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Oct-21-07 | | vonKrolock: Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany (July 24, 1878-October 25, 1957) A prolific and witty writer, he published also some interesting chess problems |
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Oct-21-07 | | Benzol: An influence on H P Lovecraft too IIRC. |
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Oct-21-07 | | Karpova: Here is a large article on Lord Dunsany:
http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/... |
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Jul-24-08 | | brankat: R.I.P. Sir. |
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Jul-24-08 | | FHBradley: Lord Dunsany about his simultaneous exhibition game against Capablanca:
<I found that the prize was a cocktail-shaker; a very handsome one, but still to a chessplayer as useless as reindeer-harness to anyone in a Southern country.> How very true! |
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Dec-17-08 | | Ragh: His full name is - DUNSANY, EDWARD JOHN MORETON DRAX PLUNKETT. http://www.philsp.com/homeville/BSS... |
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Dec-18-08
 | | sleepyirv: I used to play a lot of Lord Dunsany chess- it's regular a white army against four rows of pawns. It's a great way to learn the value of a pawn. |
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Feb-12-13 | | David2009: Check out "The Three Sailor's Gambit" e.g. on
http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/dun... |
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May-05-13 | | Benzol: Some more information about him
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward... A few more games wouldn't go amiss either.
:) |
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Jul-24-14
 | | Ron: Wow, I didn't know till now that the fantasy writer Lord Dunsany played chess. Happy Birthday! |
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Jul-25-14
 | | MissScarlett: <Bring me no more reports; let them fly all: Till Baruch Wood remove to Lord Dunsany, I cannot taint with fear.> |
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Jan-12-18 | | Kapmigs: <The Sea and Chess> by Lord Dunsany Silence. And silence still.
Then one long roller breaks,
And Hastings' houses fill
With the wild sound it makes.
Silence again. The sea,
Though it may seem to sleep,
Is still the vast and free
Inscrutable old deep.
Who shall entirely scan
All its mysteriousness?
Even the mind of man
Has deeps beyond our guess.
So, when a move has brought
Some strategy in sight,
We cannot plumb the thought
That brought that move to light.
And, small although it be,
And missed by careless eyes,
A chessboard, like the sea,
Has unplumbed mysteries. |
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Feb-13-18
 | | Richard Taylor: He influenced Tolkien and others... |
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Feb-13-18 | | wtpy: Ms scarlett, isn't it Birnan wood? |
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Feb-13-18
 | | Retireborn: <wtpy> Baruch Wood (usually referred to as BH Wood) was a well-known figure in British chess circles. Better-known than Lord Dunsany, I should have thought. |
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Feb-13-18 | | wtpy: RB, Thanks. Thought there might an inside joke or allusion and appreciate the enlightenment. |
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Feb-13-18 | | zanzibar: Strange - Winter has a long article on the man, and doesn't mention Dunsey's chess: (Black to move)
 click for larger viewWhite's pawn can all only move one square at a time. White wins by checkmating Black, Black wins by ridding all White pieces from the board. Variant invented in 1942. |
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Feb-13-18 | | dumbgai: Is white allowed to promote pawns in this variant? |
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Feb-14-18
 | | WannaBe: I am not wasting my money on 3 extra sets so I can have 4 rows of white pawns. Thank you, very much. |
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Feb-14-18 | | zanzibar: <dumbgai> I think so... <Rules are the same as in regular chess, with the following exceptions:Black moves first.
Only Black's pawns have the two-step option on their first move. Black wins by capturing all 32 white pawns, while White wins by checkmating Black. Other rules are the same as regular chess; for example, all pawns can be promoted on the final rank. Stalemate is the same as in regular chess; for example, if White's pawns run out of moves.> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunsa...
<WannaBe> You're no fun! ha! |
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Feb-16-18 | | Jean Defuse: ...
[Event "Dublin v Belfast"]
[Site "Dublin"]
[Date "1929.03.02"]
[White "Dunsany, Lord"]
[Black "Manderson, S E."]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "B12"]
[PlyCount "68"]
1. d4 c6 2. e4 d5 3. e5 Bf5 4. f4 e6 5. Nf3 Nd7 6. Bd3 Bxd3 7. Qxd3 Ne7 8. O-O
Nf5 9. c3 c5 10. Be3 Qb6 11. b3 Nxe3 12. Qxe3 cxd4 13. cxd4 Nc5 14. Nc3 Na6 15.
Qe2 Nc7 16. Rac1 Be7 17. Qd3 O-O 18. Ne2 Qb5 19. Qxb5 Nxb5 20. a4 Na3 21. Rc7
Bd8 22. Rxb7 Bb6 23. b4 Nc4 24. a5 Bd8 25. Rc1 Re8 26. Nc3 Re7 27. Rxe7 Bxe7
28. Na2 Rb8 29. Ne1 Bxb4 30. Rb1 Bd6 31. Rxb8+ Bxb8 32. a6 Bc7 33. Nb4 Bb6 34.
Nc6 Kf8 1/2-1/2
Source: http://www.irlchess.com/games-2/
... |
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Feb-16-18
 | | offramp: <WannaBe: I am not wasting my money on 3 extra sets so I can have 4 rows of white pawns.> You would actually need 23 extra sets. at most. |
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Feb-16-18
 | | Dionysius1: Presumably 2 extra sets, though I thought longer about 23 than I should have :-) |
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Feb-17-18
 | | offramp: <Dionysius1: Presumably 2 extra sets, though I thought longer about 23 than I should have :-)> There are 32 potential white queens on the board. That is more than 2 sets. |
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Feb-17-18
 | | Retireborn: <offramp> Construct a legal game in which all 32 pawns queen. That'll teach you not to be a clever dick, won't it :) |
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