Archive for the 'American' Category

Jul 27 2010

Introduction to New Poems, e.e. cummings

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American,MOL,poetry

(wrenched from a geocities site in the depths of the Wayback Machine)

I N T R O D U C T I O N

The poems to come are for you and for me and are not for mostpeople– it’s no use trying to pretend that mostpeople and ourselves are alike. Mostpeople have less in common with ourselves than the squarerootofminusone. You and I are human beings;mostpeople are snobs. Take the matter of being born. What does being born mean to mostpeople? Continue Reading »

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Apr 28 2010

Wallace Stevens: The Woman That Had More Babies Than That

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American,poetry

The Woman That Had More Babies Than That
by Wallace Stevens

I
An acrobat on the border of the sea
Observed the waves, the rising and the swell
And the first line spreading up the beach; again,
The rising and the swell, the preparation
And the first line foaming over the sand; again,
The rising and the swell, the first line’s glitter,
Like a dancer’s skirt, flung round and settling down.
This was repeated day by day. The waves
Were mechanical, muscular. They never changed,
They never stopped, a repetition repeated
Continually—There is a woman has had
More babies than that. The merely revolving wheel
Returns and returns, along the dry, salt shore.
There is a mother whose children need more than that.
She is not the mother of landscapes but of those
That question the repetition on the shore,
Listening to the whole sea for a sound
Of more or less, ascetically sated
By amical tones.
The acrobat observed
The universal machine. There he perceived
The need for a thesis, a music constant to move.

II
Berceuse, transatlantic. The children are men, old men,
Who, when they think and speak of the central man,
Of the humming of the central man, the whole sound
Of the sea, the central humming of the sea,
Are old men breathed on by a maternal voice,
Children and old men and philosophers,
Bald heads with their mother’s voice still in their ears.
The self is a cloister full of remembered sounds
And of sounds so far forgotten, like her voice,
That they return unrecognized. The self
Detects the sound of a voice that doubles its own,
In the images of desire, the forms that speak,
The ideas that come to it with a sense of speech.
The old men, the philosophers, are haunted by that
Maternal voice, the explanation at night.
They are more than parts of the universal machine.
Their need in solitude: that is the need,
The desire, for the fiery lullaby.

III
If her head
Stood on a plain of marble, high and cold;
If her eyes were chinks in which the sparrows built;
If she was deaf with falling grass in her ears—
But there is more than a marble, massive head.
They find her in the crackling summer night,
In the Duft of town, beside a window, beside
A lamp, in a day of the week, the time before spring,
A manner of walking, yellow fruit, a house,
A street. She has a supernatural head.
On her lips familiar words become the words
Of an elevation, and elixir of the whole.

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Apr 09 2010

Ted always understands

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American,poetry

I lived with deep roots once:
Have I forgotten their ways —
The gradual embrace
Of lichen around stones?
–Roethke, “Plaint”

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Mar 08 2010

Cambridge ladies, furnished souls

For all the Russian literature I’ve studied, and the amount of time I devote to Blok, my strongest emotional attachments are to American poets (and the occasional Briton). I know I’ve posted plenty of Roethke here in the past, and truth be told, I should have done an English master’s and written about him. Would have been far easier in several respects.

When I was in college, Continue Reading »

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Jan 18 2007

Edna St. Vincent Millay–Kin to Sorrow

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American

Kin to Sorrow
 
AM I kin to Sorrow, 
    That so oft 
Falls the knocker of my door— 
    Neither loud nor soft, 
But as long accustomed,     
    Under Sorrow’s hand? 
Marigolds around the step 
    And rosemary stand, 
And then comes Sorrow— 
    And what does Sorrow care      
For the rosemary 
    Or the marigolds there? 
Am I kin to Sorrow? 
    Are we kin? 
That so oft upon my door—        
    Oh, come in! 

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Jan 18 2007

Edna St. Vincent Millay–Sonnet VII

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American

Sonnet VII

When I too long have looked upon your face,
Wherein for me a brightness unobscured
Save by the mists of brightness has its place,
And terrible beauty not to be endured,
I turn away reluctant from your light,
And stand irresolute, a mind undone,
A silly, dazzled thing deprived of sight
From having looked too long upon the sun.
Then is my daily life a narrow room
In which a little while, uncertainly,
Surrounded by impenetrable gloom,
Among familiar things grown strange to me
Making my way, I pause, and feel, and hark,
Till I become accustomed to the dark.

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Jan 11 2007

Edna St. Vincent Millay–The Courage that My Mother Had

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American

The courage that my mother had
Went with her, and is with her still:
Rock from New England quarried;
Now granite in a granite hill.

The golden brooch my mother wore
She left behind for me to wear;
I have no thing I treasure more:
Yet, it is something I could spare.

Oh, if instead she’d left to me
The thing she took into the grave!–
That courage like a rock, which she
Has no more need of, and I have.

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Jan 11 2007

Dorothy Parker – Somebody's Song

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American,break

Dorothy Parker – Somebody’s Song 

This is what I vow;
He shall have my heart to keep,
Sweetly will we stir and sleep,
All the years, as now.
Swift the measured sands may run;
Love like this is never done;
He and I are welded one:
This is what I vow.

This is what I pray:
Keep him by me tenderly;
Keep him sweet in pride of me,
Ever and a day;
Keep me from the old distress;
Let me, for our happiness,
Be the one to love the less:
This is what I pray.

This is what I know:
Lovers’ oaths are thin as rain;
Love’s a harbinger of pain-
Would it were not so!
Ever is my heart a-thirst,
Ever is my love accurst;
He is neither last nor first:
This is what I know.
 

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Jan 11 2007

dorothy parker–pictures in the smoke

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American,break

Oh, gallant was the first love, and glittering and fine;
The second love was water, in a clear white cup;
The third love was his, and the fourth was mine;
And after that, I always get them all mixed up.
 

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Dec 04 2006

Oliver Herford–I Heard a Bird Sing

Published by Nicole under 20th century,American

I heard a bird sing
In the dark of December
A magical thing
And sweet to remember.

‘We are nearer to Spring
Than we were in September,’
I heard a bird sing
In the dark of December.

                 
-   Oliver Herford, I Heard a Bird Sing

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