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         Williams William Carlos:     more books (100)
  1. The Collected Later Poems of William Carlos Williams. by William Carlos Williams, 1967
  2. The Letters of Denise Levertov and William Carlos Williams by Denise Levertov, Christopher MacGowan, et all 1998-11
  3. Embodiment of Knowledge by William Carlos Williams, 1974-12-12
  4. House Calls With William Carlos Williams, MD by Robert Coles, 2008-08-02
  5. Spring and All (New Directions Pearls) by William Carlos Williams, 2011-04-29
  6. Selected Poems (Penguin Modern Classics) by William Carlos Williams, 2000-09-28
  7. Many Loves and Other Plays: The Collected Plays of William Carlos Williams by William Carlos Williams, 1961-12
  8. Something to Say: William Carlos Williams on Younger Poets (William Carlos Williams Archive Series) by William Carlos Williams, 1985-10
  9. The Selected Letters of William Carlos Williams by William Carlos Williams, 1985-02-17
  10. WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS by William Carlos). Whitaker, Thomas R. (Williams, 1968-01-01
  11. The Wedge (First Edition | Poetry | Limited Edition | WCW | William Carlos Williams) by William Carlos (aka WCW) Williams, 1944
  12. A Recognizable Image: William Carlos Williams on Art and Artists by William Carlos Williams, 1978-01-01
  13. Rigor Of Beauty: Essays In Commemoration Of William Carlos Williams
  14. The Farmers' Daughters. the Collected Stories of William Carlos Williams by William Carlos Williams, 1961-01-01

41. The Paris Review - The Art Of Poetry No. 6
william carlos williams, william carlos williams Alfred Kreymborg, John Reed, Lola Ridge, Muriel Rukeyser, Win Scott, william Shakespeare, Walt Whitman
http://www.theparisreview.org/viewinterview.php/prmMID/4486

Return to Interview Archive Index

WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS
The Art of Poetry No. 6 Interviewed by Stanley Koehler Issue 32, Summer-Fall 1964 Purchase this issue View a manuscript page Download a PDF of the full interview
INTERVIEWER
WILLIAMS
Download a PDF of the full interview

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42. William Carlos Williams - Research And Read Books, Journals
Research william carlos williams at the Questia.com online library.
http://www.questia.com/library/literature/william-carlos-williams.jsp

43. Danse Russe By William Carlos Williams - Project Gutenberg
Download the free humanread Audio Book Danse Russe by william carlos williams.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19783
Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... Main Page Project Gutenberg needs your donation! More Info Did you know that you can help us produce ebooks by proof-reading just one page a day? Go to: Distributed Proofreaders
Danse Russe by William Carlos Williams
Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Williams, William Carlos Title Danse Russe Language English Category Audio Book, human-read EText-No. Release Date Base Directory /files/19783/
Download this ebook for free
Formats Available For Download Format Encoding ¹ Compression Size Download Links Plucker none unknown main site Index none 27 KB main site mirror sites Plain text us-ascii none 23 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 458 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 336 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 413 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 334 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 346 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 659 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 377 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 412 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 436 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 452 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 371 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 536 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 313 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 286 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 364 KB main site mirror sites Ogg Vorbis Audio none 474 KB main site mirror sites Apple iTunes Audiobook

44. Williams, William Carlos (Harper's Magazine)
THINGS CONNECTED TO “williams, william carlos”. HUMAN BEINGS Frost, williams, company. by Stanley Kunitz Article, October 1962, 5 pp.
http://www.harpers.org/subjects/WilliamCarlosWilliams
HOME SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE SUBJECTS ... SKIP to main content USERNAME PASSWORD Subscriber? Lost password?
Williams, William Carlos
WRITER OF 1 Collection from 1961
4 Poems
from 1948 to 1961
SUBJECT OF 2 Articles from 1961 to 1962
3 Reviews
from 1949 to 1981
CONNECTIONS HAS BORN DATE
HAS DIED DATE
HUMAN BEINGS Aiken, Conrad Blunden, Edmund Brooks, Gwendolyn Brown, Harry ... The bard of Newark's department stores by Hugh Kenner
Books/Review, December 1981 , 3 pp. by Stanley Kunitz
Article, October 1962 , 5 pp. Harper's Magazine is an American journal of literature, politics, culture, and the arts published from 1850. Subscriptions start at $16.97 a year.

