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  1. 1 de jul. de 2014 · Here are Arthur Symons's words on Gérard de Nerval – you know, the one who used to walk his lobster on a lead in the Palais-Royal because "it does not bark, and knows the secrets of the sea ...

  2. Arthur Symons was a poet, critic, and editor associated with the Aesthetic movement and the Decadent movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.. Symons is best known for his poetry, which often explores themes of urban life, psychological alienation, and the fleeting nature of beauty.His style is characterized by its sensuous imagery, musicality, and melancholic tone.

  3. Arthur Symons - Arthur William Symons, born on February 28, 1865, in Milford Haven, Wales, is a poet, critic, short story writer, translator, and editor. Arthur Symons - The Academy of American Poets is the largest membership-based nonprofit organization fostering an appreciation for contemporary poetry and supporting American poets.

  4. In this new biography of Arthur Symons (1865-1945), Karl Beckson uses much previously unpublished material that reveals new dimensions of Symons' life and art. As a critic and poet, Symons was a major figure in the development of early Modernism in England. The impact on twentieth-century writers of his major work, "The Symbolist Movement in Literature" (1899), and his personal relationships ...

  5. In Arthur Symons …November 1893) into a book, The Symbolist Movement in Literature (1899), which influenced both Yeats and T.S. Eliot; in it he characterized Symbolist literature as suggesting or evoking the “unseen reality apprehended by the consciousness.” Symons’s criticism constitutes an ambitious development of Walter Pater’s model of the “aesthetic critic.”

  6. Arthur Symons’s (1865–1945) prominence at the end of the nineteenth century and subsequent influence on early-twentieth-century literature is well established. His biographer Karl Beckson aptly calls him “a major figure who helped stimulate the Modernist initiative.”

  7. The Symbolist Movement in Literature, first published in 1899, and with additional material in 1919, is a work by Arthur Symons largely credited with bringing French Symbolism to the attention of Anglo-American literary circles. Its first two editions were vital influences on W. B. Yeats and T. S. Eliot—a note that, for nothing else, would assure its historical place with the most important ...