Author | Epoch | Work | Type | Quote | Term |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | *** (To anyone, who invades like Jason), (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | To anyone, who invades like Jason (pg. 403) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | Odysseus at Night (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “And the Ocean, vast as can be Is cold, as the hand of beloved […] And is powerful, as the hand of Hephaestus” (pg. 357) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | Pandora’s Box (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | The verse depicts a well known ancient Greek myth on Pandora’s Box (pg. 332-334) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | *** (Here the cradle), (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “It’s the same: the kiss of Judas And the cup of poison for Socrates! […]” (pg. 324) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | To my childhood friends (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “I’ll see you again – like Odysseus […]” [pg. 308) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | Atlantis, Atlantis (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “The specters - misted up with water - beckoned to me, […] This is a rock, this is a fish and this is Atlantis”. […](pg. 300) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | White Labyrinth (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “I was breast-fed by a kind-hearted she-wolf, As it happened once upon a time in the case of Remus and Romulus […] “(pg. 285) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | *** If I have the wine of “Adesa” )(Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “If I have the wine of “Adesa”, I have no fear of Hades… […]” (pg. 254) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | *** (The Empire of Romans) (Tariel Chanturia, Works in two volumes, Vol. II, edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “The Empire of Romans […] Was sucking blood of Iberia! […]” (pg. 239) |
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Tariel Chanturia | 1932 | Tirade on the topic of cybernetics (Tariel Chanturia, Works in Two Volumes, Vol. II, Edited by R. Siradze, Tbilisi, 1995) | Poetry | “- Apollo, the smart machine kicked the bucket! – They announced one sunny day The smart machine Hephaestus […]” (pg. 60) |
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