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         Tsvetaeva Marina:     more books (100)
  1. Bride of Ice: New Selected Poems by Marina Tsvetaeva, 2009-09-01
  2. Art in the Light of Conscience: Eight Essays on Poetry by Marina Tsvetaeva, 2010-06-29
  3. Selected Poems (Oxford Poets (Manchester, England).) by Marina Tsvetaeva, Elaine Feinstein, 1999-09
  4. Earthly Signs by Marina Tsvetaeva, 2002-11-01
  5. Milestones: A Bilingual Edition (European Poetry Classics) by Marina Tsvetaeva, 2002-07-10
  6. Marina Tsvetaeva v vospominaniyakh sovremennikov. Mgnovenij sled by M. Tsvetaeva, 2006
  7. Marina Tsvetaeva: The Double Beat of Heaven and Hell by Lily Feiler, 1994-01-01
  8. In the Inmost Hour of the Soul (Vox Humana) by Marina Tsvetayeva, Nina Kossman, 1989-05-25
  9. Beyond The Noise Of Time: Readings Of Marina Tsvetaeva's Memories Of Childhood (Stockholm Studies in Russian Literature) by Karin Grelz, 2004-07-31
  10. Marina Tsvetaeva: A captive spirit: Selected prose by Marina Tsvetaeva, 1980-12
  11. A Russian Psyche: The Poetic Mind of Marina Tsvetaeva by Alyssa W. Dinega, 2002-01-01
  12. Captive Lion: The Life of Marina Tsvetayeva by Elaine Feinstein, 1987-08-31
  13. Marina Tsvetaeva in Life by Veronika Losskaya, 1989-03
  14. Marina Tsvetaeva: One Hundred Years : Papers from the Tsvetaeva Centenary Symposium (Modern Russian Literature and Culture, Studies and Texts)

1. Marina Tsvetaeva - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow. She was one of the most original of the Russian 20thcentury poets. Her work was not looked kindly upon by Stalin and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina_Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva Russian , Marina Ivanovna Cvetaeva) (26 September/ 8 October , Moscow – 31 August Yelabuga Tatarstan , suicide) was a Russian and Soviet poet and writer
Contents
  • Early writing career Dysfunctional family life and its effects Personal life
    edit Early writing career
    Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow . She was one of the most original of the Russian 20th-century poets. Her work was not looked kindly upon by Stalin and the Bolshevik r©gime; her literary rehabilitation only began in the 1960s. Tsvetaeva's poetry arose from her own deeply convoluted personality, her eccentricity and tightly disciplined use of language. Among her themes were female sexuality, and the tension in women's private emotions; she bridges the mutually contradictory schools of Acmeism and symbolism
    edit Dysfunctional family life and its effects
    Much of Tsvetaeva's poetry has its roots in the depths of her displaced and disturbed childhood. Her father was Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev , a professor of art history at the University of Moscow , who later founded the Alexander III Museum, which is now known as the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts. Tsvetaeva's mother, Maria Alexandrovna Meyn, was Ivan's second wife, a highly literate woman. She was also a volatile (and a frustrated) concert pianist, with some

2. Marina Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow. Her father, Ivan Tsvetayev, was a professor of art history and the founder of the Museum of Fine Arts. Her mother
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/tsveta.htm
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Marina Ivanova Tsvetaeva (1892-1941) - also Marina Cvetaeva, Marina Tsvetayeva One of the most original of the Russian 20th-century poets, whose literary rehabilitation began in the 1960s. Tsvetaeva's disciplined poetry grew from her own contradictory personality and highly controlled use of language. Among her innumerable themes were female sexuality and the tension between women's private emotions and their public roles. She lived in exile in the 1920s and 1930s because of her political views. After returning to the Soviet Union and being ostracized by the literary community she committed suicide in 1941. What shall I do, singer and first-born, in a
world where the deepest black is grey,
and inspiration is kept in a thermos?
with all this immensity
in a measured world?

