Author | Epoch | Work | Type | Quote | Term |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Stone of Former Temple (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. IV, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “Had sensitive nerves been enough for becoming a poet, I would have been better than Homer and Shakespeare”. |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Stone of Former Temple (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. IV, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “The Victorious Sisyphus”… (pg. 67) |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Till then (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. I, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “And Pilate and Herod made friends with each other”. (pg. 466) |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Till then (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. I, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “But what can I do, I also consider my unworthy self a descendant of Atlantis”. (pg. 414) |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Till then (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. I, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “I wonder, that great country, Atlantis, what made it disappear […] I think I know, I know what terminated Atlantis”. (pg. 413) |
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Guram Dochanashvili | 1939- | Mikheil and Alexander (Guram Dochanashvili, Four Volumes, V. I, Tbilisi, 2003) | Prose | “Give me your name - Alexander. - Yes, good name, Macedonian”… (pg. 71) |
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Jansugh Charkviani | 1931- | Thorny Laurel (Jansugh Charkviani, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. 2, Tbilisi, 1992) | Poetry | “What to do, Pilate Has washed His hands”. (pg. 387) |
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Jansugh Charkviani | 1931- | Jankhvat (Jansugh Charkviani, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. 2, Tbilisi, 1992) | Poetry | “I am guarding you like Cerberus That is, like a faithful dog”. (pg. 347) |
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Jansugh Charkviani | 1931- | *** We will throw our books to hell (Jansugh Charkviani, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. 2, Tbilisi, 1992) | Poetry | “We will throw our books to hell If only our child unmakes the door into the world of Muses”. (pg. 243) |
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Jansugh Charkviani | 1931- | To Muse (Jansugh Charkviani, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. 2, Tbilisi, 1992) | Poetry | "To Muse" (pg. 242) |
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