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A Lume Spento (translated by the author as With Tapers Quenched [1]) is a 1908 poetry collection by Ezra Pound. Self-published in Venice, it was his first collection. Background and writing.
- Ezra Pound
- July 1908
- 1908
- A. Antonini
English. "First printing"--Verso of t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 124) and index. A lume spento -- A quinzaine for this Yule -- Some poems from the "San Trovaso" notebook. Gallup, D. Pound (1983 ed.) Access-restricted-item.
A lume spento / José Homero - LUVINA. José Homero. (Minatitlán, Veracruz, 1965). En 2021, el Fondo Editorial Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro publicó su poemario más reciente, Función de Mandelbrot.
A Lume Spento (With Tapers Spent), which sold 100 copies at six cents each. The London Evening Standard called it "wild and haunting stuff, absolutely poetic, original, imaginative." The title was from the third canto of Dante's Purgatorio, alluding to both the excommunicate Manfred's death, and to that of
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In 1908, Pound published his first volumes, A Lume Spento [With Tapers Quenched], A Quinzaine for This Yule, and Personae [Masks]. Content to live outside his native land, in September 1909, he settled in a sparse front room in London's Kensington section; five years later, he married Dorothy Shakespear.
12 de oct. de 2022 · Pound’s published books include A lume spento (1908), Exultations (1909), Personae (1909), Provenca (1910), Canzoni (1911), Lustra and Other Poems (1917), Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920), Umbra: Collected Poems (1920), Cantos I–XVI (1925), A Draft of XXX Cantos (1930), Homage to Sextus Propertius (1934), The Fifth Decade of Cantos ...
A Lume Spento. Ezra Pound. 3.84. 62 ratings7 reviews. Ezra Pound's first book of poetry that was privately printed in Venice in 1908 by A. Antonini. Includes an active table of contents, correct spacing/breaks, links to footnotes, and automatic (poetic) indentation for any size frame or font.