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         Moore Marianne:     more books (115)
  1. July 20,1968 The New Yorker Magazine - Saul Bellow - Genet - Marianne Moore - Ivy Litvinov
  2. Festschrift for Marianne Moore's Seventy-seventh Birthday
  3. Marianne Moore; a critical essay, (Contemporary writers in Christian perspective) by Therese Lentfoehr, 1969
  4. Critics And Poets on Marianne Moore: A Right Good Salvo of Barks
  5. Wcw and Others: Essays on William Carlos Williams and His Association With Ezra Pound, Hilda Doolittle, Marcel Duchamp, Marianne Moore, Emanuel Roman by Dave Oliphant, 1985-01
  6. Marianne Moore, a Reference Guide (A Reference Publication in Literature) by Craig S. Abbott, 1979-06
  7. Marianne Moore: The Art of a Modernist (Studies in Modern Literature)
  8. Marianne Moore and the Visual Arts: Prismatic Color by Linda Leavell, 1995-05
  9. Marianne Moore - American Writers 50: University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers by Jean Garrigue, 1965-12-03
  10. Omissions Are Not Accidents: Gender in the Art of Marianne Moore by Jeanne Heuving, 1992-05
  11. Concordance to the Poems of Marianne Moore by Gary Lane, 1972-08
  12. Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore by Joanne Feit Diehl, 1993-04-05
  13. Marianne Moore: The Poetry of Engagement by Grace Schulman, 1988-10
  14. Reading And Writing Nature: The Poetry of Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop by Guy Rotella, 1990-12-01

61. Index Of /images/writers/moore-marianne
Index of /images/writers/mooremarianne.
http://www.houseofwaterdancer.com/images/writers/moore-marianne/
Index of /images/writers/moore-marianne

62. Wessex Books Catalog
Poetrymoore, marianneLiterary Criticism US$12.00 Add to Cart Hadas, PamelaWhite. marianne moore Poet of Affection. Poetry moore, marianne.
http://www.wessexbooks.com/catalog/?action=search&keyword=MOORE, Marianne

63. Valencia West LRC - Moore, Marianne
moore, marianne (18871972). Pathfinder. May 1996. The following reference bookscan be used to get both biographical and critical information about authors.
http://valencia.cc.fl.us/lrcwest/moore.html
Moore, Marianne (1887-1972)
Pathfinder
May 1996
The following reference books can be used to get both biographical and critical information about authors. These sources should be used as a starting pointDO NOT base all of your research on material obtained from reference books. Use these sources to become better acquainted with your author; this will allow you to utilize more effectively the sources listed under COMPREHENSIVE LITERARY RESEARCH. These sources are located at the West Campus LRC; they may also be located at other local libraries.
BIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES
Consult the following reference sources to get an overview of your author's life.
Contemporary Authors
REF Z 1224 .C6
The various versions of this classic biographical source are all accessed via the Contemporary Authors Cumulative Index (REF Z 1224 .C58)
Dictionary of Literary Biography
REF PS 221 .D5
This multivolume biographical source is best accessed via the Contemporary Authors Cumulative Index (REF Z 1224 .C58)
CRITICAL SOURCES
Consult the following reference sources to obtain critical analyses of your author and his/her work. The first sources listed will provide a more general critical analyses of your author, while the second set of sources will provide critical analyses of a more specific nature.

64. W.C. Williams And Marianne Moore
New York New Directions, 1986. marianne moore. marianne moore. He Made ThisScreen. In Poems. London The Egoist Press, 1921. HE MADE THIS SCREEN.
http://www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/orient/mod10.htm
WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS
Like his colleagues H.D., Moore, and Pound, Williams doubtless saw Lawrence Binyon's exhibition of Chinese art at the British Museum, 1910-12, and recognized the importance of his close friend Pound's Cathay in 1915 when he judged "the Chinese things" to be "perhaps a few of the greatest poems ever written." Williams's repeated references in his early work to "Yang Guifei," the courtesan-heroine of Po Cheu-i's 806 A.D. narrative poem Changhenge had their source in Herbert A. Giles's 1901 translation. William Carlos Williams. "To the Shade of Po Chu-i." In Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams , A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan, editors. New York: New Directions, 1986.
MARIANNE MOORE
Marianne Moore's interest in China stemmed in part from her friendship with a Presbyterian missionary family and her visits to New York galleries. Always intrigued by the exotic, she regularly sought elements of "the wisdom of the East" to illustrate her moral points. Marianne Moore. "He Made This Screen." In Poems . London: The Egoist Press, 1921.

