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         Sappho:     more books (99)
  1. Three Archaic Poets: Archilochus, Alcaeus, Sappho by Anne Pippin Burnett, 2003-06
  2. Erotica: Women's Writing from Sappho to Margaret Atwood by Margaret Reynolds, 1998-02-03
  3. Sappho, one hundred lyrics by Bliss Carman, 2010-08-31
  4. What Sappho Would Have Said: Four Centuries of Love Poems Between Women
  5. Sappho (Gay & Lesbian Writers Series) by Jane McIntosh Snyder, Camille-Yvette Welsch, 2005-04-30
  6. Sappho was a Right on Woman by Sidney Abbott, 1972-01-01
  7. Sophia Parnok: The Life and Work of Russia's Sappho (Cutting Edge : Lesbian Life and Literature) by Diana Burgin, 1994-07-01
  8. Victorian Sappho by Yopie Prins, 1999-02-16
  9. The Poetic Style of the Greek Poet Sappho: A Study in Word Playfulness by Harold Zellner, 2010-08-29
  10. Sappho in Early Modern England: Female Same-Sex Literary Erotics, 1550-1714 (The Chicago Series on Sexuality, History, and Society) by Harriette Andreadis, 2001-07-15
  11. Sappho, One Hundred Lyrics By Bliss Carman by Bliss Carman, 2009-04-28
  12. The Girls, Sappho Goes to Hollywood - 2000 publication by Dana McLllan, 2000-01-01
  13. Sappho of Lesbos; her life and times, with thirteen reproductions from sketches and photographs. by Arthur E Weigall, 1932
  14. The Isles Of Greece: Sappho And Alcaeus (1890) by Frederick Tennyson, 2010-09-10

61. Isle Of Lesbos
Poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_seward.htm
We're sorry; the page you've tried to reach is no longer on this site. The page may have been moved to another location, or it may be part of a section that was removed. You can use the navigation bar above to jump to a specific section of the Isle of Lesbos, or return to our home page Poetry Classical Art Vintage Images ... Alix North
This is an archive site sponsored by The Small Business Operative

62. Sisters Of Sappho
Sisters of sappho. About us. Sisters of sappho is a lesbian discussiongroup at the University of Arizona. We provide support to
http://members.tripod.com/~angtaylor/sos.htm
Sisters of Sappho
About us
Sisters of Sappho is a lesbian discussion group at the University of Arizona . We provide support to lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and questioning women in the Tucson community, consisting mostly of university students. We are a part of the Women's Resource Center , in the Memorial Student Union 202. We meet weekly during the regular school year, on Wednesday nights at 7:00 pm in the Pride Alliance room, MSU 350. Questions? Call the WRC at 621-3919, Pride Alliance at 621-7585, or contact the group's facilitator Alex Kirby . For listserv information, contact Jonna Lopez
What we do
While each week we do usually meet for discussion, we also do plenty of other things. Some of the things we've done include camping trips (see our pics!), movie nights, a slumber party, out for coffee nights, karaoke, a potluck, and parties for Christmas and Halloween. In the future, we hope to go hiking, bowling, and more camping trips!
Pictures
Links
  • Alex's Sisters of Sappho Site
  • Women's Resource Center at the U of A
  • Pride Alliance,
  • 63. Sappho: Poem I
    Text, translation, and interpretation by William Harris PhD, Prof.em. Middlebury College
    http://www.middlebury.edu/~harris/Texts/sappho.1.html
    SAPPHO's only complete Poem: NUMBER I
    (A detailed introduction to Sappho and her world is included in the article SAPPHO under the TRANSLATIONS index on the main index page. The following is the text/commentary section of that longer treatment. The Greek text is available at that location.) This poem is the only complete one we have from the several volumes of Sappho's poetry which were circulating as late as the 8 th c.. A.D. It has always been prized as remarkably sensitive and elegant, but there are dimensions which I believe have not been explored or interpretated. Let me give you first the text in Roman letters for those who do not read Greek, so they can at least read the words aloud and get their general sound. The translation which follows is necessary since Sappho's Aeolic dialect is not the normal Attic Greek you learn in in school, and I believe some help is called for. Of course this translation loses immense detail, specifically the long and short vowels which make a real difference in Greek. There is no initial aspiration -h- in Aeolic so that no problem. The letters -ch- are of course more like -kh-, and the exact pronunciation of the consonants is not exactly known after the passage of two and a half millennia, not surprisingly. The accents which are printed in modern texts may not be the same as Aeolic intonation, but modern Classicists ignore the musical pitches completely, which again removes a critical part of Sappho's lyric poetry. But the poem is readable, singable, soundable as it is, with some imagination.

