You are visitor number since February 29, 1996
- in the first year 40,029 visits to this site - Last update July 4, 1998 PAGE DESIGNED AND MAINTAINED BY
STARPOET

102. The Poetry Of Sarah Ruden - Sappho, Fragment 31
The Poetry of Sarah Ruden (Winner of the 1995 CNA Literary Award) sappho, Fragment 31.
http://zingsolutions.com/Sarah/sappho.htm
Sappho, Fragment 31
The man who sits across from you
Is almost like a god to me,
And you are rare to listen to—
Your voice, your words. My heart beats (but my blood is gone)
At the sound of your sweet laugh.
I cannot look at you for long,
I cannot speak. My tongue is wounded, and a light
Flame runs beneath my skin.
In my eyes there is no sight,
But my ears roar. Dank sweat and trembling pass
Where my body was before. I am greener than grass, I am almost dying. But courage is enough, because... Click on speaker to hear the poem Download RealAudio 5.0 Player On the Sublime , which was the sole means of the poem's survival. From: Other Places Author: Sarah Ruden William Waterman Publications, South Africa Comments? A selection of poems The Storm African Children This Body Teaching The Delegation The Conversion of Saint Augustine The Advertisement Old Man by the Highway Endymion in Ohio Sappho , Fragment 31 Summer at the University A Beggar Outside Cape Town Station The Trojan King Priam Visits Achilles in the Greek Camp Index Author Poetry Reviews ... Sites These Pages were first created in November 1996.

103. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Wu Tsao
This page includes a brief biography and a small selection of poems.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/wu_tsao.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Wu Tsao
Wu Tsao
19th Century
Wu Tsao was born sometime around 1800; her year of birth and death are uncertain. She was the daughter of a merchant and married a merchant herself. Her experiences with these men were not positive and she sought out the company of women, as friends and as lovers. She wrote erotic poems to courtesans, creating unashamed lyric passages full of the sweetness of yearning. She was China's great lesbian poet, and she was popular while she lived, her songs sung throughout China. Her poetry dealt with a variety of topics, unlike other women poets of her time. This versatility, combined with casual style and personal tone, probably contributed to her popularity. Later in life, Wu Tsao moved to seclusion and became a Taoist priestess. tz'u poets of the Ching (Manchu) Dynasty. Given the quality of Wu Tsao's work and her history, it is disturbing to find that her name rarely appears in Western profiles of poets, and she is not included in literary discussions of the lesbian poetic tradition.

104. GUBA - Images In Alt.binaries.nospam.sappho Page
Erotica Images Nospam.sappho. Dates; All Aug 09 Aug 07 Aug 06 Aug 05 Aug 04 Aug 03 Aug 02 Aug 01 Jul 31 Jul 30 Jul 29 Jul 28
http://proscriptio.guba.com/redir/1529/34552536/sexblogs/
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105. Sappho And Alcaeus - A Yokepair Of Opposites
Comparison of the two contemporary writers, sappho and Alcaeus of Lesbos.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa022200a.htm
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Sappho and Alcaeus flourished in the 42 Olympiad (612-609 B.C.).
Sappho and Alcaeus (flourished in the 42 Olympiad (612-609 B.C.) were both contemporaries, natives of Mytilene on Lesbos, and aristocrats affected by local power struggles, but beyond that, they had little in common except the most important: lyric poetry. In explanation for their remarkable gift, it was said that when Orpheus was torn to pieces by the Thracian women, his head and lyre were carried to and buried on Lesbos.

106. New Page 1
The University of the Philippines lesbian organization aimed at fostering camaraderie among the lesbian students.
http://members.tripod.com/up_sappho_society/
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next Articles The Questions We Get:
Lesbians Answer Questions

on Life, Love, Faith, and Sex
Lesbian Identity ...
and the Politics of Butch-Femme Roles
The U.P. Sappho Society was the first and only university-based lesbian organization in the Philippines. It was founded in 1999 and provided solace and companionship to many lesbian students during its time. Although the organization is now inactive, our website is still running in the hopes of providing helpful information to young lesbians who are coming to terms with their sexuality. Contact Us Other LGBT Organizations: Womyn Supporting Womyn Center Indigo Pro-Gay Philippines Task Force Pride / Pride Manila

107. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Amy Lowell
Poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_seward.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Anna Seward
Anna Seward
Anna Seward was a poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century. She was the daughter of Thomas Seward, the canon of Lichfield, and Elizabeth Hunter. Elizabeth died and left Thomas a widoweran event that left Anna without a mother but with the freedom not to marry. As the eldest daughter, it was her responsibility to care for her father, and so she stayed at Lichfield and tended to him through senility. When he died, she was in her forties, and no longer under any social obligation to marry. As she was quite outspoken in her opinions of marriage (openly criticizing popular guidebooks for women that purported any marriage as preferable to none) the inability to marry young does not seem to have been a problem for her. Anna was well-educated, known for her lively, generous nature and her unconventional ideas. She was educated at home, and read French, Italian, and Latin. Lichfield was one of the major provincial literary centers of the 18th century, and hers was a literary household. She began writing poetry young, publishing in periodicals and circulating her poems among friends. Her style of verse was more conventional than her ideas, tending toward the enthusiastic and sentimental. She wrote many poems commemorating events and celebrating special places, and she is best known for these, as well as for her elegies. But another important topic to her was love, passionately expressed but always cast as friendship, and often directed toward Honora Sneyd.

108. Sisters Of Sappho
Founded in 1996, Sisters of sappho is a lesbian discussion group at the University of Arizona. We provide support to lesbian, bisexual, transgendered,
http://members.tripod.com/~angtaylor/sos.htm
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Sisters of Sappho
About us
Founded in 1996, Sisters of Sappho is a lesbian discussion group at the University of Arizona . We provide support to lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and questioning women in the Tucson community, consisting mostly of university students. We are a part of the Women's Resource Center , in the Student Union, 3rd floor. We meet weekly during the regular school year, on Wednesday nights at 6:00 pm in the Pride Alliance room, 2nd floor. Questions? Call the WRC at 621-3919, Pride Alliance at 621-7585, or contact Jonna. (To get rid of that annoying pop-up ad, please drag it to a lower corner of the page. If you just close the window, it will pop-up again the next page you load.)
What we do
While each week we do usually meet for discussion, we also do plenty of other things. Some of the things we've done include camping trips (see our pics!), movie nights, outings to basketball games, slumber parties, picnics, a film series, karaoke, potlucks, and parties for Christmas and Halloween. In the future, we hope to go hiking, bowling, and more camping trips!
Pictures
Links
  • Women's Resource Center at the U of A
  • Pride Alliance,
  • 109. Guardian Unlimited Books | News | After 2,600 Years, The World Gains A Fourth Po
    Plato believed sappho should be honoured not merely as a poet but as a Muse. A newly found poem by sappho, acknowledged as one of the greatest poets of
    http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,1513491,00.html
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    Letters: Posh reads
    Jo-Anne Nadler: Immaculate deception Competition to reveal Britain's favourite gay novel 'Booksellers must not allow the niche to become a cul-de-sac' ... Centre to explore and celebrate children's books
    After 2,600 years, the world gains a fourth poem by Sappho
    John Ezard
    Friday June 24, 2005

    110. Isle Of Lesbos: Vita Sackville-West's Letters
    Two letters to Virginia Woolf, and one to Violet Trefusis.
    http://www.sappho.com/letters/vitas-w.html
    Isle of Lesbos : Vita Sackville-West's Letters
    Letters from Vita Sackville-West
    To Virginia Woolf and Violet Trefusis
    Letters
    To Virginia Woolf, January 21, 1926
    Milan [posted in Trieste] However I won't bore you with any more. We have re-started, and the train is shaky again. I shall have to write at the stations - which are fortunately many across the Lombard plain. Venice. The stations were many, but I didn't bargain for the Orient Express not stopping at them. And here we are at Venice for ten minutes only, a wretched time in which to try and write. No time to buy an Italian stamp even, so this will have to go from Trieste. The waterfalls in Switzerland were frozen into solid iridescent curtains of ice, hanging over the rock; so lovely. And Italy all blanketed in snow. We're going to start again. I shall have to wait till Trieste tomorrow morning. Please forgive me for writing such a miserable letter. V.