65. Marianne Moore Society
Similar pages moore, marianne Forum Frigatemoore, marianne Forum Frigate Post MessageThe Jolly RogerOne Page Version.WRITERSWORD Welcome to the moore, marianne Forum Frigate. Post
http://www.edinboro.edu/~ejoyce/moore.html
The Marianne Moore Society
Marianne Moore Conference: "A Right Good Salvo of Barks"

March 28-30, 2003

Pennsylvania
State ...
Listserv
For more information please contact: Dr. Elisabeth Joyce

66. Moore, Marianne Forum Frigate
moore, marianne Forum Frigate POETS FLEET Post MessageThe Jolly RogerOne PageVersion. Ahoy mate! Welcome to the moore, marianne Classic Forum Frigate.
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67. Moore, Marianne Forum Frigate
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68. Moore, Marianne Forum Frigate
moore, marianne Forum Frigate POETS FLEET If ye would like to moderate themoore, marianne Forum Frigate, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
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69. Marianne Moore
(from 'Poetry', 1921). marianne moore was born near St. In the forewordto A marianne moore READER (1961) she wrote My favorite poem?
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/mmoor.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Marianne (Craig) Moore (1887-1972) Pulitzer Prize-winning American poet, highly esteemed by her fellow colleagues. Moore's often-quoted advice in 'Poetry' was that poets should present for inspection "imaginary gardens with real toads in them". Characteristic for her works is cryptic zigzag logic, eccentric rhythms, and ironic wit. Her best-known poems feature animals and are written in precise, clear language. Moore was a friend to many of the greatest artists and writers of the 20th century, such as T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, E.E. Cummings, and Allen Ginsberg. I, too, dislike it: there are things that are important beyond all this
fiddle.
Reading it, however, with a perfect contempt for it, one discovers in
it after all, a place for the genuine.

(from 'Poetry', 1921) Marianne Moore was born near St. Louis, Missouri, as the daughter of an engineer-inventor. Moore was brought up with her brother in the home of her grandfather, the Reverend John R. Warner, the pastor of Kirkwood Presbyterian Church. Her father, John Milton Moore, suffered a mental breakdown before Moore's birth and was committed to a psychiatric hospital; she never met him. In 1896 the family moved to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where Moore's mother, Mary Warner, worked as a teacher at the Metzger Institute, a private girls's school. "The passion for setting people right is in itself an afflictive disease. Distaste which takes no credit to itself is best."

70. Zeal.com - United States - New - Lifestyle - Books - Poetry - Poets A-Z - Poets
A great resource for United States New - Lifestyle - Books - Poetry - PoetsAZ - Poets M - moore, marianne. moore, marianne Preview Category,
http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=530560

71. MFA Resources
Susan Tichy Resources for Students. marianne moore Chronology Notes on Texts. For . marianne moore A Note on Texts. marianne
http://mason.gmu.edu/~stichy/resourceMoore.htm
Susan Tichy Resources for Students Notes on Texts For several women poets of first importance we still lack authoritative, or even comprehensive, editions of their complete worksthus making serious examinations of their poetry difficult. Hilda Doolittle, Lorine Niedecker, Mina Loy, and Marianne Moore are only a few of the women thus neglected. Only for Loy is an effort under way to remedy the disaster. The sequence of Moore’s 1935 Selected Poems was suggested by T.S. Eliot, who also wrote the introduction. Though Moore deleted some poems from her later Collected Poems (and its revised version, Complete Poems, now the only collection in print) she made only slight changes to the sequence of those that remained. The arrangement is thematic and places several of her poems from the early 1930s first, with poems from 1915 appearing as far as 88 pages into the book . Thus it obliterates all sense of development and obscures differences among Moore’s periods of high poetic production up to 1935. (One argument for containing Moore as a "minor" poet is that she "did not develop.") Though you may not be reading Moore’s poems in strictly chronological order, you will wish to recognize these periods and place her work in the context of contemporary public and private events. The list below includes only the poems I assigned the last time I taught Moore (Fall 2000). When time permits (or hell freezes over, whichever comes first) I will complete the list. What is here should at least allow you to pinpoint the characteristics of each of her most productive periods. The sequence is based on several sources, most prominently Margaret Holley’s “Chronology of Moore’s Published Poems,” in her

72. Voices And Visions Spotlight -- Marianne Moore
Learn more about marianne moore by visiting Web sites that explore her lifeand poetry. View a video clip of the marianne moore poem The Fish .
http://www.learner.org/catalog/extras/vvspot/Moore.html

