James Michie
http://dbpedia.org/resource/James_Michie an entity of type: Thing
James Michie (* 24. Juni 1927 in Weybridge, Elmbridge, Surrey; † 30. Oktober 2007 in London) war ein britischer Übersetzer und Dichter, der für seine gesammelten Gedichte Collected Poems, die Themen wie Liebe, Träume und Tod behandeln, 1995 mit dem Hawthornden-Preis ausgezeichnet wurde.
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James Michie /ˈmɪki/ (24 June 1927 – 30 October 2007) was an English poet, translator and editor. Michie was born in Weybridge, Surrey, the son of a banker and the younger brother of Donald Michie, a researcher in artificial intelligence. The texts that Michie translated included The Odes of Horace, The Art of Love by Ovid, The Poems of Catullus, The Epigrams of Martial and selections from La Fontaine's and Aesop's fables. He was the editorial director of The Bodley Head, a British publishing company, and lecturer at London University. His Collected Poems won the 1995 Hawthornden Prize.
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James Michie
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James Michie
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James Michie (* 24. Juni 1927 in Weybridge, Elmbridge, Surrey; † 30. Oktober 2007 in London) war ein britischer Übersetzer und Dichter, der für seine gesammelten Gedichte Collected Poems, die Themen wie Liebe, Träume und Tod behandeln, 1995 mit dem Hawthornden-Preis ausgezeichnet wurde.
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James Michie /ˈmɪki/ (24 June 1927 – 30 October 2007) was an English poet, translator and editor. Michie was born in Weybridge, Surrey, the son of a banker and the younger brother of Donald Michie, a researcher in artificial intelligence. The texts that Michie translated included The Odes of Horace, The Art of Love by Ovid, The Poems of Catullus, The Epigrams of Martial and selections from La Fontaine's and Aesop's fables. He was the editorial director of The Bodley Head, a British publishing company, and lecturer at London University. His Collected Poems won the 1995 Hawthornden Prize. Beginning in the 1970s, Michie devised and judged literary competitions for The Spectator under the pen-name of Jaspistos. He caused controversy in 2004 when his poem, "Friendly Fire," was published in The Spectator under then-editor Boris Johnson.
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2509