[2016]
Electronic resource
9781785436833
Electronic resource
The Poetry of Alexander Pope. Volume III, "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread."
Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744, author.
2016
The Poetry of Alexander Pope. Volume III, "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread."
2007.
1st ed.
"John Lithgow has hand-picked some of the best poems ever written in this quintessential collection for the whole family to treasure"--Provided b
Book
Grand Central Pub.,
9780446580021
Book
The poets' corner : the one-and-only poetry book for the whole family
Dover beach / Musée des Beaux Arts / Dream song 76: Henry's confession / Filling station / The tyger / We real cool / How do I love thee? Let me count the ways (Sonnet 43) / To a mouse / I would I were a careless child / Jabberwocky / from The general prologue / Kubla Khan / To Brooklyn Bridge / if everything happens that can't be done / There is no frigate like a book (1263) / Song (Go and catch a falling star) / Rhapsody on a windy night / Birches / Love unrequited, or the nightmare song / A supermarket in California / The beggar to Mab, the Fairy Queen / Pied beauty / When I was one-and-twenty / The weary blues / The death of the ball turret gunner / Inviting a friend to supper / To autumn / Days / The owl and the pussy-cat / A psalm of life / The public garden / To his coy mistress / Love is not all / Poetry / No doctors today, thank you / Afternoon / Annabel Lee / The river-merchant's wife: a letter / Up-hill / Chicago / Fear no more the heat o' the sun / To a skylark / Sonnet LXXV (One day I wrote her name upon the strand) / If I told him: a completed portrait of Picasso / The emperor of ice-cream / Do not go gentle into that good night / There was a child went forth / The red wheelbarrow / I wandered lonely as a cloud / The lake isle of Innisfree
Lithgow, John, 1945-
Matthew Arnold -- W. H. Auden -- John Berryman -- Elizabeth Bishop -- William Blake -- Gwendolyn Brooks -- Elizabeth Barrett Browning -- Robert Burns -- George Gordon, Lord Byron -- Lewis Carroll -- Geoffrey Chaucer -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Hart Crane -- E. E. Cummings -- Emily Dickinson -- John Donne -- T. S. Eliot -- Robert Frost -- William S. Gilbert -- Allen Ginsberg -- Robert Herrick -- Gerard Manley Hopkins -- A. E. Housman -- Langston Hughes -- Randall Jarrell -- Ben Jonson -- John Keats -- Philip Larkin -- Edward Lear -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow -- Robert Lowell -- Andrew Marvell -- Edna St. Vincent Millay -- Marianne Moore -- Ogden Nash -- Dorothy Parker -- Edgar Allan Poe -- Ezra Pound -- Christina Rossetti -- Carl Sandburg -- William Shakespeare -- Percy Bysshe Shelley -- Edmund Spenser -- Gertrude Stein -- Wallace Stevens -- Dylan Thomas -- Walt Whitman -- William Carlos Williams -- William Wordsworth -- William Butler Yeats.
[selected by] John Lithgow.
2007
The poets' corner : the one-and-only poetry book for the whole family
Columbia University Press,
9780231072403
Book
The Concise Columbia book of poetry
The Greatest hits of poetry in English. Tyger / Sir Patrick Spens / To Autumn / That time of year thou mayst in me behold / Pied Beauty / Stopping by woods on a snowy evening / Kubla Khan / Dover Beach / La Belle Dame Sans Merci / To the Virgins, to make much of time / To his Coy mistress / Passionate Shepherd to his love / Death, be not proud / Upon Julia's clothes / To Lucasta, going to the wars / World is too much with us / On first looking into chapman's Homer / Jabberwocky / Second coming / Elegy written in a country churchyard / Ozumandias / Sailing to Byzantium / Shall I compare there to a summer's day? / Let me not to the marriage of true minds / Fear no more the heat o' the sun / Ode to a nightingale / Love song of J. Alfred Prufrock / To Helen / Because I Could not stop for death / Windhover / Anthem for Doomed youth / When icicles hang by the wall / Batter my heart, three-personed God / Love / Ode to the west wind / God's Grandeur / Do not go gentle into that good night