Elizabeth Bishop
Hart Crane Emily Dickinson T. S. Eliot ... Robert Lowell Marianne Moore Sylvia Plath Ezra Pound Wallace Stevens Walt Whitman ... William Carlos Williams
Scholars have marveled at the paradoxes of Marianne Moorehow her verse can show such propriety amidst such caprice, or use such artifice to celebrate the natural, or seem so modern while being unabashedly old-fashioned. In fact, Moore's "wild decorum" is an accurate reflection of her character and values, exalting a gusto (as she said) that gets things done without running roughshod, a propriety that refuses to wink, distort, or disdain. But for all this down-to-earth practicality, her long, artfully poised sentences and strict but arbitrarily syllabic stanza forms also force us to a self-conscious awareness of the language itself. American Academy of Poets Read Marianne Moore's prose tribute to the "Greatest" boxer, some of her poems and letters, a brief biography, and a bibliography. University of Virginia Library's Electronic Text Center No need to visit the rare books section of a library to read Moore's poems published in The Dial . Two Moore poems from the April 1920 issue"Picking and Choosing" and "England"are featured on this site. Poetry Daily The publication for which Moore wrote "No Swan So Fine,"

73. Moore, Marianne
moore, marianne (18871972). A marianne moore Reader was published in 1961,and The Complete Poems of marianne moore was published in 1967.
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/mooremarianne/
Moore, Marianne
American poet, noted for using the stanza as the basic unit of her poetry.
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Moore was educated at Bryn Mawr College. From 1925 to 1929 she edited the literary magazine The Dial. She was associated at first with the imagist movement (see Imagism), but she later developed her own rhyme patterns and verse forms using the arrangement of syllables, rather than conventional stress patterns, as the base for her meter (see Versification). In her poetry Moore embedded crystalline references to a vast array of subjects. She was, for example, an ardent baseball fan, especially of the Brooklyn Dodgers team, and frequently celebrated this interest in her verse. Her work is descriptive and reflective, rather than lyric or dramatic, and it often gives minutely detailed descriptions of landscapes, animals, or objects.
Moore's first collection of verse was Poems (1921). This book was followed by Observations (1924), Selected Poems of Marianne Moore (1935, with an introduction by the poet T. S. Eliot), The Pangolin and Other Verse (1936), What Are Years? (1941), Nevertheless (1944), Collected Poems (1951; Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award, 1952), Like a Bulwark (1956), O to Be a Dragon (1959), The Arctic Ox (1964), and Tell Me, Tell Me (1966). Moore's translation of Fables by the French author Jean de la Fontaine appeared in 1954, and Predilections (a book on her favorite writers) appeared in 1955. A Marianne Moore Reader was published in 1961, and The Complete Poems of Marianne Moore was published in 1967.

74. Bibliographymoore
Poetry. moore, marianne. The Complete Poems of marianne moore. Published Biography.moore, marianne. The Complete Poems of marianne moore. Published
http://project1.caryacademy.org/echoes/poet_Marianne_Moore/Bibliographymoore.htm
Echoes Main Biography Sample Poetry Inspired Poems ... Bibliography
Poetry
Moore, Marianne. The Complete Poems of Marianne Moore. Published in New York Macmillian, 1881 (12/16/02) Edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom. Marianne Moore - Series- Bloom Modern Critical Review. Published in New York Chelsea House 1987 – 12/16/02
Biography
Moore, Marianne. The Complete Poems of Marianne Moore. Published in New York Macmillian, 1881 (12/16/02) Moore, Marianne Craig; (1887-1972)- The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts ; Oxford; Jan 01, 1998; -12/19/02 Oswald, Elaine and Gale, Robert. "Anthology of Modern American Poetry." Online Journal and Multimedia Companion . January 1st, 2000. . Monday Decmeber 16th, 2002
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/moore/life.htm-

Edited by Lancashire, Ian. "RPO." University of Toronto English Library . . Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Library, © 1998. December 15th, 2002 Picture Credits
www.google.com

75. A DAY AT THE ZOO WITH MARIANNE MOORE
The animal is the animal and marianne moore is the observer. moore, marianne, TheComplete Poems of marianne moore, (Penguin Books, NY, 1981) 260 Pages.
http://209.58.132.78/moe/thoughts/moore.htm
A DAY AT THE ZOO WITH MARIANNE MOORE
by moe armstrong
Past the front gates of the zoo, I'm reminded of the writing of Marianne
Moore. I think of her spirit here in a tricornered hat wandering around
collecting poetic sketches. She finds different animals and begins to
write her poetic studies of them. She keeps returning to see the animals
from different points of view and tacking on additional information she
discovers through reading (Schultz, p. 131 -132). I'm left with the memory
of her. Here in the zoo, I write my own notes about her and read worn
biographical books about her and leaf through her book of complete poems.
The ordinary weekend event of going to the zoo has become extraordinary for me through her writing. THE MONKEYS Winked too much and were afraid of snakes. The zebras, supreme in their abnormality; the elephants with their fog-colored skin and strictly practical appendages were there, the small cats; and the parakeet- trivial and humdrum on examination, destroying bark and portions of the food it could not eat.

