|
Rolf Jacobsen (1907-1994) ... Rolf Jacobsen was born in Oslo (then called Kristiania), as the son of Martin Julius Jacobsen, who had completed both medical and dental school, and Marie (Nielsen) Jacobsen, a nurse. At the age of six he moved with his family to Asnes, where Martin Jacobsen had obtained a post as a...
|
|
Rolf Jacobsen's poetry often explored modern subjects: urban life, cars, industrial machine. But Jacobsen's view of the technological 20th century was nuanced and expressed a melancholy awareness of how nature, quiet, and the interior life were overlooked in this new enthusiastic haste.
|
||
|
Poetry of the sacred experience by poets and saints from around the world. Discover Sufi poetry, Hindu poetry, Buddhist poetry, Christian mystical poetry, ...
|
||
|
Rolf Jacobsen (poet) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rolf Jacobsen (March 8, 1907—1994) could be said to be the first modernist writer in Norway. Jacobsen's career as a writer spanned more than fifty years. He is one of Scandinavia’s most distinguished...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolf_Jacobsen_(poet) |
||
|
Biographies of Jacobsen Rolf and more Jacobsen Rolf biography. ... Suggest an addtional category for Jacobsen Rolf. arrow, Suggest a Biography ...
|
||
|
Rolf Jacobsen, North in the World: Selected Poems of Rolf Jacobsen, A Bilingual Edition ... North in the World presents 121 poems by Rolf Jacobsen (1907-1994), one of Norway's greatest modern poets.
|
||
|
Amazon.com: The Roads Have Come to an End Now: Selected and Last
|
||
|
Beloit Poetry Journal is... ... Jacobsen, Josephine; The Eyes of Children at the Brink of the Sea's Grasp, 6 (Summer 1956), 5-6. Delire des Profondeurs, 8 (Summer 1958), 7-8; Persephone This Morning, ibid., 8; ... Jacobsen, Rolf; Twenty Poems, trans. by Robert Bly, rev. Marion K. Stocking, 29 (Spring 1979), 37.
|
||
|
“They improve everything, pork chops to soup, and not only that but each onion's a group.” ... —from "Song to Onions" by Roy Blount, Jr. ... “Unlike the Eskimos we only have one word for snow but we have a lot of modifiers for that word.”...
|