Western wind / Lover showeth how he is forsaken of such as he sometime enjoyed / Good-morrow / Delight in disorder / Wandered lonely as a cloud / My last Duchess / Spring and fall / Leda and the swan / River-Merchant's wife: A letter / Go, lovely rose / Retreat / Ode on a Grecian Urn / London / And did those feet / Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 / Splendor falls / Darkling thrush / Loveliest of trees, the cherry now / Mending wall / Fern Hill / A litany in time of plague / Song: To Celia / Collar / Why so Pale and Wan, fond lover? / Garden / Solitary reaper / Break, break, break / Crossing the bar / Mr. Flood's party / Musee des Beaux arts / Death of the ball Turret Gunner / Full fathom five / When to the sessions of sweet silent thought / Piping down the Valleys Wild / So, we'll go no more a-roving / I heard a fly buzz / Miniver Cheevy / Tp Brooklyn bridge/ Edward, Edward
Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part / Oh Mistress mine / On my first son / At the round earth's imagined corners / Virtue / Ask me no more where Jove Bestows / Ode on the death of a favorite cat, drowned in a tub of gold fishes / Rime of the Ancient mariner / Concord hymn / Lake isle of innisfree / Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae sub Regno Cynarae / My Papa's Waltz / Nymph's reply to the Shepherd / Gp and catch a falling star / Sun rising / Lycidas / To Althea, from prison / Sick rose / Ulysses / Eagle / Home-Thoughts, from abroad/ A narrow fellow in the grass / When you are old / Listeners
Harmon, William, 1938-
William Blake -- Anonymous -- John Keats -- William Shakespeare -- Gerard Manley Hopkins -- Robert Frost -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Matthew Arnold -- John Keats -- Robert Herrick -- Andrew Marvell -- Christopher Marlowe -- John Donne -- Robert Herrick -- Richard Lovelace -- William Wordsworth -- John Keats -- Lewis Carroll -- William Butler Yeats -- Thomas Gray -- Percy Bysshe Shelley -- William Butler Yeats -- William Shakespeare -- William Shakespeare -- Willian Shakespeare -- John Keats -- T. S. Eliot -- Edgar Allan Poe -- Emily Dickinson -- Gerard Manley Hopkins -- Wilfred Owen -- William Shakespeare -- John Donne -- George Herbert -- Percy Bysshe Shelley -- Gerard Manley Hopkins -- Dylan Thomas --
Anonymous -- Sir Thomas Wyatt -- John Donne -- Robert Herrick -- William Wordsworth -- Robert Browning -- Gerard Manley Hopkins -- William Butler Yeats -- Ezra Pound -- Edmund Waller -- Henry Vaughan -- John Keats -- William Blake -- William Blake -- William Wordsworth -- Alfred, Lord Tennyson -- Thomas Hardy -- A. E. Housman -- Robert Frost -- Dylan Thomas -- Thomas Nashe -- Ben Jonson -- George Herbert -- Sir John Suckling -- Andrew Marvell -- William Wordsworth -- Alfred, Lord Tennyson -- Alfred, Lord Tennyson -- Edwin Arlington Robinson -- W. H. Auden -- Randall Jarrell -- William Shakespeare -- William Shakespeare -- William Blake -- George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron -- Emily Diskinson -- Edwin Alington Robinson -- Hart Crane -- Anonymous --
Michael Drayton -- William Shakespeare -- Ben Jonson -- John Donne -- George Herbert -- Thomas Carew -- Thomas Gray -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Ralph Waldo Emerson -- William Butler Yeats -- Ernest Dowson -- Theodore Roethre -- Sir Walter Ralegh -- John Donne -- John Donne -- John Milton -- Richard Lovelace -- William Blake -- Alfred, Lord Tennyson -- Alfred, Lord Tennyson -- Robert Browning -- Emily Dickinson -- William Butler Yeats -- Walter De La Mare.
edited by William Harmon.