    111. Guardian Unlimited Books | LRB Essay | Lady Of Lesbos
    If Not, Winter Fragments of sappho by Anne Carson Virago, 397 pp, £12.99 The sappho History by Margaret Reynolds Palgrave, 311 pp, £19.99
    http://books.guardian.co.uk/lrb/articles/0,6109,1137390,00.html
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    Other essays

    Colin Burrow on gardens
    Divided we stand She never stooped to conquer Lady of Lesbos ... Kathleen Jamie visits midwinter Orkney
    Lady of Lesbos
    Poet, courtesan, bisexual, victim... Emily Wilson looks beyond the labels for the essence of Sappho
    Monday February 2, 2004

    112. ELECTRONIC ANTIQUITY V4N2
    Poor sappho! She is so often in the position of the one different member of the group sappho is The Woman. We cannot help interrogating her this way;
    http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/ElAnt/V4N2/scodel.html

    Announcements: The Special Collections
    Reading Room is still closed for renovations.
    Please continue to check our web site for more information...
    ELECTRONIC ANTIQUITY:
    COMMUNICATING THE CLASSICS
    Editors: Terry Papillon Terry.Papillon@vt.edu Andrew Becker
    (Book Reviews) abecker@vt.edu
    APRIL 1998
    Volume IV, Number 2
    Sappho's Bittersweet Songs:
    Configurations of Female and Male in Ancient Greek Lyric
    Lyn Hatherly Wilson
    London and New York: Routledge, 1996. 232 pp.
    Reviewed by: Ruth Scodel
    Department of Classical Studies,
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, U.S.A. email: rscodel@umich.edu The author, herself a poet, looks to Sappho for more than Sappho can provide. Women poets and lesbians can hardly avoid romanticizing and idealizing Sappho; she is not just the representative Woman, she is our originary myth. Sappho does not seems to worry about how she can be a woman and a poet. Nothing in her surviving corpus indicates that she had to struggle to achieve her voice or that her poetic role was socially exceptional. On the contrary, she seems completely at ease with her own poetic authority. Certainly in some of her most famous works, such as the Priamel Poem, she defines her erotic values and the poetry that celebrates them against other values and other poetic genres, particularly epic. While Archilochus may similarly define his poetry in opposition to epic, Sappho's position has a special resonance, because it echoes the way epic (and presumably the wider culture) assigns gender roles: war, Homer says, is a concern for men, not women; so when Sappho claims that sights of war are less beautiful that the object of a person's erotic longing, she calls on gendered categories. Still, gender is not the only category at work. Perhaps if the remains were less fragmentary, it would be easier to identify what is gendered in Sappho's song - but perhaps not.

    113. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Aphra Behn
    Brief biographical information, the texts of two poems, and links to further resources.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_behn.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Aphra Behn
    Aphra Behn
    Aphra Behn ( 33k JPG image ), alleged by Vita Sackville-West to be the first women in England to earn a living as a writer, is a bit of a mystery. Little is known about her backgroundwho her parents were and where she was bornbut the details of her life that are known paint the portrait of an intriguing woman. Aphra lived for a time in Surinam, an experienced that inspired her first novel, Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave (1688). She was married for a short time and widowed at age 25. She secured employment as a spy for King Charles II and was sent to Belgium in this capacity. The King refused to pay her return trip, however, and after borrowing the funds to return, she was thrown into debtor's prison. After leaving prison, Aphra worked hard to make sure she was always capable of supporting herself. She became a successful London playwright and then a novelist. She wrote poetry, feeling that this form allowed her to express her "masculine" side. Aphra's opinions were unconventional, and because she openly expressed her viewpoints in her lifestyle and through her writing, she was seen as scandalous. Her poetry remarks on romantic relationships with both men and women, discusses rape and impotence, puts forth a woman's right to sexual pleasure, and includes scenes of eroticism between men.

    114. Learning Commons - What Is Culture? - Glossary Item - Sappho
    sappho (born ~630 BCE) was a famous woman poet of ancient Greece. Little is known about her life, but many fragments of her lyrical poetry remain.
    http://www.wsu.edu:8001/vcwsu/commons/topics/culture/glossary/sappho.html
    Sappho
    Sappho (born ~630 BCE) was a famous woman poet of ancient Greece. Little is known about her life, but many fragments of her lyrical poetry remain. Her most celebrated works are epithalamia, or marriage songs, and personal love poems. Many of the latter are sensual poems addressed to other women. use your browser's "back" function to return to the text
    browse glossary index

    115. Monadnock Review
    The major fragments translated by Peter SaintAndr©.
    http://www.monadnock.net/translations/sappho.html
    Monadnock Review
    http://www.saint-andre.com/poems/ You will be redirected there in 2 seconds.

