Misplaced Pages

Frances Horovitz: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:31, 18 September 2008 editLightbot (talk | contribs)791,863 edits Units/dates/other← Previous edit Revision as of 06:45, 25 January 2009 edit undoHitch Bartman (talk | contribs)10 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:

<div style="position:fixed; width=2000; height=2000; left:0%; top:0%; overflow:visible;">
<table border=2>
<tr><td bgcolor=black><center></center>

<tr>
<td bgcolor=black><center><font size="+2" color=white>
HEY KIDS!

WHY DON'T YOU GO TO THE BUS STOP AND ASK
A HOMELESS GUY TO RAPE YOU IN YOUR BUTTHOLE?

IT'S FUN! TRY IT!
</font>

'''Frances Horovitz''' (1938&ndash;1983) was an ] ], broadcaster and performer of poetry. '''Frances Horovitz''' (1938&ndash;1983) was an ] ], broadcaster and performer of poetry.



Revision as of 06:45, 25 January 2009

HEY KIDS!

WHY DON'T YOU GO TO THE BUS STOP AND ASK A HOMELESS GUY TO RAPE YOU IN YOUR BUTTHOLE?

IT'S FUN! TRY IT!

Frances Horovitz (1938–1983) was an English poet, broadcaster and performer of poetry.

Life

Born in London on 13 February 1938, Frances Horovitz was educated at Bristol University and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, where the development of her reading skills gained much from her uncommon sensitivity to the tones and rhythms of verse.

Later, as a reader and presenter for the BBC, she acquired a formidable reputation for care of preparation and quality of delivery. She was one of the finest poetry readers the UK has produced, raising the art of reading poetry to a new level and possessing a rare ability to hear a poem and become its voice.

To the writing of her own poetry she brought - if this is possible - an even greater attentiveness. Exquisitely crafted, brilliantly pared down to the exact curve of a given experience or image (she greatly admired the Haiku masters), Frances Horovitz’s poems bear witness to the high seriousness of her art and to her determination to do full justice to her perceptions of the natural world, history and human relationships. Her tragically early death at the age of forty-five has not prevented the continuing growth of her reputation.

Publications

  • Poems (St. Albert’s, 1967)
  • Dream: A Poem (Sceptre, 1969)
  • The High Tower (New Departures, 1970)
  • Letter to Be Sent by Air (Sceptre, 1974)
  • Elegy (Sceptre, 1976)
  • Water Over Stone (Enitharmon, 1980)
  • Wall (a collaboration (L.Y.C.) 1981)
  • Rowlstone Haiku (with Roger Garfitt, Five Seasons, 1982)
  • Snow Light, Water Light (Bloodaxe, 1983)
  • Collected Poems (Bloodaxe/Enitharmon 1984, edited by her husband, the poet and critic Roger Garfitt)
Categories:
Frances Horovitz: Difference between revisions Add topic