76. The Dial Magazine: Selected Table Of Contents
Maddox Hueffer, Gaston Lachaise, DH Lawrence, Wydham Lewis, Vachel Lindsay, MinaLoy, Thomas Mann, Henry McBride, George moore, marianne moore, Edwin Arlington
http://virtual.clemson.edu/groups/dial/dialtoc.htm
The Dial Magazine:
A Selected, Annotated Table of Contents,
Text in the Table of Contents is color-coded so that works by those in the Woolf and O'Keeffe circles can be easily located and so that the relative proportion of publication by each group can be easily assessed.
    is for material by or about a member of the Woolf circle
    is for material by or about Woolf is for material by or about a member of the O'Keeffe circle
    is for material by or about O'Keeffe is for material by or about one of the linkers , such as D.H. Lawrence, Carl Sandburg, or Gertrude Stein
    Vol. 68 (January-June 1920) First issue under editorship of Scofield Thayer Sherwood Anderson, Djuna Barnes, Randolphe Bourne, Kenneth Burke, Hart Crane, E. E. Cummings, Charles Demuth, Kahlil Gibran, Gaston Lachaise, Amy Lowell, Marianne Moore, Ezra Pound, Odilon Redon, Paul Rosenfeld, Bertrand Russell, Carl Sandburg, Gilbert Seldes, Sganarelle, Van Wyck Brooks, W. B. Yeats Vol. 69 (July- December 1920) Richard Aldington, Julien Benda, Kenneth Burke, Joseph Conrad, Stewart Davis, T.S.Eliot, Waldo Frank, Paul Gaugain, Remy de Gourmont, Ford Maddox Hueffer, Henry McBride, Ezra Pound, Marcel Proust, Arthur Rimbaud, Vincent Van Gogh, William Carlos Williams, William Butler Yeats Vol. 70 (January-June 1921)

77. Issued Creator Title Type Document [US Subscribers To The Egoist
Issued, Creator, Title, Type, Document. US Subscribers to The Egoist,Text, Bishop, Elizabeth, Elizabeth Bishop to Muriel Rukeyser, Text, TextDOC.
http://reti.unimc.it/qryNavigazione.asp?tipoNav=3&luogoSel=Moore, Marianne

78. Elizabeth Bishop Papers: Works By Others
Folder 85.4, moore, marianne It Is Late, I Can Wait, TS, 1 p. nd.Folder 85.5, moore, marianne Apparition of Splendor, TS, 1 p. 1952.
http://library.vassar.edu/information/special-collections/bishop/works_by_others
Elizabeth Bishop Papers
Vassar College Library
Series XI. Works By Others
Translations of Bishop Works By Others
Box 79
Folder 79.1 French Translations by LaFeuille TS, (copy), 117 p. w/ EB's corrections [n.d.] Folder 79.2 Spanish Translations by Jaime Manrique TS, 14 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.3 Spanish Translations by Octavio Paz TS, 13 p. 2/corrections by E. Bishop [n.d.] Folder 79.4 Spanish Translations: Brasil. January 1, 1502, by Aomero Icaza Sanchez TS, 2 p. [n.d.] Works about Elizabeth Bishop by others Folder 79.5 Anonymous Essays about E. Bishop TS (copies), 21 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.6 Ashbery, John: "Elizabeth Bishop" TS (copy), 3 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.7 Brown, Ashley: "Elizabeth Bishop as Translator" TS, 8 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.8 Chittick, V. L. O.: "Nomination Seconded" TS, 9 p. w/ltr. from C. L. Bennet [ca. 1967] Feb. 1967 Folder 79.9 Frankenberg, Lloyd: "Poetry's Bright New Star" [review of TS (carbon), 3 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.10 Gordon, Lois: "Elizabeth Bishop" TS (copy), 4 p. [n.d.] Folder 79.11 Jordao, Vera Pacheco: "Aos Amigos da Poesia" TS (carbon), 2 p.

79. Highlights
(for marianne moore) Arshile Gorky Soft Night Donald Judd Untitled Morris LouisPoint of Tranquility Brice Marden Cold Mountain 2 Joan Miró Painting (Circus
http://hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/highlights_work.asp?ObjectNumber=99.19

80. Plagiarist.com Poetry » Archive » Marianne Moore » "Poetry"
CommentsComments (1) Help with site features.Help Browse Authors.Browse Authors BrowseTitles.Browse Titles More poems by marianne moore.marianne moore (5 poems
http://www.plagiarist.com/poetry/?wid=2963

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