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         Akhmatova Anna:     more books (100)
  1. The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova by Anna Akhmatova, 2000-09-01
  2. Anna Akhmatova (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets) by Anna Akhmatova, 2006-05-16
  3. My Half-Century: Selected Prose by Anna Akhmatova, 1997-07-20
  4. Selected Poems
  5. Anna of All the Russias: A Life of Anna Akhmatova by Elaine Feinstein, 2007-12-18
  6. Anna Akhmatova: Poet and Prophet by Roberta Reeder, 2007-11-01
  7. Selected Poems of Anna Akhmatova by Anna Akhmatova, Anna Andreevna Gorenko, 2004-01-01
  8. Anna Akhmatova v Tverskom kraiu (Russian Edition) by Anna Andreevna Akhmatova, 1989
  9. Moscow Memoirs: MEMORIES OF ANNA AKHMATOVA, OSIP MANDELSTAM, AND LITERARY RUSSIA UNDER STALIN by Emma Gerstein, 2004-09-02
  10. You Will Hear Thunder by Anna Akhmatova, 1985-07-01
  11. The Poetry of Anna Akhmatova: Living in Different Mirrors (Anthem Series on Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies) by Alexandra Harrington, 2006-05-01
  12. Twenty Poems (English and Russian Edition) by Anna Andreevna Akhmatova, 1985-12
  13. In a Shattered Mirror: The Later Poetry of Anna Akhmatova by Susan Amert, 1992-07-01
  14. Requiem and Poem Without a Hero by Anna Akhmatova, 1976-06

1. Anna Akhmatova
Anna Akhmatova was born Anna Gorenko in Bolshoy Fontan, near Odessa,Ukraine, as the daughter of a naval engineer. She began writing
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/aakhma.htm
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B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966) - pseudonym of Anna Andreyevna Gorenko One of the greatest Russian poets of the 20th-century, who became a legend in her own time as a poet and symbol of artistic integrity. Akhmatova's work is characterized by precision, clarity, and economy. She wrote with apparent simplicity and naturalness and her rhyming was classical compared to such radical contemporary writers as Marina Tsvetaeva and Vladimir Mayakovsky. "Our sacred craft has existed
For thousands of years...
With it, luminous even in darkness is earth.
But no poet has ever insisted,
Through laughter or tears,
That there is no wisdom, no age, no death."
Anna Akhmatova was born Anna Gorenko in Bolshoy Fontan, near Odessa, Ukraine, as the daughter of a naval engineer. She began writing poetry at the age of 11, and adopted a pseudonym to allay her father's fears that as a"decadent poetress" she would dishonour the family. The pseudonym was the Tatar name of Akhmatova's great-grandmother. When she was sixteen, her father abandoned his family. Akhmatova attended a girls' gymnasium in Tsarskoe Selo and the famous Smolnyi Institute in St. Petersburg. She continued her studies in Kiev in Fundukleevskaia gymnasium (1906) and in a law school (1907) before moving to St. Petersburg to study literature. Among her teachers were the poet, dramatist and essayist Innokenty Annensky (1856-1909), who influenced her deeply. Between the years 1910 and 1912 she visited Paris, where she met the painter Amedeo Modigliani, and northern Italy. At the age of 21 she became a member of the

2. Akhmatova, Anna (Anna Gorenko 1889-1966)
Akhmatova, Anna (Anna Gorenko 18891966). presentasjoner. akhmatova annakirjasto; Acmeists Anna Akhmatova lmalcolm; Anna Akhmatova.
http://www.hum.uit.no/alm/littvit/forfatter/Akhmatova Anna