    64. Sappho Und Ihre Dichtung In Der Deutung Der Forschung, Von I. Kammerer
    Eine hermeneutischkritische Untersuchung der Forschung. Wissenschaftliche Hausarbeit von Iris Kammerer. Exzerpt und Anh¤nge.
    http://www.iris-kammerer.de/html/sappho.html

    65. Sappho: Poem I
    sappho's only complete Poem NUMBER I. (A Whom then Persuasion ..tobring to you, dearest? Who sappho hurts you? And
    http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/Texts/sappho.1.html
    SAPPHO's only complete Poem: NUMBER I
    (A detailed introduction to Sappho and her world is included in the article SAPPHO under the TRANSLATIONS index on the main index page. The following is the text/commentary section of that longer treatment. The Greek text is available at that location.) This poem is the only complete one we have from the several volumes of Sappho's poetry which were circulating as late as the 8 th c.. A.D. It has always been prized as remarkably sensitive and elegant, but there are dimensions which I believe have not been explored or interpretated. Let me give you first the text in Roman letters for those who do not read Greek, so they can at least read the words aloud and get their general sound. The translation which follows is necessary since Sappho's Aeolic dialect is not the normal Attic Greek you learn in in school, and I believe some help is called for. Of course this translation loses immense detail, specifically the long and short vowels which make a real difference in Greek. There is no initial aspiration -h- in Aeolic so that no problem. The letters -ch- are of course more like -kh-, and the exact pronunciation of the consonants is not exactly known after the passage of two and a half millennia, not surprisingly. The accents which are printed in modern texts may not be the same as Aeolic intonation, but modern Classicists ignore the musical pitches completely, which again removes a critical part of Sappho's lyric poetry. But the poem is readable, singable, soundable as it is, with some imagination.

    66. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Sappho
    Biography and selected works in translation of the Greek sappho, preeminent woman poet of antiquity.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/sappho.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Sappho
    Sappho
    circa 630 B.C.
    One of the great Greek lyrists and few known female poets of the ancient world, Sappho was born some time between 630 and 612 BC. She was an aristocrat who married a prosperous merchant, and she had a daughter named Cleis. Her wealth afforded her with the opportunity to live her life as she chose, and she chose to spend it studying the arts on the isle of Lesbos. In the seventh century BC, Lesbos was a cultural center. Sappho spent most her time on the island, though she also traveled widely throughout Greece. She was exiled for a time because of political activities in her family, and she spent this time in Sicily. By this time she was known as a poet, and the residents of Syracuse were so honored by her visit that they erected a statue to her. Sappho was called a lyrist because, as was the custom of the time, she wrote her poems to be performed with the accompaniment of a lyre. Sappho composed her own music and refined the prevailing lyric meter to a point that it is now known as

    67. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Wu Tsao
    This page includes a brief biography and a small selection of poems.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/wu_tsao.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Wu Tsao
    Wu Tsao
    19th Century
    Wu Tsao was born sometime around 1800; her year of birth and death are uncertain. She was the daughter of a merchant and married a merchant herself. Her experiences with these men were not positive and she sought out the company of women, as friends and as lovers. She wrote erotic poems to courtesans, creating unashamed lyric passages full of the sweetness of yearning. She was China's great lesbian poet, and she was popular while she lived, her songs sung throughout China. Her poetry dealt with a variety of topics, unlike other women poets of her time. This versatility, combined with casual style and personal tone, probably contributed to her popularity. Later in life, Wu Tsao moved to seclusion and became a Taoist priestess. tz'u poets of the Ching (Manchu) Dynasty. Given the quality of Wu Tsao's work and her history, it is disturbing to find that her name rarely appears in Western profiles of poets, and she is not included in literary discussions of the lesbian poetic tradition.

