Infobox Standard title The Blue Juniata comment image BlueJuniata1844.png image size caption Cover of sheet music, 1844. writer Marion Dix Sullivan composer lyricist published written 1844 in music 1844 language English form original artist recorded by performed by The Blue Juniata is a popular song written by Marion Dix Sullivan in 1841. It was one of the most popular parlor song s of the Nineteenth Century, and the first commercially successful song written by an American woman. ref Pendle, Women & Music , p. 210 Marion Dix Sullivan floruit fl. 1840 1850 was the first American woman to write what today would be called a hit song, her ballad The Blue Juniata 1844 . note 1802&ndash 60 ref In The Blue Juniata , bright Alfarata, the Indian girl, sings the praises of her warrior while she travels along the Juniata River . Lyrics The Blue Juniata as first published ref Sullivan, The Blue Juniata Sheet music . ref Wild roved an Indian girl, Bright Alfarata, Where sweep the waters Of the blue Juniata Swift as an antelope Through the forest going, Loose were her jetty locks, In many tresses flowing. Gay was the mountain song Of bright Alfarata, Where sweep the waters Of the blue Juniata. Strong and true my arrows are, In my painted quiver, Swift goes my light canoe Adown the rapid river. Bold is my warrior good, The love of Alfarata, Proud waves his snowy plume Along the Juniata. Soft and low he speaks to me, And then, his war cry sounding, Rings his voice in thunder loud, From height to height resounding. So sang the Indian girl, Bright Alfarata, Where sweep the waters Of the blue Juniata. Fleeting years have borne away The voice of Alfarata Still sweeps the river on&mdash Blue Juniata References Reflist Bibliography Pendle, Karin. Women & Music A History . Bloomington, Indiana Indiana University Press 2001 . Sullivan, Marion Dix. The Blue Juniata Sheet music . Boston Oliver Ditson 1844 . Two versions of this work may be found digitally scanned at http memory.loc.gov The ... more details
one source date July 2011 Shakes versus Shav 1949 is a puppet play written by George Bernard Shaw . It was Shaw s penultimate dramatic work. The play runs for 20 minutes in performance. The play was written by Shaw for the Lanchester Marionettes who were based in their own theatre in Foley House, Malvern, Worcestershire, UK. The company s founders, Waldo and Muriel Lanchester, performed regularly in the Malvern Festival. Shaw, having seen their performances over the years, wrote Shakes Versus Shav for the company in 1949. Waldo Lanchester carved the two marionettes and Muriel costumed them. The Shaw puppet is now housed in the George Bernard Shaw Museum. The play comprises a comic argument between the two playwrights, as a form of intellectual equivalent of Punch and Judy . In 2007 it was revived by Henry Bell at the Orange Tree Theatre with Dudley Hinton and John Paul Connelly playing the parts written for puppets. John Thaxter of The Stage described it as history making . ref http www.thestage.co.uk reviews review.php 17130 trainee directors showcase the twelve pound The Stage, Review, 2007 . ref Plot summary Shakespeare challenges Shaw as an upstart, quoting lines from his own plays. Shaw claims that Macbeth has been bettered by Walter Scott Scott s novel Rob Roy novel Rob Roy , and proves the point by staging a fight between the ghosts of the two Scots, which Rob Roy wins. Shaw then asserts that Adam Lindsay Gordon has outdone Shakespeare s verse, quoting the lines The beetle booms adown the glooms And bumps among the clumps in fact a garbled version of lines by James Whitcomb Riley . Shakespeare laughs at this. He tells Shaw that he could never have written Hamlet or King Lear . Shaw replies that Shakespeare could not have written Heartbreak House , and creates a pastiche of his own play with the characters posed in imitation of Millais s painting File Millais berfahrt nach Nordwest.jpg The North West Passage . Shakespeare defends the emotional power of his wo ... more details
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essay like date May 2011 wikt Doggerel is a derogatory term for Poetry verse considered of little literature literary value. The word probably derived from dog , suggesting either ugliness, puppyish clumsiness, or unpalatability as in food fit only for dogs . Doggerel is attested to have been used as an adjective since the fourteenth century and a noun since at least 1630. ref cite web last Harper first Douglas title Doggerel url http www.etymonline.com index.php?term doggerel work Online Etymological Dictionary ref Variants Doggerel might have any or all of the following failings trite, clich , or overly sentimental content forced or imprecise rhyme s faulty meter poetry meter misordering of words to force correct meter trivial subject inept handling of subject Usage As early as the late fourteenth century, Harry Bailey interrupts Chaucer s unendurable Tale of Sir Topas , calling it rhyme doggerel Sir Thopas was a doughty swain, White was his face as paindemain, His lippes