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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: 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.

62. Cciv243.Sappho.html
(click on image for full vase) sappho. from A. M. Miller, Greek Lyric. An Anthology in Translation (Indianapolis Hackett, 1996) pp. 5163 (modified)
http://mkatz.web.wesleyan.edu/Images2/cciv243.Sappho.html
(click on image for full vase) SAPPHO from A. M. Miller, Greek Lyric. An Anthology in Translation Do not cite or download except for study purposes. Underlinings represent items explained in the notes (in red , following each poem). 1. (Fr. 1) Immortal Aphrodite on your richly crafted throne, daughter of Zeus, weaver of snares, I beg you, do not with sorrows and with pain s subdue my heart, O Lady, but come to me, if ever at another time as well, hearing my voice from far away, you heeded it, and leaving your father's house of gold, you came, yoking your chariot. Graceful sparrows brought you swiftly over the black earth, with a thick whirring of wings, from heaven down through the middle air. Suddenly they were here, and you, O Blessed, with a smile on your immortal face asked me what was wrong this time, and why I called you this time, and what in my maddened heart I wanted most to happen. "Whom shall I persuade this time

63. 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

64. Sappho
sappho the Greek Lyrists sculpture is available from sculpturegallery.com
http://www.sculpturegallery.com/sculpture/sappho.html
Sappho
One of the great Greek lyrists and few known female poets of the ancient world
630 - 612 BC Sappho 26" x -8-1/2"
Durastone with Aged Iron Finish
Sorry, This item is no longer available. O ne 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 sapphic meter. She innovated lyric poetry both in technique and style, becoming part of a new wave of Greek lyrists who moved from writing poetry from the point of view of gods and muses to the personal vantage point of the individual. She was one of the first poets to write from the first person, describing love and loss as it affected her personally.

65. A Sappho Of Green Springs By Bret Harte - Project Gutenberg
Etext at Project Gutenberg.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2867
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A Sappho of Green Springs by Bret Harte
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Author Harte, Bret, 1836-1902 Title A Sappho of Green Springs Contents A Sappho of Green Springs The châtelaine of Burnt Ridge Through the Santa Clara wheat A Maecenas of the Pacific Slope. Language English LoC Class PS: Language and Literatures: American and Canadian literature Subject American fiction 19th century Category Text EBook-No. Release Date May 30, 2006 Public domain in the USA. Downloads
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66. Sappho Biography Summary | BookRags.com
sappho summary with 472 pages of lesson plans, quotes, chapter summaries, analysis, encyclopedia entries, essays, research information, and more.
http://www.bookrags.com/Sappho

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. Lesbian Dating, Personals And Chat
Lesbian dating, personals and chat at the dating site created exclusively for lesbian and bisexual women. Browse personals, chat on line and start dating.
http://www.planetsappho.com/
Sign-up for a FREE membership Browse profiles and photos Find your perfect partner! Join for free... I am a Lesbian Lesbian Bi Female Couple (f/f) Seeking Relationship Relationship Casual Encounters Dates Friendship Email/Chat Username Email Promo Code
If applicable I agree to the terms of membership Who Was Sappho? Tips for Success Lesbian Writing Links ... Sitemap
Lesbian dating, personals and chat
PlanetSappho is a lesbian dating site which enables women of all ages to contact and get to know each other in a safe, secure and friendly environment. Check out the photo personals which have been posted by lesbian and bisexual women in your local area, chat in 'real time' with other members who are on line at the same time as you and send messages to, or receive messages from other ladies who are looking for the same things as you are. It only takes a few short minutes to join this exciting lesbian dating site and we guarantee that it is 100% FREE to do so. That's right, you can create your own individual profile, upload photos and browse our female-only database without having to reach for your credit card and make a payment. And once you've registered your details, you'll then be part of a growing community of members who share your own lifestyle goals and aspirations. The profiles at PlanetSappho have been specifically designed to enable you to achieve maximum compatibility when you're searching for a new partner; whether you're seeking a genuine relationship, friendship, flirty chat or some fun, casual encounters, you'll be able to search for other women who are looking for exactly the same as you are. And you wont just find other people at the site who you find physically attractive, but you can easily identify people who are suitable in terms of interests and personality traits. That's why it's important to be as open about yourself as you can when you create your profile; the more information your provide about yourself, the more likely you are to be contacted by other members who are just right for you.