3. F&P Akhmatova Anna - TAB Poetry (eng/ru)
Chat Room F P Listserver Russian/NIS Literature Russian Literature of 19 CenturyRussian Literature of 20 Century Historical overview Akhmatova AA Annensky IF
http://www.friends-partners.org/friends/literature/20century/akhmatova2.html
Science and art have that in common that everyday things seem to them new and attractive. - Friedrich Nietzsche
Selected Poetry - Russian and English variant
  • A simple way of life I've learned and wise...
  • Each new day that comes the heart unsettles...
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    Akhmatova A.A. Annensky I.F. Aseev N.N. ... History of Cherubina
  • 4. F&P Akhmatova Anna - TAB Poetry (eng/ru)
    The summary for this Russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
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  • 5. Poems Of Anna Akhmatova
    ANNA AKHMATOVA (Born 1889, Died 1966) Click here to see what the World Wide Weboffers in terms of works, biography, and gossips about Anna Akhmatova.
    http://www.poetryloverspage.com/poets/akhmatova/akhmatova.html
    A COLLECTION OF POEMS
    BY
    A NNA A KHMATOVA
    (Born 1889, Died 1966)
    (Translations from Russian)
    Anna Akhmatova is the literary pseudonym of Anna Andreevna Gorenko. Her first husband was Gumilev, and she too became one of the leading Acmeist poets. Her second book of poems, Beads (1914), brought her fame. Her earlier manner, intimate and colloquial, gradually gave way to a more classical severity, apparent in her volumes The Whte Flock (1917) and Anno Domini MCMXXI (1922). The growing distaste which the personal and religious elements in her poetry aroused in Soviet officialdom forced her thereafter into long periiods of silence; and the poetic masterpieces of her later years, A Poem without a Hero and Requiem, were published abroad.
    From "The Heritage of Russian Verse," by Dimitri Obolensky
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    6. Links To Literature: Anna Akhmatova
    GENERAL RESOURCES. The Academy of American Poets Anna Akhmatova. Concise biography,selected bibliography, selected poems, and links. Pegasos akhmatova anna.
    http://www.linkstoliterature.com/akhmatova.htm
    LINKS TO LITERATURE HOME BULLETIN BOARD LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUGGEST-A-SITE ... SEARCH THE WEB NEW! Enter to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Certificate simply by referring friends to this site! To begin earning entries in the next drawing, please visit our Refer-A-Friend Page GENERAL RESOURCES WORKS GENERAL RESOURCES The Academy of American Poets: Anna Akhmatova Concise biography, selected bibliography, selected poems, and links. Akhmatova Page Biography, selected poetry in English, images, video clips, and links. Anna Andreevna Akhmatova Links and selected poems in English translation. Pegasos: Akhmatova Anna Concise biography and bibliography. WORKS A Collection of Poems by Anna Akhmatova Archive of poems in English translation, organized alphabetically. Need a second opinion? Try Search the Web. GoTo Half.com Audible.com Amazon ... eBay

    7. Akhmatova
    Anna Andreyevna Akhmatova (Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) (18891966).Song Texts. Legkij shelest slyshish' sprava ot stola? Prokofiev
    http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/a/akhmatova/
    Anna Andreyevna Akhmatova (Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) (1889-1966)
    Song Texts
    Back to the Lied and Song Texts Page

    8. Anna Akhmatova
    ANNA AKHMATOVA Akhmatova died in 1966 in Leningrad. To hear a presentationof Anna Akhmatova's Requiem, click on the photo below
    http://www.uvm.edu/~sgutman/Akhmatova.htm
    ANNA AKHMATOVA
    The poet Anna Akhmatova was born Anna Gorenko in Odessa, in the Ukraine, in 1889; she later changed her name to Akhmtova. In 1910 she married the important Russian poet and theorist Nikolai Gumilyov. Shortly afterwards Akhmatova began publishing her own poetry; together with Gumilyov, she became a central figure in the Acmeist movement. Acmeism which had its parallels in the writings of T. E. Hulme in England and the development of Imagism stressed clarity and craft as antidotes to the overly loose style and vague language of late nineteenth century poetry in Russia. The Russian Revolution was to dramatically affect their lives. Although they had recently divorced, Akhmatova was was nevertheless stunned by the execution of her friend and former partner Gumilyev in 1921 by the Bolsheviks, who claimed that he had betrayed the Revolution. In large measure to drive her into silence, their son Lev Gumilyov was imprisoned in 1938, and he remained in prison and prison camps until the death of Stalin and the thaw in the Cold War made his release possible in 1956. Meanwhile, Akhmatova had a second marraige and then a third; her third husband, Nikolai Punin, was imprisoned in 1949 and thereafter died in 1953 in a Siberian prison camp. Her writing was banned, unofficially, from 1925 to 1940, and then was banned again after World War Two was concluded. Unlike many of her literary contemporaries, though, she never considered flight into exile. The poet was awarded and honorary doctorate by Oxford University in 1965. Akhmatova died in 1966 in Leningrad.

    9. Kvasir: Akhmatova Anna
    Annonsører Er domenet akhmatova anna ledig? Bokkilden treff . Kvasirakhmatova anna Annonsører Er domenet akhmatova anna ledig?
    http://search.kvasir.no/query?q=Akhmatova Anna

    10. Kvasir: Akhgar Nawid
    Kvasir akhmatova anna dokumentstørrelse26.4 kB Litteraturnettet NajaMarie Aiken, Conrad Aikio, Matti Aikman, William Aischylos ak Akhgar, Nawid
    http://search.kvasir.no/query?q=Akhgar Nawid

