Ebook {Epub PDF} Freely Espousing: Poems by James Schuyler






















When Schuyler quotes the freely espoused—“This can’t be happening to me!”; “she is a pill”; “What is that gold-green tetrahedron down the river?”; “You are experiencing a new sensation”—he espouses them in a “marriage of the atmosphere.” 60 Schuyler, “Freely Espousing,” 13– This is . www.doorway.ru: Freely Espousing: Poems (): Schuyler, James: Books. Skip to main www.doorway.ru Hello Select your address Books Hello, Sign in. Account Lists Returns Orders. Cart All. Best Sellers Customer Service Prime New James Schuyler. out of 5 stars. This work appeared at the same time as Schuyler's first major collection of poetry Freely Espousing (). Schuyler's productivity reached a zenith during the s, with the publication of numerous collections of poems including The Crystal Lithium (); A Sun Cab (); Penguin Modern Poets 24, with Kenneth Koch and Kenward Elmslie (); Hymn to Life (); Song (); The .


James Marcus Schuyler was born on November 9, , in Chicago, Illinois. He attended Bethany College from to where he studied architecture, history, and literature, before joining the U.S. Navy. From to he was a curator of circulating exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art. As. Although his first novel, Alfred and Guinevere, was published in , with some early poetry appearing in the early-to-mid s, Schuyler's first major poetry collection, Freely Espousing, was not released until It garnered him the Frank O'Hara Prize, named in honor of the late poet, who had died a few years prior. James Schuyler is the author of Collected Poems ( avg rating, ratings, 8 reviews, published ), Alfred and Guinevere ( avg rating, rat.


By James Schuyler By James Schuyler Freely Espousing. Octo Audio recordings of classic and contemporary poems read by poets and actors, delivered. The first and title poem of Schuyler’s first major book of poetry, “Freely Espousing” is an apt introduction to this aspect of Schuyler’s aesthetic. The poem is a fractured manifesto, a disjunctive enumeration of what things “are worth celebrating” and what, on the other hand, “I am not going to espouse.” Like Frank O’Hara, Schuyler is temperamentally allergic to the self-seriousness of the manifesto genre. Classic Poem. Freely Espousing. by James Marcus Schuyler. a commingling sky a semi-tropic night that cast the blackest shadow.

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