1990
The Concise Columbia book of poetry
Holt,
Book
Complete poems : centennial edition with an introduction
1887 -- Loveliest of trees, the cherry now -- The recruit -- Reveille -- Oh see how thick the goldcup flowers -- When the lad for longing sighs -- When smoke stood up from Ludlow -- Farewell to barn and stack and tree -- On moonlit heath and lonesome bank -- March -- On your midnight pallet lying -- When I watch the living meet -- When I was one-and-twenty -- There pass the careless people -- Look not in my eyes, for fear -- It nods and curtseys and recovers -- Twice a week the winter thorough -- Oh, when I was in love with you -- To an athlete dying young -- Oh fair enough are sky and plain -- Bredon Hill -- The street sounds to the soldiers' tread -- The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair -- Say, lad, have you things to do -- This time of year a twelvemonth past -- Along the field as we came by -- Is my team ploughing -- The Welsh marches -- The lent lily -- Others, I am not the first -- On Wenlock Edge the wood's in trouble -- From far, from eve and morning -- If truth in hearts that perish -- The new mistress -- On the idle hill of summer -- White in the moon the long road lies -- As through the wild green hills of Wyre -- The winds out of the west land blow -- Tis time, I think, by Wenlock town -- Into my heart an air that kills -- In my own shire, if I was sad -- The merry guide -- The immortal part -- If it chance your eye offend you -- Bring, in this timeless grave to throw -- The carpenter's son -- Be still, my soul, be still -- Think no more, lad; laugh, be jolly -- Clunton and Clunbury -- Loitering with a vacant eye -- Far in a western brookland -- The true lover -- With rue my heart is laden -- Westward on the high-hilled plains -- The day of battle -- You smile upon your friend to-day -- When I came last to Ludlow -- The isle of Portland -- Now hollow fires burn out to black -- Hughley Steeple -- Terence, this is stupid stuff -- I hoed and trenched and weeded -- We'll to the woods no more -- The west -- As I gird on for fighting -- Her strong enchantments failing -- Illis jacet -- Grenadier -- Lancer -- In valleys green and still -- Soldier from the ars returning -- The chestnut casts his flambeaux -- Yonder see the morning blink -- The laws of God, the laws of man -- The deserter -- The culprit -- Eight o'clock -- Spring morning -- Astronomy -- The rain, it streams on stone and hillock -- In midnights of November -- The night is freezing fast -- The fairies break their dances -- The sloe was lost in flower -- In the morning, in the morning -- Epithalamium -- The oracles -- The half-moon westers low, my love -- The sigh that heaves the grasses -- Now dreary dawns the eastern light -- Wake not for the world-heard thunder -- Sunner's rue -- Hell gate -- When I would muse in boyhood -- When the eye of day is shut -- The first of May -- When first my way to fair I took -- Revolution -- Epitaph on an army of mercenaries -- Oh stay at home, my lad, and plough -- When summer's end is nighing -- Tell me not here, it needs not saying -- Fancy's knell -- They say my verse is sad -- Easter hymn -- When Israel out of Egypt came -- For these of old the trader -- The sage to the young man -- Diffugere nives -- I to my perils -- Stars, I have seen them fall -- Give me a land of boughs in leaf.
When green buds hang in the elm like dust -- The weeping Pleiads wester -- The rainy Pleiads wester -- I promise nothing : friends will part -- I lay me down and slumber -- The farms of home lie lost in even -- Tarry delight; so seldom met -- How clear, how lovely bright -- Bells in tower at evening toll -- Delight it is in youth and May -- The mill-stream, now that noises cease -- Like mine, the veins of these that slumber -- The world goes none the lamer -- Ho, everyone that thirsteth -- Crossing alone the nighted ferry -- Stone, stell, dominions pass -- Yon flakes that fret the eastern sky -- I counsel you beware -- To stand up straight and tread the turning mill -- He, standing hushed, a pace or two apart -- From the wash the laundress sends -- Shake hands, we shall never be friends -- Because I liked you better -- With seed the sowers scatter -- On forelands high in heaven -- Young is the blood that yonder -- Half-way, for one commandment broken -- Here dead lie we because we did not choose -- I did not lose my heart in summer's even -- By shores and woods and steeples -- My dreams are of a field afar -- Farewell to a name and a number -- He looked at me with eyes I thought -- A.J.J. -- I wake from dreams and turning -- Far known to sea and shore -- Smooth between sea and land -- The land of Biscay -- For my funeral -- Parta Quies -- Atys -- Oh were he and I together -- When Adam walked in Eden young -- It is no gift I tender -- Here are the skies, the planets seven -- Ask me no more, for fear I should reply -- He would not stay for me -- Now to her lap the incestuous earth -- When the bells justle in the tower -- Oh, on my breast in days hereafter -- God's acre -- An epitaph -- Oh turn not in from marching -- Oh is it the jar of nations -- Tis five years since, 'An end', said I -- Some can gaze and not be sick -- The stars have not dealt me the worst they could do -- Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists -- The defeated -- I shall not die for you -- New Year's Eve -- R.L.S. -- The olive -- Now do our eyes behold / What man is he that yearneth / In heaven-high musings and many
Housman, A. E. (Alfred Edward), 1859-1936.