red as rose. His rode is like scarlet in grain, And I you tell in good certain He had a seemly nose. His hair, his beard, was like saffroun, That to his girdle reach d adown, His shoes of cordewane Of Bruges were his hosen brown His robe was of ciclatoun, That coste many a jane. ref The Canterbury Tales The Tale of Sir Thopas, ll. 724 35 ref Doggerel is usually the sincere product of poetic incompetence, and only unintentionally humorous, as with the work of Julia A. Moore , the sweet singer of Michigan Andrew was a little infant, And his life was two years old He was his parents eldest boy, And he was drowned, I was told. His parents never more can see him In this world of grief and pain, And Oh they will not forget him While on earth they do remain. On one bright and pleasant morning His uncle thought it would be nice To take his dear little nephew Down to play upon a raft, Where he was to work upon it, An this little child would company be The raft the water rushed around it, Yet he the dange ... more details
Infobox character name Princess Ozma of Oz series Oz colour lightgreen image Image Ozma.gif 200px caption Illustration from The Lost Princess of Oz by John R. Neill first The Marvelous Land of Oz 1904 alias Tippetarius or Tip species human fairy gender Female as Ozma br Male as Tip br occupation Supreme ruler of Oz title Queen officially , Princess more commonly family Pastoria father children N A, though Jack Pumpkinhead thinks of himself as her son relatives Queen Lurline s fairy band L. Frank Baum said she descends from a long line of fairy queens creator L. Frank Baum Princess Ozma is a fictional character in the Land of Oz , created by L. Frank Baum . She appears in every book of the series except the first, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz 1900 . She is the rightful ruler of Oz, and Baum indicated that she would reign in the fairyland forever, being immortal. Baum described her physical appearance in detail, in The Marvelous Land of Oz Her eyes sparkled as two diamonds, and her lips were tinted like a tourmaline. All adown her back floated tresses of ruddy gold, with a slender jeweled circlet confining them at the brow. Despite Baum s own description, Ozma was almost always illustrated with raven hair in the original editions of the Oz books. The classic books While still an infant, Ozma, the daughter of the former King Pastoria Pastoria of Oz , was given to the witch Mombi by the Wizard of Oz character Wizard of Oz . Mombi transformed Ozma into a boy and called him Tip short for Tippetarius in order to prevent the rightful ruler of Oz from ascending to the throne. Thus, Ozma spent her childhood with Mombi in the form of the boy Tip, and had no memory of ever having been a girl. In The Marvelous Land of Oz , Glinda the Good Sorceress discovered what had happened and forced Mombi to turn Tip back into Ozma ever since then, the Princess has possessed the Throne of Oz although many realms within Oz remained unaware of her authority . In some of his last Oz books, namel ... more details
About the book the street ballad after which it is named Finnegan s Wake Use dmy dates date July 2011 Infobox book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name Finnegans Wake title orig translator image Image Joyce wake.jpg alt Simple book cover, unadorned. 200px author James Joyce cover artist country language English genre Sui generis publisher Faber and Faber release date 4 May 1939 media type Print hardback and paperback pages isbn 0 14 118126 5 congress PR6019.O9 F5 1999 dewey 823 .912 21 oclc 42692059 preceded by Ulysses novel Ulysses 1922 followed by Finnegans Wake is a work of Comic novel comic fiction ref While some critics argue for treating Finnegans Wake as a novel, Tim Conley articulates the current critical consensus on this matter when he states that the Wake is not a novel or, at least, it follows none of the traditions of the novel, makes no claims to be a novel, and its author did not refer to it as such. refConley2003 Conley 2003 http books.google.at books?id MV6zTbGNcU0C&lpg PA109&ots M4OCFEOfAv&dq tim 20conley 20finnegans 20wake 20novel&hl de&pg PA109 v onepage&q&f false p. 109 ref by Irish literature Irish author James Joyce , significant for its experimental style and resulting reputation as one of the most difficult works of fiction in the English language. ref http books.google.co.uk books?id 0j ehka0ZLsC&pg PA3&dq finnegans wake difficult&client firefox a Joyce, Joyceans, and the Rhetoric of Citation , p 3, Eloise Knowlton, University Press of Florida, 1998, ISBN 0 8130 1610 X ref ref http books.google.co.uk books?id hIg80jT5aOIC&pg RA3 PA245&dq finnegans wake experimental&client firefox a What Art is The Esthetic Theory of Ayn Rand , p 245, Louis Torres, Michelle Marder Kamhi, Open Court Publishing, 2000, ISBN 0 8126 9372 8 ref Written in Paris over a period of seventeen years, and published in 1939, two years before the author s death, Finnegans Wake was Joyce s final work. The entire book is written in a largely i ... more details