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It is only known that [Dance of the Skeletons] is a symphonic poem composed by the modern French composer Camille Saint-Saëns based on the poem of the same name by the native poet Khazali, and it is also his most famous song after "Carnival of the Animals".
Didn't see Kazali's profile.
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There's something to do about that dance.
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Map of FranceFrance (La France), the full name of the French Republic, now the French Fifth Republic, is located in the western part of Europe, bordering Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, Andorra and Spain, and across the English Channel from the United Kingdom. France is the first.
1. The main victorious country in World War II, which thus became a permanent member of the UN Security Council, has veto power over Security Council bills. France is also a founding member of the European Union and NATO, a member of the G8 and one of Europe's four largest economies, and a member of the Schengen Convention. The capital is Paris.
It's too much, I can't stick it, so I'll give you the address.
Below is the address of the document.
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World War II broke out, and Nazi Germany invaded France with a quick blitzkrieg. It is known in history as the Battle of France.
The Battle of France (known to Germany as the Western Campaign) was a German military operation that attacked France and the Low Countries on May 10, 1940, thus ending a stalemate of more than half a year of fake war. The operation was divided into two phases: the first was Operation Yellow, in which the German troops attacked Belgium to attract the main Allied forces north to meet the predetermined defensive line, while the real main force, the armored forces, drove through the loosely defended Ardennes Mountains and drove straight into the Allied rear, cutting off supplies and communications from the Allied forces that had penetrated into Belgium, and then encircling and annihilating them, but the British Expeditionary Force and many French soldiers successfully retreated from Dunkirk to the British mainland in Operation Dynamo.
The second phase of the German campaign was Operation Red, which began on 5 June, flanking the defenders of the Maginot Line and moving south to capture large swaths of French territory. When the war was one-sided, Italy declared war on France on 10 June. The French moved to Bordeaux, and Paris was made an undefended city, which was occupied by the Germans on June 14.
On 17 June, France's new Prime Minister Philippe Pétain issued an armistice declaration. On 22 June, France and Germany signed an armistice, which entered into force on 25 June. For the Axis powers, the battle was a brilliant victory.
France was divided into German occupation zones in the north and west, small Italian occupation zones in the southeast, and Vichy France, a remnant state in the south. The southern part of France was occupied on 10 November 1942, the remnants of France were occupied by Germany until the Allied landings in 1944, and the Low Countries were liberated in 1944 and 1945.
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France is just a battlefield, and Britain and Germany are the opponents (I personally think that it is a battle.
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Raymond Queneau (1903-1976), French poet, philistine and publisher, pioneer of postmodernism, and poet who broke out of the camp of surrealism. Born in Havre, he went to university in Paris, where he worked as a bank clerk, a salesperson and a reviewer for the Galimar publishing house. Geno wrote prolifically, but he became famous late, and it was not until 1951 that he published "If You Think" to attract attention.
Geno was an "office man", sitting in the office all day long, contemplative, and his early German philosophical education made him inclined to sentimentality, which was expressed in melancholy and sadness in **, but sincere and lyrical in poetry. At the same time, he inherited the black humor of surrealism, which was rambling and laughing, imagining strangely, boldly forming, coining new words, using slang, colloquialisms and even swear words. He was once called "one of the greatest Baroque poets of our time" for his eccentricity.
In the early 50s, Geno's poetic style changed abruptly, the subject matter changed from small to large, the technique changed from weird to plain, and the poems were full of science and wisdom. The Theory of the Evolution of the Small Universe prominently reflects the characteristics of his period. The poem is large-scale and extraordinary, and the poem is divided into six parts, each with 230 lines, from the origin of the universe to the evolution and development trend of the universe, and attempts to reveal the mysterious nature of the universe.
The poems are written with light and lively life, but there is no lack of strength and enthusiasm, which can be called Geno's masterpiece.
Since becoming famous in the 50s, Glendeau's accolades have come and gone. He was selected as a jury member of the Prix Goncourt and was invited to preside over the compilation of the Encyclopedia, as well as his passion for rhetoric and printing.
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Raymond Queneau (1903-1976, French poet, publisher, and pioneer of postmodernism) also invented a combinatorial algorithm that could create millions of poems from a limited set of sentences with the help of possibilities
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From the information available so far, I have not found the famous French poet mentioned in your question. Information on the life of Jean Pethamaure.
But there's a little story about Jean Pethamaure, and I don't know if it will help you. Here's what the story says:
On the side of the bustling avenue of Paris stood an old man in ragged clothes, gray-haired, and blind. Instead of reaching out to beg passers-by, as other beggars do, he stood a wooden sign beside him that read: "I can't see anything!"
There were a lot of pedestrians passing by on the street, and they were indifferent when they saw the words on the wooden signs, and some of them smiled faintly and left.
At noon that day, the poet Jean Pierreux also passed by. He looked at the words on the wooden sign and asked the blind old man, "Old man, did anyone give you money this morning?" ”
The blind old man sighed, "I, I didn't get anything. As he spoke, the expression on his face was very sad.
Jean Pethar listened, took up his pen and quietly added the words "spring has arrived, but" in front of the line, and hurried away.
In the evening, Jean Petham passed by again and asked the old blind man how he was doing in the afternoon. The blind old man smiled and said, "Sir, for some reason, there are so many people who gave me money in the afternoon!" Jean Pierreux listened, stroked his beard and smiled with satisfaction.
It can be referred to by chemical production enterprises.
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