Davenport, Basil, 1905-1966.
Haber, Tom Burns, 1900-
by Basil Davenport and a history of the text by Tom Burns Haber.
1959
Complete poems : centennial edition with an introduction
1994, ©1991.
Rev., corr., and expanded ed. containing all the published poetry.
This centennial edition of E.E. Cummings's Complete Poems, published in celebration of his birth on October 14, 1894, contains all of the poems p
Book
Liveright,
9780871401526
9780871401458
9780871407108
Book
Complete poems, 1904-1962
Poems
Tulips -- Epithalamion -- Of nicolette -- Songs -- (thee will I praise between those rivers whose -- when life is quite through with -- Always before your voice my soul -- Thy fingers make early flowers of -- All in green went my love riding -- Where's Madge then, -- Doll's boy's asleep -- cruelly, love -- when God lets my body be -- Puella Mea -- Chansons innocentes -- in Just -- hist whist -- little tree -- why did you go -- Tumbling-hair picker of buttercups violets -- Orientale -- i spoke to thee -- my love -- listen -- unto thee i -- lean candles hunger in -- The emperor -- Amores -- your little voice over the wires came leaping -- in the rain- -- there is a -- consider O -- as is the sea marvelous -- into the smiting -- if I believe -- The glory is fallen out of -- I like -- after five -- O distinct -- La Guerre -- Humanity I love you -- earth like a tipsy -- The bigness of cannon -- little ladies more -- O sweet spontaneous -- Impressions -- Lady of silence -- The sky a silver -- writhe and -- The hills -- stinging -- the sky was -- i was considering how -- between green mountains -- The hours rise up putting off stars and it is -- i will wade out till my thighs are steeped in burning flowers -- Portraits -- of my -- being -- III. as usual i did not find him in cafes, the more dissolute atmosphere -- The skinny voice -- Babylon slim -- The dress was a suspicious madder, importing the cruelty of roses. -- of evident invisibles -- ta -- it's just like a coffin's -- between nose-red gross -- i walked the boulevard -- 5 -- The young -- one April dusk the -- between the breasts -- but the other.
in the, exquisite; -- The rose -- spring omnipotent goddess thou dost -- spring omnipotent goddess thou dost -- Buffalo Bill's -- Cleopatra built -- Picasso -- conversation with my friend is particularly -- my mind is -- The waddling -- raise the shade -- somebody knew Lincoln somebody xerxes -- Post impressions -- windows go orange in the slowly. -- beyond the brittle towns asleep -- The moon is hiding in -- riverly is a flower -- any man is wonderful -- into the strenuous briefness -- at the head of this street a gasping organ is waving motheaten -- i was sitting in mcsorley's outside it was New York and beautifully snowing. -- at the ferocious phenomenon of 5 o'clock i find myself gently decompos- -- SNO -- i am going to utter a tree, nobody -- Chimneys -- Sonnets-realities -- The Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls -- when i am in Boston, i do not speak. -- goodby Betty, don't remember me -- ladies and gentlemen this little girl -- by god i want above fourteenth -- when you rang at Dick Mid's Place -- A fragrant sag of fruit distinctly grouped. -- irreproachable ladies firmly lewd -- near:breath of my breath:take not thy tingling -- when thou hast taken thy last applause, and when -- god pity me whom (god distinctly has) -- kitty. sixteen, 5' 1", white, prostitute. -- it started when Bill's chip of clenched arms -- she sits dropping on a caret of clenched arms -- unnoticed woman from whose kind large flesh -- twentyseven bums give a prostitute the once.
