[New-Poetry] a question

Anny Ballardini anny.ballardini at tin.it
Thu Jan 3 17:42:06 EST 2008


I liked Nausicaa

and for men maybe Frédéric but probably because of early French literature, 
see what I found here:
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft8k4008jd/


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "TheOldMole" <Opus40-01 at opus40.org>
To: "NewPoetry: Contemporary Poetry News &amp;Views" 
<new-poetry at wiz.cath.vt.edu>
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 10:48 PM
Subject: Re: [New-Poetry] a question


> Dickens had great male character names. Mr. Gradgrind, Mr. Pickwick, Mr. 
> Micawber.
>
> Female name: Cosette is hard to beat. So I'll go in a different direction, 
> with Cruella de Ville.
>
> jfq at myuw.net wrote:
>> Roskolnikov always resonated with me for some reason, so i'd say that for 
>> the male name.
>>
>> for a female name, I always liked "Brett" (bret? it's been a while) from 
>> the sun also rises.
>>
>>
>> On Thu, 3 Jan 2008, Anny Ballardini wrote:
>>
>>> Which is the name in literature you liked most (male and female)?
>>>
>>>
>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>>
>>> Anny Ballardini
>>> http://annyballardini.blogspot.com/
>>> http://www.fieralingue.it/modules.php?name=poetshome
>>> http://www.moriapoetry.com/ebooks.html
>>> I Tell You: One must still have chaos in one to give birth to a dancing 
>>> star!
>>> Friedrich Nietzsche
>
> -- 
> Tad Richards
> http://www.opus40.org/tadrichards/
> http://opusforty.blogspot.com/
>
> The moral is this: in American verse,
> The better you are, the pay is worse.
>  --Corey Ford
>



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