rdfs:comment
| - Poems are used to woo ladies by raising your relationship points with her, allowing you to marry them. Female characters can learn all of the poems as well, but other than completion on the character's known poems stats, they serve no purpose.
- The book is divided into two volumes with the first part, which occupies over half of the book, being titled Volume I and is stated on the copyright page to be a reprint of the contents of The Road of Dreams (incorrectly dated to 1924) however there are several differences between the two publications. They are:
- The poems found in the Vorkosigan Saga include the following:
* A sestina in honor of Cordelia Vorkosigan, composed by Enrique Borgos.
* Also, Enrique rewrote the introduction to his PhD thesis as a sonnet in honor of Ekaterin Vorsoisson.
* Elegiac poems in many styles composed by haut women but performed by the haut governors in commemoration of Lisbet Degtiar.
* Limericks "A Degtiar empress named LisbetTrapped a satrap lord neatly in his net.Enticed into treasonFor all the wrong reasons,He'll soon have a crash with his kismet." ―Miles Vorkosigan "A beautiful lady named RianHypnotized a Vor scion.The little defectiveThinks he's a detective,But instead will be fed to the lion." ―Miles Vorkosigan
* Camp songs with and without rude words .
* Poetry/songs mak
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abstract
| - The book is divided into two volumes with the first part, which occupies over half of the book, being titled Volume I and is stated on the copyright page to be a reprint of the contents of The Road of Dreams (incorrectly dated to 1924) however there are several differences between the two publications. They are:
* Pierrot Grown Old, which in 1925 appears as the very last poem in the overall book, appears in 1973 between the verses The Last Song of Columbine and Epilogue: Spoken by Punchinello within the overall sequence titled A Masque from Italy.
* Islot of Brittany, which appears between the verses The Bells of Brittany and Dark Sheila in the sequence titled Ballads in 1973 does not appear in the 1925 volume.
* Beatrice Passes, which in 1925 appears between the verses The Road of Dreams and Heritage in the Dreams and Fantasies sequence appears in the 1973 version in Volume II.
* A Palm Tree in Egypt in the sequence Other Poems in 1925 is retitled A Palm Tree in the Desert in 1973.
* In a Dispensary, one of the most quoted poems Christie wrote, which in 1925 appears between the verses Easter, 1918 and To a Beautiful Old Lady in the sequence Other Poems does not appear in the 1973 volume. The remainder of the 1973 publication, titled Volume II was, like its predecessor, divided into four sections:
* Things
* Places
* Love Poems and Others
* Verses of Nowadays One of the poems in the sequence Love Poems and Others is entitled To M.E.L.M. in Absence. The dedicatee of this poem is Christie's second husband Max Mallowan or Max Edgar Lucien Mallowan to give him his full name. It is not known when the poem was written, however the only prolonged absence the married coupled ever suffered was in the Second World War when Max was sent to Egypt with the British Council in February 1942 and after several years and different postings in North Africa, did not return home until May 1945. Both Christie's autobiography and her official biography are silent on the subject of whether or not this poem dates from this period. Remembrance, another poem in the same sequence, is a poem about the loss of a loved one and was reprinted in a small sixteen-page volume of the same name in 1988 by the Souvenir Press with illustrations by Richard Allen (ISBN 0-285-62876-3) The following year, the Souvenir Press published another of the poems from the collection, My Flower Garden, again in a small sixteen-page volume with illustrations by Richard Allen (ISBN 0-285-62888-7)
- Poems are used to woo ladies by raising your relationship points with her, allowing you to marry them. Female characters can learn all of the poems as well, but other than completion on the character's known poems stats, they serve no purpose.
- The poems found in the Vorkosigan Saga include the following:
* A sestina in honor of Cordelia Vorkosigan, composed by Enrique Borgos.
* Also, Enrique rewrote the introduction to his PhD thesis as a sonnet in honor of Ekaterin Vorsoisson.
* Elegiac poems in many styles composed by haut women but performed by the haut governors in commemoration of Lisbet Degtiar.
* Limericks "A Degtiar empress named LisbetTrapped a satrap lord neatly in his net.Enticed into treasonFor all the wrong reasons,He'll soon have a crash with his kismet." ―Miles Vorkosigan "A beautiful lady named RianHypnotized a Vor scion.The little defectiveThinks he's a detective,But instead will be fed to the lion." ―Miles Vorkosigan
* Camp songs with and without rude words .
* Poetry/songs making suggestive comparisons involving jumpships and wormholes.
* A rather treacly poem from very early in the universe was "Doreen's Gift"
* "The Siege of Silver Moon"
* This was a ballad involving a Vor lord, a beautiful witch, her flying mortar, and the pounding of enemy bones within such. The only extant line is: "If thou wilt swear thyself to me, thy liege lord true to thee I'll be"
* "The Tragedy of the Maiden of the Lake"
* This was a Vorkosigan family tale, set on the Long Lake, in which Vorkosigan Surleau was under siege and the maiden was sacrificed by her brother to save her from enemy troops only one day before her lover, Selig Vorkosigan, succeeded in coming to the rescue.
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