(from 'The Poet', trans. by Elaine Feinstein) Tsvetaeva started to write verse in her early childhood. As a poet she debuted at the age of 18 with the collection Evening Album , a tribute to her childhood. The book was privately published and was dedicated to the narcissist diarist Bashkiartseff (1858-1884). Her writings were also examined by

3. A COLLECTION OF POEMS BY MARINA TSVETAEVA
Marina Tsvetaeva published her first verse in 1911, wrote poems between 1918 and 1920 in praise of the White armies and their fight against Bolshevism,
http://www.poetryloverspage.com/poets/tsvetaeva/tsvetaeva_ind.html

4. Marina Tsvetaeva
MARINA TSVETAEVA In each line s strange syllable she awakes as a gull, torn between heaven and earth. I accept her, stand with her face to face.
http://www.sundress.net/stirring/archives/v4/e8/kaminskyi.htm
Ilya Kaminsky
MARINA TSVETAEVA
In each line's strange syllable: she awakes
as a gull, torn
between heaven and earth.
I accept her, stand with her face to face.
in this dream: she wears her dress
like a sail, runs behind me, stopping
when I stop. She laughs
as a child speaking to herself:
"soul = pain + everything else." I bend clumsily at the knees and I quarrel no more, all I want is a human window in a house whose roof is my life. Previously published in Mars Hill Review Location San Francisco, California Email ik001f@yahoo.com Publications The New Republic, American Literary Reivew, etc. Awards Ruth Lilly Fellowship from Poetry Magazine, Milton Center Award, writer in residence at Phillips Exeter Academy, etc. Editor of In Posse Review - August 2002 - hornet Body Parts for Art Naming Trees Divinity is for angels Hogs Loosed En Route to Slaughter The Masturbating Baboon at the Brookfield Zoo Marina Tsvetaeva First Time Crow and Raven Rembrandt while Saskia Watched Instead of the Usual - Stirring's Steamiest Six - The Word Witness It Wasn't Until Later It Not Love Amoroso Current Previous Submit Editors ... Sundress Publications

5. Marina Tsvetaeva - Poems, Biography, Quotes
Free collection of all Marina Tsvetaeva Poems and Biography. See the best poems and poetry by Marina Tsvetaeva.
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Women Poets ... Meaning of Names Marina Tsvetaeva Enlarge Picture View Marina Tsvetaeva: Poems Quotes Biography Books Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow. Her father, Ivan Tsvetayev, was a professor of art history and the founder of the Museum of Fine Arts. Her mother Mariya, n©e Meyn, was a talented concert pianist. The family travelled a great deal and Tsvetaeva attended schools in Switzerland, Germany, and at the Sorbonne, Paris. Tsvetaeva started to write verse in her early childhood. She made her debut as a poet at the age of 18 with the collection Evening Album, a tribute to her childhood. In 1912 Ts.. Continue.. Some of Marina Tsvetaeva Poems Girlfriend Grey Hairs Little World Much Like Me ... View all Marina Tsvetaeva Poems Quote from Author A deception that elevates us is dearer than a host of low truths.

6. Marina Tsvetaeva - Wikiquote
Marina Tsvetaeva (18921941) Extensive site with translations of both poetry and prose, photographs and links. Bilingual (Russian and English).
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Marina_Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva
From Wikiquote
Jump to: navigation search Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva 8 October , Moscow – 31 August , Yelabuga, Tatarstan) was a Russian poet and writer.
edit Sourced
  • What is the main thing in love? to know and to hide. To know about the one you love and to hide that you love. At times the hiding (shame) overpowers the knowing (passion). The passion for the hidden—the passion for the revealed.
    • The House at Old Pimen , ch. 2 (1934)
    Freedom! A wanton slut on a profligate's breast!
    • You came out of a severe, well-proportioned church
    There are books so alive that you're always afraid that while you weren't reading, the book has gone and changed, has shifted like a river; while you went on living, it went on living too, and like a river moved on and moved away. No one has stepped twice into the same river. But did anyone ever step twice into the same book?
    • Pushkin and Pugachev
    A deception that elevates us is dearer than a host of low truths.
    • Pushkin and Pugachev
    edit External links
    Wikipedia has an article about: Marina Tsvetaeva Wikisource has original text related to Author:Marina Tsvetaeva
    • Marina Tsvetaeva (1892-1941) Extensive site with translations of both poetry and prose, photographs and links. Bilingual (Russian and English).