    68. Sappho Central
    sappho Central. Welcome to the new sappho Central, now with longer lasting flavorcrystals! As you can tell, some improvements have been made around here.
    http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/sappho/
    Sappho Central
    Welcome to the new Sappho Central , now with longer lasting flavor crystals!
    As you can tell, some improvements have been made around here. However, I will still be avoiding use of features for which inclusion into HTML 3.0 standard specifications is questionable, such as frames, tables, watermarks, marquees, etc., as well as huge, slow-loading image files for those of us who still do not have an ISDN connection to the Internet. Also, links are being added and changed in an attempt to keep up with the ones that move, change, are created, or fall off the face of the 'Net. If you find a link that doesn't work, please e-mail me and I will check it out and change it if needed. If you know of a relevant site (including your own) that you'd like to see here, e-mail me.
  • URGENT! READ THIS!
  • Queer Sites and Organizations Lesbian and Women-Oriented Sites Fun Places to Kill Time ... About me
  • There have been visitors to this page since 29 January 1996.

    69. Sappho
    sappho (c.600 BCE) SOMEONEIN ANOTHER TIME WILL REMEMBER US 2. Essays on sappho
    http://www.tl.infi.net/~ddisse/sappho.html
    Updated 02-20-03
    Be sure to look at the index of "Other Women's Voices." for excerpts from translations of over 100 other women writers from before 1700.
    Sappho (c.600 BCE)
    "SOMEONE IN ANOTHER TIME WILL REMEMBER US."
    Sappho was born in the late 700s BCE on Lesbos, one of the larger islands in the Aegean, near Lydia (now Turkey). Lesbos was important for trade between mainland Greece and the kingdoms of Asia; it was also a cultural center. Sappho was probably from an aristocratic family of the city of Mytiline; she probably married and had at least one daughter. She may have spent some time in exile in Sicily. Her poetry suggests that she was the center of a closely-knit group of women; we don't know if this was some kind of an academy or a chorus of singers. We do know that Sappho composed epithalmia (marriage songs) for performance by a group. But her preferred form seems to have been songs to be sung or recited by an individual to the accompaniment of a lyre, some perhaps for religious or civic festivals. Over 200 fragments of Sappho's poetry are extant, but many of these are only a few words long. One poem, usually called the "Hymn to Aphrodite" (see online), may be complete, but we aren't sure. But even from fragments we can tell that Sappho had the ability to look at herself and others clearly-often ironically-and the ability to make us hear her voice.

    70. - Great Books -
    sappho (c. 625 BC), sappho was an ancient Greek poet, from the city of Mytileneon the island of Lesbos, which was a cultural centre in the 7th century BC.
    http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_1018.asp
    Sappho (c. 625 BC-)
    Sappho was an ancient Greek poet, from the city of Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, which was a cultural centre in the 7th century BC. Today the island is known as Mytilene. She was born sometime between 630 BC and 612 BC It was said that she was small and dark. Sappho was married to a wealthy merchant, and they had a daughter named Cleis. She became very famous in her day for her poetry so much so that the city of Syracuse built a statue to honor her when she visited. Her family was politically active, which caused Sappho to travel a great deal. She was also noted during her life as the headmistress of a sort of Greek finishing school for girls. Most likely the objects of her poetry were her students. She was a lyric poet who developed her own particular meter, known as sapphic meter , and she was credited for leading an aesthetic movement away from classical themes of gods, to the themes of individual human experience. The Greeks were so enamoured of her poetry that they referred to her as the "tenth Muse". Sappho wrote mainly love poems, of which only fragments survive, save a single complete poem, Fragment 1, Hymn to Aphrodite

    71. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Sor Juana Inés De La Cruz
    A small selection in English translation by Alan S. Trueblood.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/j_ines.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical
    Selected Works All poems translated by Alan S. Trueblood. Shown here in Spanish first, then the English translation.
    Phyllis
    Lo atrevido de un pincel,
    Filis, dio a mi pluma alientos:
    que tan gloriosa desgracia
    Logros de errar por tu causa
    donde es el riesgo apreciable
    Permite, pues, a mi pluma
    segundo arriesgado vuelo,
    pues no es el primer delito
    que le disculpa el ejemplo
    de ti, peregrina Filis?,
    cuyo divino sujeto se dio por merced al mundo, se dio por ventaja al cielo; en cuyas divinas aras, ni sudor arde sabeo, ni sangre se efunde humana, ni bruto se corta cuello, los combatientes deseos son holocausto poluto, son materiales afectos, y solamente del alma en religiosos incendios arde sacrificio puro Yo, pues, mi adorada Filis