69. Sappho
sappho (pronounced in English; Attic Greek Σαπφώ , Aeolic Greek Ψάπφω ) was an Ancient Greek poet, born on the island of Lesbos. Later Greeks
http://pediaview.com/openpedia/Sappho
Sappho
Bust inscribed Sappho of Eressos, Roman copy of a Greek original of the 5th century BC. Sappho (pronounced in English; Attic Greek Aeolic Greek ) was an Ancient Greek poet, born on the island of Lesbos . Later Greeks included her in the list of nine lyric poets . Her birth was sometime between 630 and 612 BC, and it is said that she died around 570 BC, but little is known for certain about her life. The bulk of her poetry, which was well-known and greatly admired throughout antiquity, has been lost, but her immense reputation has endured through surviving fragments.
Contents
  • Life
    Life
    The only contemporary source which refers to Sappho's life is her own body of poetry, and scholars are sceptical of biographical readings of it. Later biographical traditions, from which all more detailed accounts derive, have also been cast into doubt.
    Chronology
    Strabo says that Sappho was the contemporary of Alcaeus of Mytilene (born ca. 620 BC) and Pittacus (ca. 645 - 570 BC) and according to Athenaeus she was the contemporary of Alyattes of Lydia (ca. 610 - 560 BC). The

70. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Edna St. Vincent Millay
Five poems.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/e_millay.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Edna St. Vincent Millay
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Edna St. Vincent Millay, twentieth-century poet and playwright, was best known for her lyrical poetry. She wrote many poems in traditional sonnet form, on topics such as love, fidelity, erotic desire, and feminist issues. What isn't as widely publicized is that she also acknowledged herself as bisexual and had many affairs with women before her marriage. It's not clear if she continued sexual involvements with women after marriage (though it is quite possible), nor is it clear which of her poems are written about women rather than men. She grew up in a different sort of familypast the age of seven, her father wasn't present, as her mother (Cora) asked him to leave. Cora was a nurse who encouraged Millay (called Vincent by her close friends) and her sisters in musical and literary pursuits. Millay was brought up to be self-sufficient and was taught that ambition was good, an upbringing reflected in her accomplishments of later years. At her mother's encouragement, Millay entered her poem "Renascence" into a poetry contest and won fourth placed. When the poem was published, she gained literary recognition and earned a scholarship to Vassar. At Vassar, she continued to write poetry and became involved in theater. In 1922 one of her plays

71. Sappho
home index ancient Greece sappho sappho (Musei Capitolini, Roma) sappho famous Greek poetess of lyric poetry. Only a few fragments survive.
http://www.livius.org/sao-sd/sappho/sappho.html
home index ancient Greece
Sappho
Sappho ( Musei Capitolini , Roma) Sappho: famous Greek poetess of lyric poetry. Only a few fragments survive. To a certain extent, the beauty of Sappho's poetry is caused by the fact that it is fragmentary. Her poetry is quoted by later authors, but most of their quotations are short and offer us a tantalizing glimpse of what once must have been a poem of great quality. Unlike Homer and Hesiod , Sappho and the other lyric poets tried to express private sentiments. Because almost none of her poems is complete, it is hard to understand them, and many interpretations tell us more about the classicist than about the author, who lived c.600 in Mytilene on the Greek island of Lesbos. Most scholars agree, however, that Sappho had a school where young aristocratic women received education before marriage. Because Sappho sometimes expresses passionate sentiments for young girls, she is often called "lesbian" (in our sense of the word). This is in fact an oversimplification, because the Greeks had other ideas about homosexuality than we have. Besides, these attitudes changed. Later generations were often hostile to woman-girl relationships, but it is very likely that in sixth-century Mytilene, this type of love was not frowned upon.

72. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Katharine Lee Bates
Love poems of the ardently feminist writer best known for America the Beautiful.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/k_bates.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Katharine Lee Bates
Katharine Lee Bates
Katharine Lee Bates was an ardent feminist and the author of the song "America the Beautiful." She attended Wellesley college and later returned to join the faculty. While on staff she met Katharine Coman and began a relationship that lasted for 25 years. Bates and Coman's relationship might be best described as a romantic friendship. It is not clear whether their relationship was sexual, but it was intensely loving; Bates referred to Coman as her "Joy of Life" and wrote many poems about their love. Both women had successful careers at Wellesley collegeBates became chair of the English department, while Coman became chair of the Economics Department and Dean of the college. They kept contact with other educated women who lived in couples as they did, but they did not assume roles as lesbian activists. In 1912, Coman was diagnosed with cancer, and Bates nursed her until Coman died in 1915. In 1922, Bates published a limited volume of poetry entitled, "Yellow Clover," where she wrote of their relationship.

