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  1. An attempt by Heym to draw one of his ‘imaginations’ of madness. In the text above he laments that ‘Heaven denied me a gift for drawing’ and explains that he has long had an image of a madman in his minds eye. Reproduced in Am Ufer des blauen Tags. However, in 1924, a new edition of Umbra Vitae appeared, designed and illustrated by ...

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      The life and career of one of the greatest 19th-century...

  2. Find 87 different ways to say UMBRA, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.

  3. 52. Ernst Ludwig Kirchner illustrated the 1924 reprint of Umbra Vitae (Shadow of life), a posthumous collection of Georg Heym's Expressionist poems that was first published in 1912, the year of the poet's premature death, at age twenty-four, by drowning. Kirchner, who owned a copy of the earlier edition and knew the poems very well, designed ...

  4. Sub umbra floreo: Under the shade I flourish: National Motto of Belize, referring to the shade of the mahogany tree. sub verbo; sub voce: Under the word or heading; abbreviated s.v. Used to cite a work, such as a dictionary, with alphabetically arranged entries, e.g. "Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. 'horse. ' "" sublimis ab unda: Raised from ...

  5. Hi ideo vocan­tur umbrae. Umbra est homo non invi­ta­tus qui adduci­tur ad con­vivi­um ab alio homine qui ad id con­vivi­um invi­ta­tus est. Ergo prox­ime, si quan­do con­vivi­um adieri­tis, et for­t­asse libebit adduc­ere amicum qui non invi­ta­tus est, ille vobis erit umbra. Tantum’st!

  6. Umbra Vitae is Kirchner’s masterpiece in book art. The artist was obsessed by Heym’s haunting poems, which explore such themes as alienation, death, estrangement, loneliness, and war. Kirchner selected the poems included here, created corresponding images, and designed the book. In 1915 he had enlisted "involuntarily voluntarily" in the ...

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  8. Gloaming is a synonym of “twilight” or “dusk.”. It comes from the Old English word for twilight, "glōm," which is akin to "glōwan," meaning "to glow," and was originally used in Scottish dialects of English. Gloam itself was used as a verb meaning “to grow dark” and, in Noah Webster’s dictionary from 1828, meaning “to be ...

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