7. StumbleUpon - Marina Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva, book,StumbleUpon discovers web sites based on your interests, learns what you like and brings you more.
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8. JSTOR Lives And Myths Of Marina Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva, Poet i vremia To reformulate Marina Tsvetaeva s taxonomy of poets, there are poets who possess a biography and poets who do not.
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0037-6779(198823)47:3<518:LAMOMT>2.0.CO;2-V

9. Marina Tsvetaeva - Wikipedia
Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow on the 9th of October, 1892. She was one of the most original of the Russian 20thcentury poets, and at the forefront of
http://nostalgia.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina_Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva
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Printable version

Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva Russian poetess and writer, 1892-1941

10. Buy.com - Marina Tsvetaeva: Selected Poems : Marina Tsvetaeva : ISBN 97819030393
Marina Tsvetaeva Selected Poems Marina Tsvetaeva ISBN 9781903039373 Book.
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Marina Tsvetaeva: Selected Poems (Paperback)
Author: Marina Tsvetaeva Translator: Elaine Feinstein Product Image enlarge image
Pricing Additional Info Currently Unavailable: This item is currently unavailable from the Manufacturer. Format: Paperback Format: Paperback ISBN: Publish Date: Publisher: Carcanet Press, Dimensions (in Inches) 8.5H x 5.25L x 0.5T Pages: Edition Number: Buy.com Sku: More about this product Item#: BRCGYS Buy.com Sales Rank: View similar products Product Summary Reviews ISBN: Publisher: Carcanet Press, Buy.com Sales Rank: Annotation:
This selection of poems by major Russian poet Tsvetaeva includes some of her earliest offerings, drawn from her 1910 collection EVENING ALBUM, written when she was 18, through compositions of the Stalinist era in which she was ostracized. In her innovative verse, the bittersweet celebration of Old Russia, as well as the tragedy of living abroad as an emigrant during the upheavals of her homeland, are apparent. These English translations seek to convey her passionate longing.
Author Bio Marina Tsvetaeva
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11. Desired Constellation - Two Untitled Poems By Marina Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva is a confessional poet from Russia. She occupies a place in Russian poetic culture much like Sylvia Plath s in English poetic culture.
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desired constellation
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two untitled poems by marina tsvetaeva
Nov 22, '07 10:28 PM
for everyone Category: Other Marina Tsvetaeva is a confessional poet from Russia. She occupies a place in Russian poetic culture much like Sylvia Plath's in English poetic culture. Like Plath, she wrote poems with unsettling, often probably sexual intensity. Also like Plath, she committed suicide, a fact that has colored much interpretation of her work. I read these facts on the web that she lived a rather sad life, mostly due to the politics that was going on in Russia throughout that time. After returning to the Soviet Union and being ostracized by the literary community she eventually hanged herself in 1941.
I adore these "two untitled poems" very much. They are stimulating poems in every sense of the word, just like the reminder of the downs of life. Wonderful images created. And of course, a beautiful depth.
I do not think, or argue, or complain.

12. Marina Tsvetaeva
Selected poems in English translation by Erdene Huasai.
http://www.geocities.com/erdenechimegb/Marina_Tsvetaeva.html

Sign Guestbook
View Guestbook Marina Tsvetaeva
Mne nravitsya, chto vu bol'nu me mnoi...
I like that you are obsessed, but not by me.
I like that I am sick, but not by you.
That never ever the heavy round Earth
Would sail itself away under our feet.
I like, it is permitted to be funny
And loose - and is not to play with words,
Is not to blush with stifling wave slightly
Have touched sleeves each other's, you and me. And I like still that you can calmly Embrace the others in my dear presence, You don't predict me burning in the hell Because I kiss not you, but someone else. Again and again my tender name, my tender, You haven't mentioned day or night - in vain... That never in the church silence for forever Would sing above us: halli -halleluya! Thank you for that, from very heart and hand, You do love me - and never knowing it! - so much, For peace and rest allowed me at nights, For rarity of seeing you at sunsets, For walking not together under the moon And for the sun is not above us all along, For you are sick - alas! -but not by me, For I am sick - alas! - but not by you.

