Author | Epoch | Work | Type | Quote | Term |
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Terenti Graneli | 1898-1934 | Fantastic night (Terenti Graneli, Selected Works, Tbilisi, 1979) | Poetry | “Right Metekhi, shattered golden Armaz, Green mirage, night arch, pretty face. The diamond is trickling down like a tear into the Pan’s torrent” (pg. 50) |
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Archil | 1927-1997 | Medea’s sorrow (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | The poem “Medea’s Sorrow” depicts one of the most well-known ancient Greek myths about the voyage of the Argonauts to Colchis. (pg. 100) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | In Istanbul (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | “Troy can be seen in the ancient myth. […] Even now it knows not what happened, Why were doors opened to the wooden horse And Hecuba’s mourning and sobbing Are shaking... |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | Eureka! (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | “Now I am here. In a small port of Syracuse, Brother Archimedes, […] the greatest of Syracusans” (pg. 213) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | Last will (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | “To help only through the Muses is impossible.” […] (pg. 164) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | Epitaph (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | Epitaph (pg. 114-115) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | ***(Hamlet) (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | “Hamlet. Electra. Richard. Medea. The old windy days are in the past. My life is speedily coming to the final act Like drama or comedy”. (pg. 79) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | If at the Rubicon (Archil Sulakauri, works in 3 volumes, vol. 1, Poetry – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi 1997) | Poetry | “[…]At the Rubicon, There stands thoughtfully Caesar […] with distant dreams about ancient Rome" (pg. 78) |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | Romulus (Archil Sulakauri, works in three volumes, vol. I, Poems – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi, 1997) | Poetry | “Still hanging onto the wolf’s breasts Romulus … That is Romul and Remus. […] To found Rome in this world You should have been breastfed by wolf” (pg.... |
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Archil Sulakauri | 1927-1997 | Minotaur (Archil Sulakauri, works in three volumes, vol. I, Poems – Stories, edited by Lia Sharvashidze, Tbilisi, 1997) | Poetry | The poem “Minotaur”, as is seen from its title, depicts one of the best-known ancient Greek myths about Cretan king Minos and his bull-headed son Minotaur, who was shut up in the... |
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