    72. Untitled
    sappho Discography History of Harp Lyre Greek Laments (see alsoOTHER WOMEN'S VOICES) Following are brief excerpts from Who
    http://music.acu.edu/www/iawm/pages/reference/sappho.html

    73. Htgrep Error: Not Found
    A resource of publications related to sappho and her works, including links to reviews.
    http://www.uky.edu/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/~scaife/diobib?Sappho

    74. Sappho Discography
    see also sappho's Choral Music and History of the Harp Lyre. sappho.Setting of The Wedding Festival and Epithalamium By sappho. sappho.
    http://music.acu.edu/www/iawm/pages/sapphodiscography.html
    see also Sappho's Choral Music and Sappho. Setting of The Wedding Festival and Epithalamium By Sappho. Ancient Greek music system and recorded on ancient Greek instruments, on CD titled Secular Music of Greek Antiquity, Vol 1. Petros Tabouris, director. With Greek and English notes, ancient Greek song texts, with some English translations and paraphrases. FM Records, FM808, FM Records (Gre), 1998 Sappho. Setting of Fragment #112 (Bridal Day). Ancient Greek music system and recorded on ancient Greek instruments, on CD titled: Secular Music of Greek Antiquity, Vol 2. Petros Tabouris, director. With Greek and English notes, ancient Greek song texts, with some English translations and paraphrases. FM Records, FM809, no date.
      Fragment 112 by Sappho
      solo voice (Tasos Aloupis) with lyra, diaulos, timpanon, cymbals
      (English translation from Greek Lyric, Vol. 1, by David A. Campbell, Harvard University Press, 1982)
      to the bridegroom
      "Happy bridegroom, your marriage has been fulfilled as you prayed: you have the girl for whom you prayed." to the bride
      "Your form is graceful, your eyes...gentle, and love streams over your beautiful face...

    75. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Marie-Madeleine
    Short Biography and poetry in English translation.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/m_madeln.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Marie-Madeleine
    Marie-Madeleine (aka Baronness Von Puttkamer)
    Note: Biographical material on Marie-Madeleine was most graciously provided to me by one of Marie Madeleine's grandsons. He cautions that, at this time, some of this information is anecdotal. Marie Madeleine Gunther was born on April 4, 1881 in Eydtkuhnen (then East Prussia, today Russian) to Karl Gunther, a merchant, and Emmy Siemssen. On August 2, 1900, at age nineteen, Marie Madeleine married General Heinrich Georg Ludwig Freiherr (Baron) von Puttkamer. He was 35 years her senior. Three years later she gave birth to her only child, Jesco Gunther Heinrich. They lived in Grunewald, a top-grade suburb of Berlin. In her time, under the name of Marie Madeleine, she established a name for herself as a writer of unusually lyrical, stunningly sensual, shockingly erotic and hotly passionate poetry and prose (she wrote short stories and novellas). She published individual poems in journals (such as "Champagne frappe" in Das Narrenschiff [Ship of Fools]). In 1900, she published her first collection

    76. Sappho - Das Tanzlokal Von Frauen Für Frauen In Saarbrücken

    http://www.sappho-saar.de/
    Herzlich Willkommen auf unseren Webseiten. Hier findet Ihr unsere und Termine
    Auch Bilder
    Oder ein wenig im Netz surfen mit unseren Links
    Infos Szene
    und den CSD eintragen, uns Emails Sappho-Forum "Sie sucht Sie" lesen und schreiben. Nicht zuletzt bleiben noch die Humor -Seiten und der Sappho-Chat Euer Sappho-Team Version 1 Mit Frames und Javascript
    Version 2
    Ohne Extras