of this wilting wall the colour drub -- where as by dark really released, the modern -- XIX. my girl's tall with hard long eyes -- life boosts herself rapidly at me -- Sonnets -- unrealities -- what were roses. Perfume? for i do -- when unto nights of autumn do complain -- A connotation of infinity -- Thou in whose swordgreat story shine the deeds -- when my sensational moments are no more -- god gloats upon Her stunning flesh. Upon -- O Thou to whom the musical white spring -- when the proficient poison of sure sleep -- this is the garden : colours come and go, -- X. it is at moments after i have dreamed -- it may not always be so ; and i say -- I have seen her a stealthily frail -- if learned darkness from our searched world -- who's most afraid of death? thou art of him -- come nothing to my comparable soul -- when citied day with the sonorous homes -- will suddenly trees leap from winter and will -- A wind has blown the rain away and blown -- when my love comes to see me it's -- it is funny, you will be dead some day. -- A connotation of infinity -- Thou in whose swordgreat story shine the deeds -- V. when the proficient poison of sure sleep -- let's live suddenly without thinking -- yours is the music for no instrument -- fabulous against, a, fathoming jelly -- by little accurate saints thickly which tread -- A thing most new complete fragile intense, -- autumn is : that between a building -- my love is building a building -- perhaps it is to feel strike -- The ivory performing rose -- my naked lady framed -- i have found what you are like -- GOM splashes-sink -- my sonnet is A light goes on in -- phonograph's voice like a keen spider skipping -- you asked me to come : it was raining a little, -- (let us tremble) a personal radiance sits.
utterly and amusingly i am pash -- notice the convulsed orange inch of moon -- this day it was spring ... us -- Dedication -- Post impressions -- The wind is a lady with -- Take for example this: -- Paris ; this April sunset completely utters -- I remark this beach has been used too. much Too. orginally -- my smallheaded pearshaped -- of this sunset (whuch is so -- my eyes are fond of the east side -- suppose -- Portraits -- when the spent day begins to frail -- impossibly -- here is little Effie's head -- & : seven poems -- i will be -- i'll tell you a dream i had once i was away up in the sky Blue, everything: -- Spring is like a perhaps hand -- Who threw the silver dollar up into the tree? I didn't said the little -- gee i like to think of dead it means nearer because deeper firmer -- (one!) -- who knows if the moon's -- Sonnets-Realities -- O It's Nice To Get Up In, the slipshod musous kiss -- my strength becoming wistful in a glib -- The dirty colours of her kiss have just -- light cursed falling in a singular block.
The bed is not very big -- The poem her belly marched through me as -- an amiable putrescence carpenters -- her careful distinct sex whose sharp lips comb -- in making Marjorie god hurried -- Sonnets -- actualities 5 -- before the fragile gradual throne of night -- when i have thought of you somewhat too -- if i should sleep with a lady called death -- upon the room's silence, i will sew -- A blue woman with sticking out breasts haning -- when you went away it was morning -- i like my body when it is with your -- is 5 (1926) -- One -- Five Americans -- Liz -- Mame -- Gert -- Marj -- Fran -- Poem, or beauty hurts Mr. Vinal -- curtains part) -- workingman with hand so hairy-sturdy -- yonder deadfromtheneckup graduate of a -- Jimmie's got a goil goil goil, Jimmie -- listen my children and you -- even if all desires things moments be -- death is more than -- nobody loses all the time -- now dis daughter uv eve(who aint precisely slim)sim -- (and i imagine -- it really must -- Item -- XV. Ikey (Goldberg)'s worth I'm -- ? -- this young question mark man -- mr youse needn't be so spry -- XIX. she being Brand
slightly before the middle of Congressman Pudd -- Ode -- on the Madam's best april the -- (as that named Fred -- my uncle -- than(by yon sunset's wintry glow -- weazened Irrefutable unastonished -- Memorabilia -- a man who had fallen among thieves -- this evangelist -- (ponder, darling, these busted statues -- poets yeggs and thirsties -- Will i ever forget that precarious moment? -- voices to voices, lip to lip -- life hurl my -- Two -- the season 'tis, my lovely lambs, -- opening of the chambers close -- "next to of course god america i -- it's jolly -- look at this) -- first Jock he -- lis -- come, gaze with me upon this dome -- 16 heures -- my sweet old etcetera -- Three -- now that fierce few -- Among these red pieces of -- it is winter a moon in the afternoon -- candles and -- will out of the kindness of their hearts a few philosophers tell me -- but observe ; although -- sunlight was over -- Four -- the moon looked into my window -- if being mortised with a dream -- here's a little mouse) and.
