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  2. Poetry from Daily Life: When stopping for coffee sparks a ...

    www.aol.com/poetry-daily-life-stopping-coffee...

    His first book was selected by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa for The National Poetry Series and published in 1996. He recently retired from Missouri State University.

  3. Elaine Equi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elaine_Equi

    Decoy (Coffee House, 1994) Friendship with Things (Figures, 1998) Voice-Over (Coffee House, 1999) The Cloud of Knowable Things (Coffee House, 2003) Ripple Effect: New and Selected Poems (Coffee House, 2007)(shortlisted for the 2008 International Griffin Poetry Prize) Click and Clone (Coffee House, 2011) [4] Sentences and Rain (Coffee House, 2015)

  4. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Love_Song_of_J._Alfred...

    Eliot wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" between February 1910 and July or August 1911. Shortly after arriving in England to attend Merton College, Oxford in 1914, Eliot was introduced to American expatriate poet Ezra Pound, who instantly deemed Eliot "worth watching" and aided the start of Eliot's career.

  5. Zygote in My Coffee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zygote_in_my_coffee

    Zygote in My Coffee (often referred to simply as Zygote) was a popular underground independent print and online magazine that ran from December 31, 2003 until May 30 of 2014, which dealt mostly in experimental and "street" poetry, [1] though it also published content such as short fiction, social commentary, political rants, one-act plays, erotica, and adult-oriented comic strips. [2]

  6. The Gods of the Copybook Headings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gods_of_the_Copybook...

    "The Gods of the Copybook Headings" is a poem by Rudyard Kipling, characterized by biographer Sir David Gilmour as one of several "ferocious post-war eruptions" of Kipling's souring sentiment concerning the state of Anglo-European society. [1] It was first published in the Sunday Pictorial of London on 26 October 1919.

  7. Brian Coffey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Coffey

    In the early 1930s, Coffey moved to Paris, where he studied Physical Chemistry under Jean Baptiste Perrin, who had won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1926. He completed these studies in 1933, and his Three Poems was printed in Paris by Jeanette Monnier that same year, as was the poem card Yuki Hira, which was admired by George William Russell and William Butler Yeats.

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