13. Translations Of Marina Tsvetaeva
The marina tsvetaeva page for Englishspeakers about the Russian poet. Includes a selection of poems, a brief biography and more.
http://home.comcast.net/~kneller/tsvetaeva.html
Marina Tsvetaeva
"Represented on a graph, Tsvetaeva's work would exhibit a curveor rather, a straight linerising at almost a right angle because of her constant effort to raise the pitch a note higher, an idea higher (or, more precisely, an octave and a faith higher.) She always carried everything she has to say to its conceivable and expressible end. In both her poetry and her prose, nothing remains hanging or leaves a feeling of ambivalence. Tsvetaeva is the unique case in which the paramount spiritual experience of an epoch (for us, the sense of ambivalence, of contradictoriness in the nature of human existence) served not as the object of expression but as its means, by which it was transformed into the material of art."
Joseph Brodsky
My Poems...
My poems, written early, when I doubted
that I could ever play the poet’s part,
erupting, as though water from a fountain
or sparks from a petard,
and rushing as though little demons, senseless,
into a sanctuary, where incense spreads,
my poems about death and adolescence

14. Marina Tsvetaeva. The Best Of Marina Tsvetayeva (translated By Ilya Shambat
marina tsvetaeva. The Best of marina Tsvetayeva (translated by Ilya Shambat. March 22, 2002 The most comprehensive translation of marina Tsvetayeva in
http://www.lib.ru/POEZIQ/CWETAEWA/sbornik_engl.txt
Fine HTML Printed version txt(Word,ÊÏÊ) Lib.ru html
    Marina Tsvetaeva. The Best of Marina Tsvetayeva (translated by Ilya Shambat
March 22, 2002 The most comprehensive translation of Marina Tsvetayeva in English language, prepared for 110th anniversary of her birth. Translations from Russian original in chronological order. Includes classics and lesser-known poems, translated directly from Russian anthology. For inquiries, contact ilya_shambat@yahoo.com
    To Mother
In the old Strauss waltz for the first time We had listened to your quiet call, Since then all the living things are alien And the knocking of the clock consoles. We, like you, are gladly greeting sunsets, And are drunk on nearness of the end. All, with which on better nights we're wealthy Is put in the hearts by your own hand. Bowing to a child's dreams with no tire. (Only crescent looked in them indeed Without you)! You have led your kids past Bitter lifetime of the thoughts and deeds. From the early age the sad one's close to us, Laughter bores and home we left behind.. Our ship not in good times left the harbor And it sails by will of every wind! Azure isle of childhood is paling, On the deck of ship we stand alone. It appears, oh mother, to your daughters You've left an inheritance of woe.
    x x x
The street awakens. She looks, exhausted With the mute windows' sullen eyes, On sleepy faces, red from the cold, That with thoughts chase the stubborn sleep away. The blackened trees with rime are covered - With trace mysterious of the night's fun, In gleaming brocade sad ones are standing, Just like the dead the alive among. The gray coat mingles, trampled upon, The forage-cup with a wreathe, a bored look, And the red arms, pressed to the ears, And the black apron with the tied books. The street awakens. She looks, unpleasant With mute windows' sullen eyes, it would seem. To sleep, in a happy thought be forgotten, What life seems to us, this is a dream!

15. Marina Tsvetaeva
The marina tsvetaeva Home Page. A page for Englishspeakers about the Russian poet. Includes a selection of poems, a brief biography, suggested reading and
http://faynights.users.btopenworld.com/Laura/Marina/index.html
The Marina Tsvetaeva Home Page
(for English-speakers)
Some forebear of mine was a violinist,
A horseman and a thief, moreover.
Isn't that where I got my wanderlust,
Why my hair smells of wind and weather?
Swarthy, guiding my hand, is it not really him
Stealing apricots from the fruit-cart?
Curly-haired, hook-nosed, is it not his whim
That my fate is all passion and hazard?
Admiring the tiller at his plough,
In his lips he twirled a sweet-briar.
He made a perfidious friend, but how Dashing and tender a lover. Of moon, pipe and beads he was long a fan, And of all female neighbours... It seems to me he was a cowardly man, My yellow-eyed, distant forebear. That after he'd sold the devil his life He'd not walk through the graveyard at midnight. It occurs to me, too, that he carried a knife Hidden inside his bootflap. That many a time from round some fence He'd leap, a supple feline.