45. A Letter By William Carlos Williams About Eli Siegel's Poetry
williams writes, I can t tell you how important Siegel s work is. And about Eli Siegel s poem Hot Afternoons Have Been In Montana It secures our place in
http://www.aestheticrealism.net/poetry/WilliamsLetter1951.htm
Aesthetic Realism Online Library Poetry A LETTER BY WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS Reprinted in Something to Say, ed. J.E.B. Breslin (New Directions)
And in Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana: Poems (Definition Press)
November 3, 1951 My dear Martha Baird: I cannot adequately thank you for first writing me and then sending me the copies of Eli Siegel's poems. I am thrilled: your communications could not have come at a better time. I can't tell you how important Siegel's work is in the light of my present understanding of the modern poem. He belongs in the very first rank of our living artists. That he has not been placed there by our critics (what good are they?) is the inevitable result of their colonialism, their failure to understand the significance, the compulsions, broadened base upon which prosody rests in the modern world and our opportunity and obligations when we concern ourselves with it. We are not up to Siegel, even yet. The basic criteria have not been laid bare. It's a long hard road to travel with only starvation fare for us on the way. Almost everyone wants to run back to the old practices. You can't blame him. He wants assurance, security, the approval that comes to him from established practices. He wants be united with his fellows. He wants the "beautiful," that is to say ... the past. It is a very simple and very powerful urge. It puts the hardest burdens on the pioneer who while recognizing the virtues and glories of the past sees its restricting and malevolent fixations. Siegel knows this in his own person. He must be tough and supremely gifted.

46. CONTEXT: William Carlos Williams On The Work Of Gertrude Stein
CONTEXT william carlos williams on the work of Gertrude Stein.
http://www.centerforbookculture.org/context/no6/williams.html
No. 6
Online Edition SPECIAL SALEany 100 Dalkey titles for $500 "The Work of Gertrude Stein"
William Carlos Williams By locating traces of Tristram Shandy in Stein's Geography and Plays, Williams identifies an entire tradition of literature that is concerned foremost with language rather than logic, with "the words." Would I have seen a white bear!
(for how can I imagine it?)
Let it be granted that whatever is new in literature the germ of it will be found somewhere in the writings of other times; only the modern emphasis gives work a present distinction. The necessity for this modern focus and the meaning of the changes involved are, however, another matter, the everlasting stumbling block to criticism. Here is a theme worth development in the case of Gertrude Steinyet signally neglected. Why in fact have we not heard more generally from American scholars upon the writings of Miss Stein? Is it lack of heart or ability or just that theirs is an enthusiasm which fades rapidly of its own nature before the risks of today? Now I quote from Sterne:
    The verbs auxiliary we are concerned in here, continued my father, are am; was; have; had; do; did; could; owe; make; made; suffer; shall; should; will; would; can; ought; used; or is wont . . . or with these questions added to them;Is it? Was it? Will it be? . . . Or affirmatively . . . Or chronologically . . . Or hypothetically . . . If it was? If it was not? What would follow?If the French beat the English? If the Sun should go out of the Zodiac?

47. Wiliam Carlos Williams: The Beginning Of The End!
william carlos william’s To a Friend Concerning Several Ladies OK, we all know the influence of william carlos williams basically he was the granddaddy
http://www.cosmoetica.com/TOP58-DES55.htm
This Old Poem #58:
William Carlos William’s To a Friend Concerning Several Ladies
Greater than transcendence is its recognition

WCW was also at the forefront of the trend of poets that could not sustain a poem beyond a certain # of lines- even his long poem Paterson William Carlos Williams was born on September 17, 1883 in Rutherford, New Jersey. Like Chekhov, he studied medicine and became a country doctor before he discovered his potential as a writer. He earned his medical degree at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School and began practicing as a pediatrician in his hometown of Rutherford (near the present-day Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford) before publishing his first literary work, 'Poems,' in 1909.
He wrote stories, plays and autobiographies as well as poems. His most memorable achievement is probably his five books of poetry about the humble and downtrodden Northern New Jersey city of Paterson, which few people would have seen as a fit subject for an epic poem. "No ideas but in things," he writes in the first page, and to hammer the point home he studs this unpretentious but dramatic work with ancient newspaper articles, anecdotes and letters from friends and admirers. One of the letter-writers was A.G., an enthusiastic young poet admirer from Paterson. This was the then-unknown Allen Ginsberg.
Williams wrote the introduction for Ginsberg's first book of poetry, "Howl and Other Poems", in 1955. He died on March 4, 1963, the same year he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Literature.