but if i should say -- in spite of everything -- you are not going to, dear. You are not going to and -- since feeling is first -- some ask praise of their fellows -- supposing i dreamed this) X. you are like the snow only -- because -- you being in love -- Nobody wears a yellow -- it is so long since my heart has been with yours -- i am a beggar always -- if within tonight's erect -- how this uncouth enchanted -- i go to this window -- Five -- after all white horses are in bed -- touching you i say (it being Spring -- along the brittle treacherous bright streets -- our touching hearts slenderly comprehend -- V. if i have made, my lady, intricate -- W [ViVa] (1931) -- mean- -- oil tel duh woil doi sez -- the surely -- there are 6 doors. -- V. myself, walking in Dragon st -- VI. but my can you maybe listen there's -- Space being (don't foreget to remember) Curved -- (one fine day) -- y is a well know athlete's bride -- thethe -- a mong crum bling people (a -- poor But TerFly -- remarked Robinson Jefferson -- XIV. what time is it i wonder never mind -- well) here's looking at ourselves -- tell me not how electricity or -- Full Speed Astern) -- Gay is the captivating cognomen of a young woman of cambridge, mass. -- i will cultivate within.
but granted that it's nothing paradoxically enough beyond mere personal -- helves surling out of eakspeasies per(reel) hapsingly -- Lord John Unalive (having a fortune of fifteengrand -- buncha hardboil guys from duh A.C. fulla -- serene immediate silliest and whose -- XXIX. in the middle of a room -- i sing of Olaf glad and big -- memory believes -- Wing Wong, uninterred at twice -- innerly -- sunset) edges become swiftly -- how -- n(o)w the -- An(fragrance) of -- thou firsting a hugeness of twi-light -- twi- is -Light bird -- structure, miraculous challenge, devout am -- if there are any heavens my mother will (all by herself) have -- i'd think wonder -- you -- i met a man under the moon -- when rain whom fear -- come a little further -- why be afraid- -- A light out) & first of all foam -- when hair falls off and eyes blur and -- A clown's smirk in the skull of a baboon -- it)It will it -- breathe with me this fear -- if i live you -- speaking of love (of -- lady will you come with me into -- somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond -- is there a flower (whom -- my darling since.
because i love you) last night -- if you and i awakening -- item: is Clumsily with of -- be unto love as rain is unto colour ; create -- greanted the all saving our young kiss only -- but being not amazing : without love -- nothing is more exactly terrible than -- put off your faces, Death : for day is over -- but if a living dance upon dead minds -- so standing, out eyes filled with wind, and the -- here is the ocean, this is moonlight : say -- No thanks (1935 Manuscript) -- Initial dedication -- mOOn Over tOwns mOOn -- moon over gai -- that which we who're alive in spite of mirrors -- i -- a)glazed mind layed in a urinal -- exit a kind of unkindness exit -- sonnet entitled how to run the world -- The (Wistfully -- o pr -- little man -- ci-gît 1 Foetus (unborn to not die -- why why -- r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r -- mouse) Won -- one nonsufficiently inunderstood -- may i feel said he -- O -- this little -- who before dying demands not rebirth -- go(perpe) go -- In) all those who got -- when muckers pimps and tratesmen -- he does not have to feel because he thinks -- let's start a magazine -- this (that.
what does little Ernest croon -- little joe gould has lost his teeth and dosen't know where -- that famous fatheads find that each -- most (people -- kumrads die because they're told) -- does yesterday's perfection seem not quite -- numb(and -- emptied.hills.listen. -- snow)says! Says -- how dark and single, where he ends, the earth -- into a truly -- conceive a man, should he have anything -- SNOW -- move -- as if as -- here's to opening and upward. to leaf and to sap -- out of a supermetamathical subpreincestures -- theys sO alive (who is?niggers) -- The boys i mean are not refined -- sometimes in) Spring a someone will lie (glued -- swi(across! gold's -- ondumonde -- floatfloafloflf -- silent unday by silently not night -- much i cannot) -- at dusk just when -- Spring(side -- what a proud dreamhorse pulling(smoothloomingly) through -- Jehovah buried, Satan dead, -- worshipping Same -- this mind made war -- when from a sidewalk out of (blown never quite to -- love is a place -- sh estiffl -- (b eLl s? bE -- love's function is to fabricate unknownness -- we) under) over, the thing of floathing Of.