    116. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Gertrude Stein
    Includes a brief biography of Stein, along with one of her poems and a list of further reading materials both online and off.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/g_stein.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Gertrude Stein
    Gertrude Stein
    Gertude Stein was born in Pennsylvania to Jewish-Bavarian parents.She was educated briefly in Europe and then at Radcliffe. She studied psychology under William James, and his influence runs through her work. Her life in Paris motivated much of her experimental writing. Cezanne's and Matisse's painting inspired the composition of her early Three Lives (1909) while Picasso's cubism informs her astonishing prose-poem Tender Buttons (1914). Her novel Q.E.D. (1903) published posthumously as Things as They Are ) explores the jealousies and desires bewteen three young women. The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1932) records her relationship with Alice. Biography by Alix North
    Selected Work
    from Before the Flowers of Friendship Faded Faded I love my love with a v
    Because it is like that
    I love my love with a b
    Because I am beside that
    A king.

    117. Sappho: Poems
    Six poems from various late 19th century translations.
    http://www.poetry-archive.com/s/sappho.html
    POEMS BY SAPPHO: RELATED LINKS BROWSE THE POETRY ARCHIVE: A B C D ... Email Poetry-Archive.com

    118. Sappho And The Isle Of Lesbos
    sappho was a Greek poetess and teacher at a girls school on the Island of Not much is known about sappho s life, and only a few of her works remain.
    http://members.aol.com/matrixwerx/glbthistory/sappho.htm
    Sappho
    Sappho was a Greek poetess and teacher at a girls school on the Island of Lesbos during the 6th century B.C. The exact dates of her birth and death are unknown. Her lyric poetry was so exquisite that Plato called her the "tenth muse." Much of her poetry was about both the ecstasy and pain of love, which was virtually unknown in poetry until that time. She also wrote hymns of praise to the Greek Goddesses, particularly Aphrodite. Not much is known about Sappho's life, and only a few of her works remain. Early translators, disturbed that many of her passionate love poems were addressed to adolescent girls, simply changed their gender in translation to fit their world view. Sappho's books were burned by Christians in 380 A.D. at the insistance of Pope Gregory Nazianzen. The rest of her works may have been destroyed in 1073 A.D. when Pope Gregory VII ordered another book burning. In Sappho's only complete surviving poem she asks the Goddess Aphrodite to help her win the heart of a reluctant young lady: O immortal Aphrodite of the many-colored throne

    119. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Edna St. Vincent Millay
    Five poems.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/e_millay.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Edna St. Vincent Millay
    Edna St. Vincent Millay
    Edna St. Vincent Millay, twentieth-century poet and playwright, was best known for her lyrical poetry. She wrote many poems in traditional sonnet form, on topics such as love, fidelity, erotic desire, and feminist issues. What isn't as widely publicized is that she also acknowledged herself as bisexual and had many affairs with women before her marriage. It's not clear if she continued sexual involvements with women after marriage (though it is quite possible), nor is it clear which of her poems are written about women rather than men. She grew up in a different sort of familypast the age of seven, her father wasn't present, as her mother (Cora) asked him to leave. Cora was a nurse who encouraged Millay (called Vincent by her close friends) and her sisters in musical and literary pursuits. Millay was brought up to be self-sufficient and was taught that ambition was good, an upbringing reflected in her accomplishments of later years. At her mother's encouragement, Millay entered her poem "Renascence" into a poetry contest and won fourth placed. When the poem was published, she gained literary recognition and earned a scholarship to Vassar. At Vassar, she continued to write poetry and became involved in theater. In 1922 one of her plays

    120. Glbtq >> Literature >> Sappho
    Admired through the ages as one of the greatest lyric poets, the ancient Greek writer sappho is today esteemed by lesbians around the world as the
    http://www.glbtq.com/literature/sappho.html
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    Sappho (ca 630? B.C.E.)
    page: The earliest woman writer whose work survives and the most famous, Sappho has been admired throughout the ages. To the ancients, she needed no introduction: She was known simply as the poetess, the female equivalent to Homer, the poet. She was so esteemed by her compatriots that her portrait graced the coins of her native Lesbos. The Importance of Sappho She was admired by male poets such as Baudelaire, A. C. Swinburne, and Ezra Pound as the greatest of lyric poets; by female poets like Natalie Barney, Amy Lowell, and H.D. as the font of their poetic tradition. Sponsor Message.
    To lesbians around the world today, she is the archetypal lesbian and their symbolic mother. Although Sappho was the sole woman to be admitted to the canon of the nine great lyric poets in antiquity, she was the only one of them to attain mythic status when Plato first elevated her to the rank of the Muses. She is the only ancient author to have become the stuff of legend: She was a popular subject for Greek art from the sixth and fifth century B.C.E. onward, she was presumably the subject of the six different Greek comedies entitled

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