    11. [minstrels] Requiem (excerpt) -- Anna Akhmatova
    htm Anna akhmatova anna Akhmatova, who changed her name from Anna Gorenko at theage of seventeen, was born into a noble family in Odessa, Ukraine, in 1889.
    http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/231.html
    [231] Requiem (excerpt)
    Title : Requiem (excerpt) Poet : Anna Akhmatova Date : 10 Oct 1999 In the fearful years... Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq vikdoc@ Requiem (excerpt) Anna Akhmatova This is an unbearably moving moving poem. It comes at the end of Akhmatova's great Requiem sequence, which she wrote during the oppression of rhe Stalin years. During those years she was harassed a great deal, and her son was taken away by the police. It was for him that she stood in the lines outside the prison gates. But any comments are irrelevant with such a poem. Don't have exact biographical details about Akhmatova with me at the moment. Is there anything on the Net? [Yes - from http://www.poets.org/LIT/poet/aakhmfst.htm

    12. Anna Akhmatova
    Anna Akhmatova (18891966). DEPARTURE Although this land is not myown, I will remember its inland sea and the waters that are so
    http://cmgm.stanford.edu/~ahmad/akhmatova.html
    Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966)
    DEPARTURE Although this land is not my own, I will remember its inland sea and the waters that are so cold the sand as white as old bones, the pine trees strangely red where the sun comes down. I cannot say if it is our love, or the day, that is ending. (translated by Michael Cuanach) YOU WILL HEAR THUNDER You will hear thunder and remember me, And think: she wanted storms. The rim Of the sky will be the colour of hard crimson, And your heart, as it was then, will be on fire. That day in Moscow, it will all come true, when, for the last time, I take my leave, And hasten to the heights that I have longed for, Leaving my shadow still to be with you. (translated by D. M. Thomas) I DON'T KNOW IF YOU'RE ALIVE OR DEAD I don't know if you're alive or dead. Can you on earth be sought, Or only when the sunsets fade Be mourned serenely in my thought? All is for you: the daily prayer, The sleepless heat at night, And of my verses, the white Flock, and of my eyes, the blue fire. No-one was more cherished, no-one tortured Me more, not Even the one who betrayed me to torture, Not even the one who caressed me and forgot. (translated by D. M. Thomas)

    13. Anna Akhmatova
    Biography of the poet.
    http://www.odessit.com/namegal/english/ahmatova.htm
    Akhmatova, Anna,
    pseudonym of ANNA ANDREYEVNA GORENKO (b. June 11 [June 23, New Style], 1889, Bolshoy Fontan, near Odessa, Ukraine, Russian Empired. March 5, 1966, Domodedovo, near Moscow), Russian poet recognized at her death as the greatest woman poet in Russian literature. Akhmatova began writing verse at the age of 11 and at 21 became a member of the Acmeist group of poets, whose leader, Nikolay Gumilyov, she married in 1910 but divorced in 1918. The Acmeists, through their periodical Apollon ("Apollo"; 1909-17), rejected the esoteric vagueness and affectations of Symbolism and sought to replace them with "beautiful clarity," compactness, simplicity, and perfection of formall qualities in which Akhmatova excelled from the outset. Her first collections, Vecher (1912; "Evening") and Chyotki (1914; "Rosary"), especially the latter, brought her fame. While exemplifying the best kind of personal or even confessional poetry, they achieve a universal appeal deriving from their artistic and emotional integrity. Akhmatova's principal motif is love, mainly frustrated and tragic love, expressed with an intensely feminine accent and inflection entirely her own. In August 1946, however, she was harshly denounced by the Central Committee of the Communist Party for her "eroticism, mysticism, and political indifference." Her poetry was castigated as "alien to the Soviet people," and she was again described as a "harlot-nun," this time by none other than Andrey Zhdanov, Politburo member and the director of Stalin's program of cultural restriction. She was expelled from the Union of Soviet Writers; an unreleased book of her poems, already in print, was destroyed; and none of her work appeared in print for three years.

    14. A COLLECTION OF POEMS BY ANNA AKHMATOVA
    Collection of poems offers a short biography of the Russian author along with a sampling of her work. (Translations from Russian). anna akhmatova is the literary pseudonym of anna Andreevna Gorenko.
    http://www.poetryloverspage.com/poets/akhmatova/akhmatova_ind.html

    15. Altman, Nathan: Portrait Of Anna Akhmatova
    Painting of the author.
    http://www.auburn.edu/academic/liberal_arts/foreign/russian/art/altman-akhmatova
    Altman, Nathan: Portrait of Anna Akhmatova (1914)
    Index Access
    George Mitrevski
    . Auburn University

