The Ruba'iyat . Mathilde Blind,Christopher Cranch, Theodore Watts, and Rosamund MarriottWatson. All these find a place in Mr. N. H. Doles monumentaledition. 94 One of the most interesting and at the same time unattainable items in the literature of Omar is the fulfilment of Fitzgeralds idea ofputting the quatrains into Latin verse, as follows: Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, the Astronomer-poet of Persia,rendered into English verse by Edward Fitzgerald, and intoLatin verse by Herbert Wilson Greene, , , Fellowof Magdalen College, Oxford. Privately Printed (Oxford), 1893. 95 There remains on
The Ruba'iyat . Mathilde Blind,Christopher Cranch, Theodore Watts, and Rosamund MarriottWatson. All these find a place in Mr. N. H. Doles monumentaledition. 94 One of the most interesting and at the same time unattainable items in the literature of Omar is the fulfilment of Fitzgeralds idea ofputting the quatrains into Latin verse, as follows: Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, the Astronomer-poet of Persia,rendered into English verse by Edward Fitzgerald, and intoLatin verse by Herbert Wilson Greene, , , Fellowof Magdalen College, Oxford. Privately Printed (Oxford), 1893. 95 There remains only to be mentioned Miss Liza Lehmanns Song Cycle, In a Persian Garden, in which all, or parts of, thirty-one quatrains are arranged for four voices. It was performedfor the first time (in public) at St. Jamess Hall, 14th December,1896, and is fully described in the Programme and AnalyticalRemarks for that evening (Chappell). (Gratitude is due that this book is finishedBefore my life has reached its termination.). H. S. NICHOLS, LTD., PRINTERS, 3Q CHARING CROSS ROAD, LONDON, /£>, KL it > T3M ON idM g o O •+J 7» J3 ^ r13 O M <D U 9 O (x) 0) -vt M 4. ltdSP F0 P (dH< University of TorontoLibrary DO NOT REMOVE THE CARD FROM THIS POCKET
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