48. This Moment
Who shall hear of us in the time to come? Let him say there was a burst of fragrance from black branches. william carlos williams. posted by alan at 25.1.05
http://thesemoments.blogspot.com/2005/01/love-song-sweep-house-clean-hang-fresh.
@import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=5523100");
this moment
is different from any before it. It is now.
Tuesday, January 25, 2005
Love Song
Sweep the house clean,
hang fresh curtains
in the windows
put on a new dress
and come with me!
The elm is scattering
its little loaves
of sweet smells
from a white sky!
Who shall hear of us in the time to come? Let him say there was a burst of fragrance from black branches. William Carlos Williams posted by alan at postCount('110658693324584525'); postCountTB('110658693324584525');
About Me
Name: alan
still wandering View my complete profile
recentmoments
othermoments
aiblins behindtheax clairwil corbyhawk ... yelhsacrow
photomoments
aperture apparently nothing astronomy images conscientious ... shutterseek
musicalmoments
alex ross bbc radio 3 david byrne glenn gould ... locust st.

49. American Literature Web Resources: William Carlos Williams
Interviews with william carlos williams. New York New Directions, 1976. Mazzaro, Jerome. Profile of william carlos williams. Columbus Charles E. Merrill
http://www.millikin.edu/aci/crow/chronology/wcwilliamsbio.html
American Literature Web Resources: William Carlos Williams
William Carlos Williams
"Say it, no ideas but in things" Chronology
compiled by Megan Martin, Millikin University, 1999 1883 Born on September 17 in Rutherford, New Jersey 1897-1899 Attended school in Switzerland and France 1902 Graduated Horace Mann High School 1902-1906 Attended the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania
Meets and befriends Ezra Pound, Hilda Doolittle, and Charles Demuth 1909 Poems printed. 1910 Begins medical practice in Rutherford. 1912 Marries Florence Herman 1914-1919 Poems published in Ezra Pound's Des Imagistes anthology. Encounters
poets of the Others movement, including Marianne Moore and Wallace Stevens. 1917 Publishes Al Que Quiere. 1920 Kora in Hell: Improvisations published. 1920-1923 Edits Contact with Robert McAlmon. Publishes Sour Grapes; Spring and all; The Great American Novel; and Go Go. 1924 Travels Europe with wife. 1925 Publishes In the American Grain. 1926 Dial Award for excellence in writing. 1928 Publishes A Voyage to Pagany, based on his1924 trip.

50. M E C A
Previous monetary winners in the william carlos williams poetry competition are not eligible. Each poem is not to exceed 750 words.
http://meded.iusm.iu.edu/Resources/Wm Carlos Wm Poetry Competition - Neoucom.htm
William Carlos Williams Poetry Writing Competition Neoucom Northeastern Ohio Universities The Human Values in Medicine Program of the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine (NEOUCOM www.neoucon.edu ) is sponsoring its 23rd annual poetry writing competition during the 2004-2005 academic year. The competition is open to students attending schools of medicine or osteopathy in the United States and Canada. Preliminary judging will be done by English department faculty at NEOUCOM's consortium universities (The University of Akron, Kent State University and Youngstown State University), and final judging will be by John Stone, M.D., poet and essayist from Emory University School of Medicine. The editors of The Journal of Medicine Humanities will review the winning poems and consider them for publication.

