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Side one features William Scammell, who introduces and reads poems from his three Peterloo collections: Yes & no (1979), A second life (1982), and Jouissance (1984). Side two features Elizabeth Bartlett, who introduces and reads poems from her two Peterloo collection: A lifetime of dying (1979) and Strange territory (1983).
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Fraser, and the Greek exiles George Seferis and Elie Papadimitriou.
The voices of famous poets - from Marvell to McGonagall - are borrowed to pay tribute to the game Scammell loves. From knocking around in the park to the perfectionist tantrums of McEnroe, players from Henry VIII to Agassi - all are captured in this original and funny collection of tennis poems.
Poets have been inspired by music for centuries, but with the arrival of recordings and the possibility of repeated listening there was an extraordinary upsurge in verse about specific pieces, particular composers. There followed a century of pithy, perceptive responses, fascinating to the poetry lover, delightful to the music lover, and irresistible to those who are both. John Greening's new anthology draws especially on this exciting hoard of forgotten material. ACCOMPANIED VOICES is a unique book: not only is it a highly readable anthology of some of the most memorable and accessible international writing about classical music, and a moving commentary by one set of practising artists on t...
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The authors trace the relationship between Australia's economic well being and the international economy from the late nineteenth-century onwards. This book fills the need for an introductory text in this area for undergraduate students of economics, politics and history and for the general reader who wishes to understand how the Australian economy operates.