    16. Alexander Ostrovsky - Olga's Gallery
    Biography of the poet illustrated with her portraits by famous artists.
    http://www.abcgallery.com/liter/akhmatova.html
    Olga's Gallery
    Anna Akhmatova
    Akhmatova, Anna, pseudonym of Anna Andreevna Gorenko (1889-1966) Russian poetess, born in Odessa into the family of a naval officer. She started to write very early to ultimate horror of her parents; her father told her not to shame the family name by becoming a “decadent poetess”. She chose the name of her great-grandmother as a literary pseudonym not to embarrass the family. For some time she studied at law school in Kiev. In 1910, she married Nicolai Gumilev (1886-1921), himself a poet and critic, who at first considerably influenced her style. They spent the spring of 1910, their honeymoon, in Paris, where Anna met the Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) and fell in love with him. Summer of 1911 she spent with Modigliani in Paris. Under the influence of this love affair she wrote many lyrical poems, many of which formed up her first book, Evening The same year that her first book was published, 1912, her son Lev Gumilev (1912-92) was born. He would become an outstanding historian, geographer, and philosopher. But meanwhile his father put the child under supervision of his own mother, who disliked Anna. Akhmatova tried to protest the situation, but Nicolai supported his family; Anna visited her son during holidays and summer. She wrote that she ‘was a bad mother’, that “motherhood is a bright torture. I was not worthy of it.” The book Evening made Akhmatova a very popular poetess, and her second book

    17. Bandwidth Has Been Exceeded
    Biography, poems, pictures, and video clips.Category Arts Literature Authors A akhmatova, anna......Tons of WWW Links About the Russian Poet anna akhmatova (18891966).Onthe WWW since 1995. anna Andreevna akhmatova (1889-1966
    http://dybka.home.mindspring.com/jill/akhmatova/
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    18. Akhmatovaproject
    A new movement based theatre piece centered around the life and poetry of anna akhmatova.
    http://www.akhmatovaproject.com
    A new movement based theatre piece inspired by the life
    and writing of Russian Poet Anna Andreevna Akhmatova.
    "Intense… lyrical… elegant
    Los Angeles Times
    "A dazzling epic movement piece… a riveting narrative, interjected with stunning choreography and visual tableaux."

    L.A. Weekly
    "Theater doesn't get any more compelling or meaningful than this."
    The American Reporter
    Nominated for four
    L.A. Weekly Awards
    On L.A. Times
    "10 Best" List for 2000. ENTER

    19. Bandwidth Has Been Exceeded
    Tons of WWW Links About the Russian Poet anna akhmatova (18891966).On the WWW since1995. Works Cited. akhmatova, anna. Selected Poems. Trans. Richard McKane.
    http://dybka.home.mindspring.com/jill/akhmatova/akhmat.html
    We're sorry - this page is temporarily unavailable. Hey, this page has exceeded its bandwidth for this month!
    Please check back at the beginning of the month when it will be available again. Back to the MindSpring HomePage Text Version
    For information and support, contact MindSpring MindSpring Enterprises, Inc.

    20. ANNA ANDREEVNA AKHMATOVA || Gemini Mint's World
    A collection of links and selected poems by this famous Russian poet. Poems are English translations.
    http://www.geocities.com/gemini-mint/axmatova.html
    Anna Akhmatova POEMS Great Links Akhmatova Page Great links, video clip of Akhmatova, image slide show, bio. By Jill Dybka.
    The Academy of American Poets - Poetry Exhibits - Anna Akhmatova
    Links, poems, bio, selected bibliography, books available at borders.com.
    Anna Akhmatova
    Extensive biography HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
    Encyclopedia.com - Results for Akhmatova, Anna
    Small entry, but follow the link ACMEIST in the text if you are interested in literary jargon.
    Marina Tsvetaeva
    Extensive, well-done page about one of Akhmatova's contemporaries mentioned in her poem "There Are Four Of Us." Tsvetaeva is a brilliant poet in her own right. This page has biographical info, links, and more.
    Anna Akhmatova
    Translations into English of some of her poems.
    WISE WOMEN'S POEMS
    Translation of Akhmatova's "The First Long Range Artillery Fire on Leningrad" and Tsvetaeva's "Poem of the End." This site contains many excellent poems written by - who else? - wise women.
    ANNA AKHMATOVA IN PORTRAITS BY HER CONTEMPORARIES
    This page discusses Akhmatova's portrayal of herself in her poetry and why she was the subject of so many works of art. At the bottom of the page, there is a link that says "catalog." What follows is a huge collection of various Akhmatova portraits in many media. The descriptions are in Cyrillic, but you can still look at the pictures even if you don't know Russian (hey, nobody's perfect).
    Temple of Anna Akhmatova
    Great images, bio, photo gallery, two beautiful paintings by Altman and Petrov-Vodkin, audio-visual, etc. Recommended.

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