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  2. The Red Wheelbarrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Wheelbarrow

    The Red Wheelbarrow" is a poem by American modernist poet William Carlos Williams. Originally published without a title, it was designated " XXII " in Williams' 1923 book Spring and All , a hybrid collection which incorporated alternating selections of free verse and prose.

  3. William Carlos Williams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Carlos_Williams

    In 1923, Williams published Spring and All, one of his seminal books of poetry, which contained the classics "By the road to the contagious hospital", "The Red Wheelbarrow" and "To Elsie". However, in 1922, the publication of T. S. Eliot 's The Waste Land had become a literary sensation that overshadowed Williams's very different brand of ...

  4. Spring and All - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_and_All

    Spring and All is a hybrid work consisting of alternating sections of prose and free verse.It might best be understood as a manifesto of the imagination. The prose passages are a dramatic, energetic and often cryptic series of statements about the ways in which language can be renewed in such a way that it does not describe the world but recreates it.

  5. Jean Beicke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Beicke

    "Jean Beicke" is a work of short fiction by William Carlos Williams first published in Blast: A Magazine of Proletarian Short Stories in 1933. [1] The story appeared in the 1938 collection Life Along the Passaic River [2]

  6. Talk:The Red Wheelbarrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Red_Wheelbarrow

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  7. This Is Just to Say - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/This_Is_Just_to_Say

    The poem appears to the reader like a piece of found poetry. [4] Metrically, the poem exhibits no regularity of stress or of syllable count. Except for lines two and five (each an iamb) and lines eight and nine (each an amphibrach), no two lines have the same metrical form. [4]

  8. Resurrection (Tolstoy novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resurrection_(Tolstoy_novel)

    The tie-in book, Red Wheelbarrow, features a torn out page from the opening of Chapter XIV of Resurrection. The season 4 episode "eXit" features a floppy disk hidden in a copy of Resurrection that is also labelled "eXit" and which Elliot Alderson uses to try to shut down the machine built by Whiterose.

  9. The Use of Force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Use_of_Force

    The story is written without the use of quotation marks, and the dialogue is not distinguished from the narrator's comments. The story is rendered from the subjective point of view of the doctor and explores both his admiration for the child and disgust with the parents, and his guilty enjoyment of forcefully subduing the stubborn child in an attempt to acquire the throat sample.