16. Heritage Of Marina Tsvetayeva
We welcome you on a site, devoted to great poet marina Ivanovna tsvetaeva.On our site you can find her verses, prose works, biography, critical publications
http://english.tsvetayeva.com/
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Heritage of Marina Tsvetayeva
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We welcome you on a site, devoted to great poet Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva.On our site you can find her verses, prose works, biography, critical publications, pictures of Tsvetayeva’s Museum-House in Moscow. All your remarks and wishes are welcomed. You can leave them in our forum . If you are interested in some particular material related to Marina Tsvetaeva we are happy to help you. We will be very grateful if you subscribe to our mailing list in which you can find news, poetry and prose of Marina Tsvetaeva.

17. Glbtq >> Literature >> Tsvetaeva, Marina Ivanovna
A lesbian theme runs throughout the works of marina tsvetaeva, widely considered one of the four greatest twentiethcentury Russian poets.
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/tsvetaeva_mi.html
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Tsvetaeva, Marina Ivanovna (1892-1941) Widely considered one of the four greatest twentieth-century Russian poets, and an innovative prose writer and dramatist, Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow on October 8, 1892. Her father was an art professor and her mother a gifted pianist of Polish descent, whose father had forbidden her a concert career. Although Tsvetaeva's mother wanted her daughter to become a pianist, Marina herself was drawn to words and began writing poetry at the age of six. Her first volume of poems, Evening Album , was published in 1910 and consisted of verse written between the ages of fifteen and seventeen. Sponsor Message.
Aside from her youthful love affair with the poet Sophia Parnok, Tsvetaeva's self-acknowledged bisexuality, her lesbianism, and the lesbian theme that runs throughout her poetry, prose, letters, and journals have all been ignored or, at best, mentioned in passing by most of her Western biographers. Most Russian Tsvetaeva scholars try to deny the poet's lesbianism and its significance in her work. Tsvetaeva revealed an attraction to her own sex from childhood both in her reading and in her relationships with other children. She tells the story of her childhood love for another girl in her prose work, "The House at Old Pimen."

18. Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva
, which contains most of tsvetaeva s texts (Russian) The World of marina tsvetaeva (incl. extensive inventory of poems in Russian,
http://max.mmlc.northwestern.edu/~mdenner/Demo/poetpage/tsvetaeva.html
var go_mem="michaeladenner";
Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva
Poems in this Collection
You walk, and look like me.../Èäåøü, íà ìåíÿ ïîõîæèé...
For my poems, written so early.../Ìîèì ñòèõàì, íàïèñàííûì òàê ðàíî...

Go find yourself naive women friends.../Èùè ñåáå äîâåð÷èâûõ ïîäðóã...

Praise to God/Ìîëèòâà
...
I like that you are sick.../Ìíå íðàâèòñÿ, ÷òî âû áîëüíû íå ìíîé...
Timeline for M. I. Tsvetaeva
Tsvetaeva and Efron
The cover to " Mileposts"
Born in Moscow to father, an art history professor at Moscow University and mother of German-Polish descent who was also a fine pianist
Attends boarding schools in Switzerland and Germany, where mother received treatments for lung problems that eventually killed her in1906
Travels to Paris and studies at Sorbonne
First collection Evening Album appears, an intimate work in a lyrical voice that would characterize the majority of her poetic output. Also showcases her command of syllabatonic verse and inventiveness in both versification and stanza structure

19. 61797. Tsvetaeva, Marina. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
61797. tsvetaeva, marina. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996.
http://www.bartleby.com/66/97/61797.html
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20. Author:Marina Tsvetaeva - Wikisource
marina Ivanovna tsvetaeva (Russian ) (October 8, 1892 – August 31, 1941) was a Russian poet and writer.
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Author:Marina_Tsvetaeva
Author:Marina Tsvetaeva
From Wikisource
Jump to: navigation search Author Index: T Marina Tsvetaeva
See also biography media Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva (Russian: Мари́на Ива́новна Цвета́ева) (October 8, 1892 – August 31, 1941) was a Russian poet and writer. Marina Tsvetaeva
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