Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Pieces of Hope to the Echo of the World (French: Parcelles d'espoir à l'echo de ce monde) is reputedly the modern era's longest, handwritten, poem, unveiled on 4 August 2006 by its author French public notary Patrick Huet. It comprises 7,547 verses and is reported to be almost 1 km (994 metres (1,087 yd)) long .The poem takes the form of an acrostic, in which the initials of each line collectively spell out the 30 articles of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The display of the work was unveiled before a court official in Lyon, so that the poem could be considered for inclusion in Guinness World Records.There remain other, far longer epic poems, such as the Indian Mahabharata and Persian Shahnameh, although these are far older."@en }
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- Pieces_of_Hope_to_the_Echo_of_the_World abstract "Pieces of Hope to the Echo of the World (French: Parcelles d'espoir à l'echo de ce monde) is reputedly the modern era's longest, handwritten, poem, unveiled on 4 August 2006 by its author French public notary Patrick Huet. It comprises 7,547 verses and is reported to be almost 1 km (994 metres (1,087 yd)) long .The poem takes the form of an acrostic, in which the initials of each line collectively spell out the 30 articles of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The display of the work was unveiled before a court official in Lyon, so that the poem could be considered for inclusion in Guinness World Records.There remain other, far longer epic poems, such as the Indian Mahabharata and Persian Shahnameh, although these are far older.".
- Q7191402 abstract "Pieces of Hope to the Echo of the World (French: Parcelles d'espoir à l'echo de ce monde) is reputedly the modern era's longest, handwritten, poem, unveiled on 4 August 2006 by its author French public notary Patrick Huet. It comprises 7,547 verses and is reported to be almost 1 km (994 metres (1,087 yd)) long .The poem takes the form of an acrostic, in which the initials of each line collectively spell out the 30 articles of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The display of the work was unveiled before a court official in Lyon, so that the poem could be considered for inclusion in Guinness World Records.There remain other, far longer epic poems, such as the Indian Mahabharata and Persian Shahnameh, although these are far older.".