    77. SAPPHO  R
    A expatriate social group based in Seoul, South Korea. Bimonthly meetings in English.
    http://sapphorok.org
    SAPPHO R.O.K.
    Sappho (a.k.a. Seoulsisters) is an eclectic, multicultural group of lesbian and bisexual women based in Seoul, Korea. With members from around the globe, we currently represent over 12 nationalities, however English is the predominant language. English teachers, artists, military women, students, etc. make up the 100 plus women, ranging in age from 18-40+ (with a majority of 20somethings). We meet twice a month in Hongdae and Iteawon. Meetings are casual and informal. Our group primarily offers a social space for queer expatriates to feel free and accepted in our host country. Occasionally, we have special outings, retreats, movie nights, potlucks and various other activities. As homophobia is an ever-present challenge in Korea, we do ask our members to respect all other members levels of "outness" as well as to register in person to be on our mailing list. For more information, please write to us at sapphorok@yahoo.com

    78. Grand Inspiritors: Sappho
    Links · Books sappho. The Divine sappho This site has many resources includingtranslations by several authors, links to pictures, recordings, essays.
    http://www.globaldialog.com/~thefko/tom/gi_sappho.html
    Opening
    Links
    Books
    Sappho
    Loving Lady of Lesvos , who wrote:
    "Although they are only breath, words which I command are immortal"

    Internet Resources:
    • The Divine Sappho This site has many resources including translations by several authors, links to pictures, recordings, essays.
      http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/sappho/index.htm
      The Poems of Sappho
      , translated by Edwin Marion Cox [1925], transliterated by J.B. Hare [2000]. Complete Cox translations, notes, index of first lines.
      http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/sappho/index.htm
      Poems of Sappho
      translated by Julia Dubnoff contains 3 longer poems and 35 shorter fragments, with notes.
      http://lab.dce.harvard.edu/extension/clase116/sappho.html
      "Works By Sappho"
      includes 42 poem fragments, mostly translations of Mary Barnard, from the Poetry Archives
      : eleven translations by Mary Barnard. http://users.erols.com/kmdavis/sappho.html Sappho: "Someone in Another Time Will Remember Us." Annotated translations from Diane J. Rayor and from Jane McIntosh Snyder, links, bibliography. This is Sappho's entry at Other Women's Voices http://www.akron.infi.net/~ddisse/sappho.html

    79. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Emily Dickinson
    A brief biography of Dickinson, as well as three of her poems and a selection of related reading material available both online and off.
    http://www.sappho.com/poetry/e_dickin.html
    Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Emily Dickinson
    Emily Dickinson
    Emily Dickinson, one of America's most famous poets, was born in Amherst to a prominent family. She was educated at Amerherst Academy, the institution her grandfather helped found. She spent a year at the Mt. Holyoke Female Seminary, but left because she didn't like the religious environment and because her parents asked her home. In her twenties, Emily led a busy social life, but she became more reclusive with each passing year. By her thirties, she stayed to her home and withdrew when visitors arrived. She developed a reputation as a myth, because almost never seen and, when people did catch sight of her, she was always wearing white. But while she withdrew from physical contact with people, she did not withdraw from them mentally. Emily was an avid letter-writer who corresponded with a great number of friends and relatives. 1000 of these letters (a portion of what she wrote) survived her death, and they show her letter writing to be very similar to her poetic styleenigmatic and abstract, sometimes fragmented, and often forcefully sudden in emotion. Emily often included poetry with her letters to friends. Her friends encouraged her to publish, but after an attempt to do so in 1860 (when the publisher suggested she hold off) Emily did not appear to try again. The eight poems that were published in her lifetime were primarily poems submitted by her friends without her permission. Her death revealed 1768 more poems.

    80. GayHeroes.com: Sappho
    GayHeroes.com Gay and Lesbian People in History. sappho (c.600 BCE). Butall must be ventured . How do we know sappho was gay?
    http://www.gayheroes.com/sappho.htm
    GayHeroes.com: Gay and Lesbian People in History Sappho
    (c.600 BCE)
    Immensely famous in the ancient world, Sappho was a lyric poet loved throughout the ages for the beauty of her writing. Her poems were collected into nine volumes in ancient libraries, but today only one complete poem survives. Then we have one sixteen-line fragment and the rest are bits, known mostly from later writers who quoted her work. In spite of this tragic loss, the intensity and power of her poetry can still be felt. Fragment 31 V
    He seems to me to be like the gods
    whatever man sits opposite you
    and close by hears you
    talking sweetly And laughing charmingly, which
    makes the heart within my breast take flight;
    for the instant I look upon you, I cannot anymore

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