51. Poet William Carlos Williams Describes The Crowd At The Ballpark
Poet william carlos williams evoked the growing diversity of baseball’s fans and their impact on the game in “The Crowd at the Ball Park,” published in the
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5086/
home many pasts evidence www.history ... about us
Poet William Carlos Williams Describes the Crowd at the Ballpark
Dial in 1923. The crowd at the ball game is moved uniformly by a spirit of uselessness all the exciting detail of the chase and the escape, the error all to no end save beauty So in detail they, the crowd, are beautiful for this to be warned against It is alive, venomous it smiles grimly The flashy female with her It is the Inquisition, the Revolution It is beauty itself that lives day by day in them This is the power of their faces It is summer, it is the solstice the crowd is cheering, the crowd is laughing in detail permanently, seriously without thought Dial See Also: The National Pastime in the 1920s: The Rise of the Baseball Fan
Journalists Pay Homage to Babe Ruth and the House That He Built

52. TomFolio.com By William Carlos Williams
william carlos williams s 18831963 interests, writings, and wide acquaintanceship among artists provide a guide to the American avant-garde in this
http://www.tomfolio.com/SearchAuthorTitle.asp?Aut=William_Carlos_Williams

53. ReadWriteThink: September 17, 2007: William Carlos Williams Was Born In 1883.
American writer william carlos williams was born in Rutherford, New Jersey, in 1883. As a medical student at the University of Pennsylvania, williams met
http://www.readwritethink.org/calendar/calendar_day.asp?id=597

54. George Washington As Seen By William Carlos Williams (Ftrain.com)
From “George Washington” in In the American Grain, a collection of essays by william carlos williams, © 1933, (pp 142144).
http://www.ftrain.com/williams_george_washington.html
Up: Texts Related T Wednesday, June 20, 2001
George Washington as seen by William Carlos Williams
By Carlos Williams, William From “George Washington” in In the American Grain , a collection of essays by William Carlos Williams,  © 1933, (pp 142-144). Here was a man of tremendous vitality buried in a massive frame and under a rather stolid and untractable exterior which the ladies somewhat feared, I fancy. He must have looked well to them, from a distance, or say on horseback - but later it proved a little too powerful for comfort. And he wanted them too; violently. One can imagine him curiously alive to the need of dainty waistcoats, lace and kid gloves, in which to cover that dangerous rudeness which he must have felt about himself. His interest in dress at a certain period of his career is notorious. Some girl at Princeton, was it? had some joke with him about a slipper at a dance. He was full of it. And there was the obscene anecdote he told that night in the boat crossing the Delaware. America has a special destiny for such men, I suppose, great wench lovers - there is the letter from Jefferson attesting it in the case of Washington, if that were needed - terrible leaders they might make if one could release them. It seems a loss not compensated for by the tawdry stuff bred after them - in place of a splendor, too rare. They are a kind of American swan song, each one.

55. LRB · Stephen Burt: Chicory And Daisies
‘The painters have paid too much attention to the ism and not enough to the painting,’ william carlos williams wrote in 1928. Something similar could be
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v24/n05/burt01_.html
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Chicory and Daisies
Stephen Burt
  • Collected Poems: Volume I by William Carlos Williams, edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan Collected Poems: Volume II by William Carlos Williams, edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan
Collected (first published in 1986 and 1988) offers another chance to see what he made. Born in 1883, Williams grew up in northern New Jersey, speaking Spanish at home and ‘the American idiom’ everywhere else. His businessman father, of English descent, grew up in St Thomas in the Virgin Islands; his mother, a frustrated painter, came from Puerto Rico. After high school in Switzerland and New York City, Williams took a degree in medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, where he met Hilda Doolittle (later H.D.) and Pound. In 1912, after a difficult two-year courtship, he married the shy and practical Florence (Flossie) Herman. During the same years he established a medical practice in his home town of Rutherford; he was also writing bad Keatsian verse, some of it printed in

56. Variations On A Theme By William Carlos Williams
Variations on a Theme by william carlos williams Kenneth Koch 1 I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~richie/poetry/html/poem191.html
[previous] [next] [more by this author] [home]
Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams
Kenneth Koch
I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer.
I am sorry, but it was morning, and I had nothing to do
and its wooden beams were so inviting.
We laughed at the hollyhocks together
and then I sprayed them with lye.
Forgive me. I simply do not know what I am doing.
I gave away the money that you had been saving to live on for the next ten years.
The man who asked for it was shabby and the firm March wind on the porch was so juicy and cold. Last evening we went dancing and I broke your leg. Forgive me. I was clumsy and I wanted you here in the wards, where I am the doctor! [previous] [next] [more by this author] [home]