birds(here, inven -- Do. -- if night's mostness(and whom did merely day -- death (having lost) put on his universe -- come (all you mischief- -- be of love (a little -- reason let others give and realness bring- -- 70. brIght -- morsel miraculous and meaningless -- Terminal dedication -- New poems [from collected poems] (1938) -- un -- kind) -- A football with white eyebrows the -- (of ever-ever land i speak -- lucky means finding -- Q:dwo -- & -moon-He-be-hind-a-mills -- this little bride & groom are -- so little he is -- nor woman -- my speicailty is living said -- The mind's ( -- if i -- hanged -- economic secu -- beware beware beware -- only as what (out of a flophouse) floats -- must being shall -- may my heart always be open to little -- The people who -- porky & porkie -- you shall above all things be glad and young. -- Dedication -- !blac -- fl -- If you can't eat you got to.
nobody loved this -- am was. are leaves few this. is these a or -- flotsam and jetsam -- moan -- The Noster was a ship of swank -- warped this perhapsy -- spoke joe to jack -- red-rag and pink-flag -- (will you teach a -- proud of his scientific attitude -- The way to hump a cow is not -- mrs -- )when what hugs stopping earth than silent is -- youful -- ecco a leatter starting dearest we -- there is a here and -- harder perhaps than a newengland bed -- six -- nouns to nouns -- A pretty a day -- these people socalled were not given hearts -- as freedom is a breakfastfood -- wherelings whenlings -- buy me an ounce and i'll sell you a pound. -- there are possibly 21/2 or impossibly 3. -- anyone lived in a pretty how town -- The silently little blue elephant shyly (he was terri -- not time's how (anchored in what mountaining roots -- newlys of silence -- one slopshlouch twi -- my father moved through dooms of love -- you which could grin three smiles into a dead -- i say no world -- these children singing in stone a -- love is the every only god -- denied night's face -- A peopleshaped toomany-ness far too -- up into the silence the green -- love is more thicker than forget -- hate blows a bubble of despair into -- air, -- enters give -- grEEn's d -- (sitting in a tree- ) -- mortals) 49. ia am so glad and very -- what freedom's not some under's mere above.
1X1 [One times one] (1944) -- 1 -- nonsun blob a -- neither could say -- it's over a (see just -- of all the blessings which to man -- squints a blond -- my (his from daughter's mother's zero mind -- ygUDuh -- applaws) -- A salesman is an it that stinks excuse -- A politician is an arse upon -- mr u will not be missed -- it was a good co -- plato told -- pity told -- (free stop thief help murder save the world -- one's not half two. It's two are halves of one: -- X pme (Floatingly) arrive -- as any (men's hell having wrestled with -- when you are silent, shinning host by guest -- what if a much of a which of a wind -- dead every enormous piece -- no man, if men are gods : but if gods must -- rain or hail -- let it go-the -- Hello is what a mirror says -- a- -- old mr ly -- open green those -- nothing false and possible is love -- nothing false and possible is love -- except in your -- true lovers in each happening of their hearts -- we love each other very dearly, more -- yes is a pleasant country : -- all ignorance toboggans into know -- darling! because my blood can sing.
how -- might these be thrushes climbing through almost (do they -- if (among -- these (whom ; pretends -- i think you like -- open your heart : -- until and i heard -- so isn't small one littlest why, -- trees were in (give -- which is the very -- sweet spring is your -- life is more than reason will deceive -- o by the by -- if everything happens that can't be done -- Dedication -- Xaipe (1950) -- Dedication -- this (let's remember) day died agian and -- hush) -- 3. purer than purest pure -- this out of within itself moo -- swim so now million many worlds in each -- dying is fine) but Death -- we miss you, jack -- tactfully you (with one cocked -- o -- possibly thrice we glimpsed -- more likely twice -- or who and who) -- so many selves (so many fiends and gods -- tw -- chas sing does (who -- out of more find than seeks -- hair your a brook -- if the -- (swooning) a pillar of youngly -- a(ncient) a -- out of the mountain of his soul comes -- goo-dmore-ning (en -- jake hates all the girls (the -- when serpents bargain for the right to squirm.
three wealthy sisters swore they'd never part -- one day a nigger -- pieces (in darker -- who sharpens every dull -- summer is over -- noone autumnal this great lady's gaze -- nine birds (rising -- 30. snow means that -- infinite jukethrob smoke & swallow to dis -- blossoming are people -- if a cheerfulest elephantangelchild should sit -- A thrown a -- light's lives lurch a once world quickly from rises.
Cummings, E. E. (Edward Estlin), 1894-1962.
Firmage, George James.
E.E. Cummings ; edited by George J. Firmage.
1994
1991
Complete poems, 1904-1962
1