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Scalapino's Author Page at the Electronic Poetry Center 'The Tango' reviewed by Melissa Flores-Bórquez at poetry mag "Intercapillary Space" Disbelief: History/Memory/Body: Language is the Trace of Being written for the Segue Panel "Language Poetry and the Body", May 12, 2007; It’s go in horizontal by Leslie Scalapino A review by John Herbert ...
Robert Duncan. Robert Edward Duncan (January 7, 1919 – February 3, 1988 [1]) was an American poet and a devotee of Hilda "H.D." Doolittle and the Western esoteric tradition [2] who spent most of his career in and around San Francisco. [3]
Footprints in the sand "Footprints," also known as "Footprints in the Sand," is a popular modern allegorical Christian poem. It describes a person who sees two pairs of footprints in the sand, one of which belonged to God and another to themselves. At some points the two pairs of footprints dwindle to one; it is explained that this is where God ...
Missouri Poet Laureate David L. Harrison describes something unexpected he found after checking into a room with a fly in it.
In addition to being a widely published poet and poetry editor (he is represented in the 2004 edition of Best American Poetry by a poem entitled "Bad Modernism"), Davidson is known for insightful literary criticism, his work in disability studies, and for the meticulous editing of the monumental George Oppen, New Collected Poems.
The title comes from St. Paul's epistle to the Romans (6:9): "Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no dominion over him." [1] The poem portrays death as a guarantee of immortality, [2] drawing on imagery from John Donne's Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions. [1]
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The poems of the Junius Manuscript, especially Christ and Satan, can be seen as a precursor to John Milton's 17th-century epic poem Paradise Lost. It has been proposed that the poems of the Junius Manuscript served as an influence of inspiration to Milton's epic, but there has never been enough evidence to prove such a claim (Rumble 385).