57. Williams's Influence On Burke
Paul Mariani s biography, william carlos williams A New World Naked (1981) Brian Bremen s william carlos williams and the Diagnostics of Culture (1993)
http://www.cla.purdue.edu/dblakesley/burke/blake.html
William Carlos Williams's Influence
on Kenneth Burke David Blakesley , Purdue University Presented at the Modern Language Association Conference
Toronto, December 1997 Williams scholars have, of course, paid the Burke-Williams connection considerable attention. Paul Mariani's biography, William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked (1981), is perhaps the first work to stress Burke's presence in Williams's life and thought. While interested less in the mutual influence of these two writers than in developing an alternative reading of Williams's poetry, Bernard Duffey's A Poetry of Presence (1986) reads Williams through the lens of Burke's pentad, his terminology in A Grammar of Motives for answering the question, "What is involved, when we say what people are doing and why they are doing it?" (xv). Brian Bremen's William Carlos Williams and the Diagnostics of Culture (1993) argues that "Burke's 'damned theorizing' [Williams's way of putting it] is an essential means of understanding Williams's writing, just as Williams's writing provides an important critique of Burke's work" (62). Bremen offers by far the most thorough account of how Burke may have influenced Williams's aesthetics. Like Duffey, Bremen reads Williams via Burke, with the exception that the terminology is not limited to the pentad (which Burke and Williams hardly discussed) but encompasses specifically the ideas that Williams and Burke haggled over and that affected Williams most noticeably. Bremen doesn't really consider Williams's influence on Burke, but rather his understanding of Burke, with an emphasis on Williams’s "critique."

58. William Carlos Williams: Paterson, First Edition Of All Five Books
First edition of william carlos williams s Paterson, offered by The Manhattan Rare Book Company.
http://www.manhattanrarebooks-literature.com/williams_paterson.htm
The Manhattan Rare Book Company 1050 Second Ave, Gallery 50E
New York, NY 10022
tel: 212.326.8907 fax: 212.355.4403
email: info@manhattanrarebooks.com Science/Technology/Medicine Literature/Modern Firsts Americana/History/Travel ... receive a catalog
William Carlos Williams's masterpiece:
Paterson
, first edition of all five books
WILLIAMS, William Carlos. Paterson. Books I-V. New York: New Directions, 1946-1958. Tall octavo, original cloth, original dust jackets. $1900. First editions of all five books of William Carlos Williams's epic masterpiece, one of the great triumphs of twentieth-century American poetry. Each first edition had a very limited print run: Books I-IV, one of only 1000 copies, Book V, one of 3000 copies. "This is the first part of a long poem in four partsthat man in himself is a city, beginning, seeking, achieving and concluding his life in ways which the various aspects of a city may embodyif imaginatively conceivedany city, all the details of which may be made to voice his most intimate convictions. Part One introduces the elemental character of the place. The Second Part will comprise the modern replicas. Three will seek a language to make them vocal, and Four, the river below the falls, will be reminiscent of episodesall that any one man may achieve in a lifetime" (Williams, introducing Paterson , which will ultimately become five, rather than four books).

59. PoetryFoundation.org: Reading Guide: William Carlos Williams
I was fumbling around, looking for a way to make sense of my life, and seized on william carlos williams’s poems in my 10thgrade English class.
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/features/feature.guidebook.html?id=178804

60. 0811202283 - The Farmer's Daughters By William Carlos Williams - 9780811202282
Looking for ISBN 0811202283 at a great price? Find The Farmer s Daughters by william carlos williams at Biblio.com where you can choose from over 50 million
http://www.biblio.com/isbn/0811202283.html
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The Farmer's Daughters
Collected Short Stories
by William Carlos Williams
ISBN: ISBN-13: Format: Paperback
Summary
"The Farmer's Daughters" is one of Williams's most celebrated short stories.
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