73. Sappho
Choose another writer in this calendar by name A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z. by birthday from the calendar. Credits and feedback. TimeSearch for Books
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Sappho (fl. c. 610-c.580 B.C. Greek poetess, who lived on the island of Lesbos. Sappho is the most famous female poet of antiquity, but only incomplete poems and fragments remain of her work. Most of Sappho's love poems were addressed to women. The Greek philosopher Plato called her the tenth Muse. I asked myself What, Sappho, can
you give one who
has everything,
like Aphrodite?

(in Sappho: A New Translation, by Mary Barnard) Little is known for certain of Sappho's life, although there are many anecdotes. Her parents were of aristocratic origin. Sappho may have been born in 612 B.C. at Eresus, one of the towns of Lesbos. Her father was Scamandronymus, or according to some sources his name was Scamander. She had three brothers, Erigyius, Larichus and Charaxus, the eldest, who was a merchant. He sailed to Egypt with a cargo of wine. There he was involved with a local slavewoman named Doricha and purchased her freedom. Sappho disapproved the affair. She was more fond of the young Larichus; he poured the wine at council banquets. As a child, at some date between 604 and 595

74. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Aphra Behn
Brief biographical information, the texts of two poems, and links to further resources.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_behn.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Aphra Behn
Aphra Behn
Aphra Behn ( 33k JPG image ), alleged by Vita Sackville-West to be the first women in England to earn a living as a writer, is a bit of a mystery. Little is known about her backgroundwho her parents were and where she was bornbut the details of her life that are known paint the portrait of an intriguing woman. Aphra lived for a time in Surinam, an experienced that inspired her first novel, Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave (1688). She was married for a short time and widowed at age 25. She secured employment as a spy for King Charles II and was sent to Belgium in this capacity. The King refused to pay her return trip, however, and after borrowing the funds to return, she was thrown into debtor's prison. After leaving prison, Aphra worked hard to make sure she was always capable of supporting herself. She became a successful London playwright and then a novelist. She wrote poetry, feeling that this form allowed her to express her "masculine" side. Aphra's opinions were unconventional, and because she openly expressed her viewpoints in her lifestyle and through her writing, she was seen as scandalous. Her poetry remarks on romantic relationships with both men and women, discusses rape and impotence, puts forth a woman's right to sexual pleasure, and includes scenes of eroticism between men.

75. Sappho Biography | BookRags.com
sappho biography, including 3 pages of information on the life of sappho.
http://www.bookrags.com/biography/sappho/

76. Isle Of Lesbos: Vita Sackville-West's Letters
Two letters to Virginia Woolf, and one to Violet Trefusis.
http://www.sappho.com/letters/vitas-w.html
Isle of Lesbos : Vita Sackville-West's Letters
Letters from Vita Sackville-West
To Virginia Woolf and Violet Trefusis
Letters
To Virginia Woolf, January 21, 1926
Milan [posted in Trieste] However I won't bore you with any more. We have re-started, and the train is shaky again. I shall have to write at the stations - which are fortunately many across the Lombard plain. Venice. The stations were many, but I didn't bargain for the Orient Express not stopping at them. And here we are at Venice for ten minutes only, a wretched time in which to try and write. No time to buy an Italian stamp even, so this will have to go from Trieste. The waterfalls in Switzerland were frozen into solid iridescent curtains of ice, hanging over the rock; so lovely. And Italy all blanketed in snow. We're going to start again. I shall have to wait till Trieste tomorrow morning. Please forgive me for writing such a miserable letter. V.

77. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Amy Lowell
Poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_seward.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Anna Seward
Anna Seward
Anna Seward was a poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century. She was the daughter of Thomas Seward, the canon of Lichfield, and Elizabeth Hunter. Elizabeth died and left Thomas a widoweran event that left Anna without a mother but with the freedom not to marry. As the eldest daughter, it was her responsibility to care for her father, and so she stayed at Lichfield and tended to him through senility. When he died, she was in her forties, and no longer under any social obligation to marry. As she was quite outspoken in her opinions of marriage (openly criticizing popular guidebooks for women that purported any marriage as preferable to none) the inability to marry young does not seem to have been a problem for her. Anna was well-educated, known for her lively, generous nature and her unconventional ideas. She was educated at home, and read French, Italian, and Latin. Lichfield was one of the major provincial literary centers of the 18th century, and hers was a literary household. She began writing poetry young, publishing in periodicals and circulating her poems among friends. Her style of verse was more conventional than her ideas, tending toward the enthusiastic and sentimental. She wrote many poems commemorating events and celebrating special places, and she is best known for these, as well as for her elegies. But another important topic to her was love, passionately expressed but always cast as friendship, and often directed toward Honora Sneyd.

78. Mythography | The Greek Poet Sappho
Learn about the Greek poet sappho and how her poems relate to Greek mythology
http://www.loggia.com/myth/sappho.html
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Explore mythology and art with information about the classic stories of heroes and gods...from the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, to the legends of the Celts. Mythography presents resources and reference materials about mythology - including recommended books, and lexicons that explain Greek, Roman, and Celtic terms. Gardner's Art Through the Ages This book is the classic reference for the study of art. It features a history of artists and their works, as well as lucid and engaging descriptions of the styles and periods of art history. Highly recommended for both students and scholars. Aphrodite in Art
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... poets Sappho
The Greek Poet Sappho
Sappho was an ancient Greek poet who infused her works with intense emotions - especially love, desire, longing, and their companion, suffering. She crafted her poems primarily as a tribute to the private world of women, something from which we are generally excluded in Greek literature. Therefore the poems provide us with a valuable and remarkable glimpse into the lives and aspirations of Greek girls. In some respects, they could be termed "romantic", but Sappho transcends her subject with such a moving, insightful, and poignant power that the poems are still highly relevant even today. Simply stated, she created some of the most vibrant love poetry ever composed. Naturally, someone as intimately concerned with love as Sappho would be drawn to the irresistible realm of the goddess of love. And indeed

79. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Gertrude Stein
Includes a brief biography of Stein, along with one of her poems and a list of further reading materials both online and off.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/g_stein.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein
Gertude Stein was born in Pennsylvania to Jewish-Bavarian parents.She was educated briefly in Europe and then at Radcliffe. She studied psychology under William James, and his influence runs through her work. Her life in Paris motivated much of her experimental writing. Cezanne's and Matisse's painting inspired the composition of her early Three Lives (1909) while Picasso's cubism informs her astonishing prose-poem Tender Buttons (1914). Her novel Q.E.D. (1903) published posthumously as Things as They Are ) explores the jealousies and desires bewteen three young women. The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1932) records her relationship with Alice. Biography by Alix North
Selected Work
from Before the Flowers of Friendship Faded Faded I love my love with a v
Because it is like that
I love my love with a b
Because I am beside that
A king.

80. Sappho (c. 630BC-?) Greek Writer.
(c. 630BC?) Greek writer. Find information about what we know of sappho's life and works.
http://classiclit.about.com/od/sappho/Sappho.htm
zWASL=1 zGL='0';zGR='ca-about-radlink'; zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') zDO=0
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    (c. 630BC-?) Greek writer. Find information about what we know of Sappho's life and works.
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  • Cleis - Sappho
    Read "Cleis," by Sappho: "Sleep, darling / I have a small / daughter called / Cleis, who is / like a golden / flower..." zSB(3,3)
    Hymn to Aphrodite - Sappho
    Read "Hymn to Aphrodite," by Sappho: "THRONED in splendor, immortal Aphrodite! / Child of Zeus, Enchantress, I implore thee / Slay me not in this distress and anguish, / Lady of beauty."
    In a Library - Emily Dickinson
    Read "In a Library," by Emily Dickinson.
    Profile: Sappho (Psappha)
    (c610-570 BC) Greek writer. Sappho is one of the most famous Greek writers, known for the fragments that are left of her books of poetry. Read more about the life and works of Sappho.
    Sappho - Christina Rosetti
    Read "Sappho" by Christina Rossetti (1830-1894). Rossetti was a British poet, sister of Dante Rossetti, and known for the religious themes in her works.
    Sappho A Yokepair of Opposites
    N.S. Gill writese about Sappho and Alcaeus.

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