Rudi Holzapfel - Works

Works

  • Cast a Cold Eye, 1959, with Brendan Kennelly
  • Romances, 1960, Sunburst Press
  • The Rain, the Moon, 1961, with Brendan Kennelly
  • The Dark About Our Loves, 1962, with Brendan Kennelly
  • Poems: Green Townlands (Leeds), 1963, with Brendan Kennelly
  • Transubstantiations, 1963
  • The Leprechaun, 1963
  • Why Hitler is in Heaven (satirical ballad), 1964
  • Nollaig by Rudi Holzappel and Oliver Snoddy, 1964
  • Translations From The English, 1965, The Museum Bookshop, Dublin
  • The Rebel Bloom, Leeds, 1967
  • For Love of Ireland (Broadsheet with 9 poems), Leeds, 1967
  • No Road beyond Vallombrosa, 1968
  • Parasites Lost, (Rudi Patrick Sebastian Holzapfel and John Joseph Conleth Farrell), 1970, Privately Printed, Cork
  • Soledades, n.d., Sunburst Press
  • Whom a Dream Hath Possessed, 1975, Sunburst Press
  • A Smile Dies, 1978, Sunburst Press
  • Repeat after me, 1980, Woodway Press, Euskirchen
  • Poems Written Swiftly, 1982, Sunburst Press
  • Buckshot (Aphorisms), 1983
  • Turning and Manipulation, 1986, Sunburst Press
  • Ask Silence Why, 1961-1982, selected poems edited by Ellen Shannon-Mangan, Dublin, 1987, Beaver Row Press
  • The Light of Loss, December 1987, Sunburst Press
  • And Other Poems, 1987, Pioneer Printing, New York
  • White Alligators, 1991, Sunburst Press
  • For Ronnie, 1993 (single leaf - to be read at the graveside)
  • An Cheapach, 1993, Sunburst Press
  • Dark Harvest, 1997, Sunburst Press
  • Sonnets, 2001, Sunburst Press
  • The Thieves of Dream, 2003, Sunburst Press
  • A Tiger Says His Prayers, 2006, Sunburst Press

Bibliography:

  • Rudi Holzapfel A Bibliographical Checklist, foreword by Alraune Graefin Boesewicht, 1971, Triest.

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Famous quotes containing the word works:

    His character as one of the fathers of the English language would alone make his works important, even those which have little poetical merit. He was as simple as Wordsworth in preferring his homely but vigorous Saxon tongue, when it was neglected by the court, and had not yet attained to the dignity of a literature, and rendered a similar service to his country to that which Dante rendered to Italy.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The hippopotamus’s day
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    In the works of man, everything is as poor as its author; vision is confined, means are limited, scope is restricted, movements are labored, and results are humdrum.
    Joseph De Maistre (1753–1821)