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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Kinsman, Eugene England
Depletion, Edward L. Hart
White Birds, Randall L. Hall
Wisps, Jim Walker
Rue The Scholar, Clinton F. Larson
Pioneer Stoicism, Sally T. Taylor
Phoenix, Karen Mikkelsen
Anniversary, Jim Walker
War Veteran At A Clinic, Clinton F. Larson
War Veteran At A Clinic, Clinton F. Larson
BYU Studies Quarterly
No abstract provided.
Openings, Orson Scott Card
A Prayer For Faith, Karen Mikkelsen
Tent Flaps, Michael Rutter
Some Observations Of The Deposition Of Archbishop Theodulf Of Orleans In 817, Thomas F. X. Noble
Some Observations Of The Deposition Of Archbishop Theodulf Of Orleans In 817, Thomas F. X. Noble
Quidditas
Theodulf of Orleans, called by Ann Freeman "one of the brightest lights of the Carolingian Renaissance," is one of the most fascinating individuals in the history of the eighth and ninth centuries. He was a fine poet, perhaps the best of the Carolingian era, and more than 4,000 of his verses survive. His Paranesis ad iudices and his work on the filioque dispute indicate that he was a skilled controversialist. Finally, his authorship of the Libri Carolini, the massive Carolingian treatise against the positions on icons taken by the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, reflects a theological knowledge …
Four Poems On Death By Nis Petersen, Otto M. Sorensen
Four Poems On Death By Nis Petersen, Otto M. Sorensen
The Bridge
Very litte of Nis Petersen's poetry has been translated into English, and yet he is regarded as one of Denmark's finest poets in this century. In the following I offer readers of The Bridge translations and interpretations of four poems that deal with death, a subject that concerned Petersen over a considerable period of time. The reader should be cautioned, however, not to deem the poems typical of the poet. Death is one of many themes that run through his work. I have reproduced the originals here from the poet's Samlede Digte. ed. Hans Brix, Gyldendal, 1951 .
Abel, Cain, Orson Scott Card