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         Plumly Stanley:     more books (47)
  1. The New Yorker, June 20, 1983 "In Passing" by Stanley Plumly, 1983-01-01
  2. The Ohio Review, Vol. XVI, No. 1, Fall 1974. by THOMAS; PICCIONE, ANTHONY; HOWARD, RICHARD, et al). DODD, WAYNE; PLUMLY, STANLEY, editors. (PARKINSON, 1974
  3. The New Yorker, Nov. 30, 1987 "The Wyoming Poetry Tour" by Stanley Plumly, 1987-01-01
  4. THE OUTER DARK by Stanley Plumly, 1970
  5. Boy on the Step by Stanley Plumly, 1989
  6. Simile.(Poem): An article from: Poetry by Stanley Plumly, 2004-11-01
  7. SUMMER CELESTIAL POEMS by Stanley Plumly, 1983
  8. Out-of-the-Body Travel by Stanley Plumly, 1977-01-01
  9. Summer Celestial : Poems by Stanley Plumly, 1983
  10. NER/BLQ - New England Review and Bread Loaf Quarterly - Autumn 1983 by Linda Pastan, Castle Freeman, Jr., T.R. Hummer,Stanley Plumly, Marvin Bell. Stephen Sandy, 1983
  11. Georgia Review, The - Spring 1983 by Stanley Plumly, Barry Hannah, Joyce Carol Oates, James B. Twitchell Mary Oliver, 1983
  12. Poetry Miscellany 9, The by Leonard Nathan, Linda Pastan, Sharon Olds, Marge Piercy, Carol Muske, Richard Wilbur, Stanley Plumly, Mark Strand William Stafford, 1979
  13. Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me : New and Selected Poems, 1970-2000 (Uncorrected Proof) by Stanley Plumly, 2000
  14. SUMMER CELESTIAL Poems Volume 27 in The American Poetry Series by Stanley PLUMLY, 1983-01-01

41. Grievers - Grievers By Stanley Plumly
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. Grievers Grievers By stanley plumly Posted Thursday, July 9, 1998, at 1230 AM PT By stanley plumly.
http://slate.msn.com/id/3434/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
Grievers
Grievers
By Stanley Plumly
Posted Thursday, July 9, 1998, at 12:30 AM PT
By Stanley Plumly (posted Wednesday, July 8, 1998) Continue Article To hear the poet read "Grievers," click here Like some dreams, they appear, then reappear,
cloistered in the space of their own wounding, their public mourning, their gravity's gray coat. Even at a distance, as if drawn by being seen, they come straight at you, the almost-elegant woman in the aisle, the tall young bird-like silent weeping man. And no one need have died, no one you know, to know their voices and half-faces, the scent of the spirit passing, for whom blood on the door or blessing means nothing. But, then, everyone died or didn't, who calls to you in sleep

42. Turn, Counterturn, Stand - Turn, Counterturn, Stand By Stanley Plumly
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. Turn, Counterturn, Stand Turn, Counterturn, Stand By stanley plumly Posted Thursday, Aug. By stanley plumly.
http://slate.msn.com/id/3439/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
Turn, Counterturn, Stand
Turn, Counterturn, Stand
By Stanley Plumly
Posted Thursday, Aug. 20, 1998, at 12:30 AM PT
By Stanley Plumly (posted Wednesday, Aug. 19, 1998) Continue Article To hear the poet read "Turn, Counterturn, Stand," click here He's dressed like a patient,
naked to the waist, in bottoms like pajamas. And hooked by invisible wire to a monitor hooked to an amplifier. All of this on stage, like intensive care, the badge of his connection at the center of his chest, recording and rendering his pulse. His heart is the dancer, and its muscle the music that rises and subsides: each searching step, each turn, each somersault and curl, each sudden rest.

43. Boston Review: Poem By Stanley Plumly
And I would not touch him who lies deeper in the drifting dark than life. stanley plumly. Copyright Boston Review, 1993–2003. All rights reserved.
http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR21.3/Plumly.html
Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me We lie in that other darkness, ourselves.
There is less than the width of my left hand
between us. I can barely breathe,
but the light breathes easily,
wind on water across our two still bodies.
I cannot even turn to see him.
I would not touch him. Nor would I lift
my arm into the crescent of a moon.
(There is no star in the sky of this room,
only the light fashioning fish along the walls.
They swim and swallow one another.) I dream we lie under water, caught in our own sure drift. A window, white shadow, trembles over us. Light breaks into a moving circle. He would not speak and I would not touch him. It is an ocean under here. Whatever two we were, we become one falling body, one breath. Night lies down at the sleeping center no fish, no shadow, no single, turning light. And I would not touch him who lies deeper in the drifting dark than life.

44. Poets Forrest Gander And Stanley Plumly To Read At The Library Of Congress
On Thursday evening, March 20, poets Forrest Gander and stanley plumly will read from their work in the Mumford Room on the sixth floor of the James Madison
http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/1997/97-036.html
The Library of Congress The Library Today News All Library of Congress Pages Public Affairs Office
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e-mail pao@loc.gov March 10, 1997 Contact: Craig D'Ooge (202) 707-9189
Poets Forrest Gander and Stanley Plumly To Read at the Library of Congress
On Thursday evening, March 20, poets Forrest Gander and Stanley Plumly will read from their work in the Mumford Room on the sixth floor of the James Madison Memorial Building. The reading, which is presented under the auspices of the Gertrude Clarke Whittall Poetry and Literature Fund, will begin at 6:45 p.m. Tickets are not required. Forrest Gander grew up in Virginia and holds degrees in both geology and literature. After living in central Mexico, he edited the bilingual anthology Mouth to Mouth: Poems by Twelve Contemporary Mexican Women (1993), for which he also translated poems. His own books include Rush to the Lake (1988), Lynchburg (1993), and Deeds of Utmost Kindness (1994). A new book, Science and Steepleflower, will appear next year from New Directions. In 1988, Mr. Gander received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in poetry, and in 1993, he received a Gertrude Stein Award in Innovative American Poetry. With C.D. Wright, he edits Lost Roads Publishers, a literary book press of more than 40 titles, and keeps a small orchard outside of Providence, Rhode Island. A professor at Providence College, he is teaching this year as a visiting poet in The Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa.

45. WETA Community Calendar
stanley plumly Folger Poetry May 3, 2004 Folger Shakespeare Library 201 East Capitol Street SE Washington, DC The annual Folger Poetry Board Reading gives
http://www.weta.org/calendar/detail.php?e=6183

46. Stanley Plumly: "The Morning America Changed"
V P R VALPARAISO POETRY REVIEW Contemporary Poetry and Poetics. ~stanley plumly~. THE MORNING AMERICA CHANGED . by stanley plumly.
http://www.valpo.edu/english/vpr/plumlythemorning.html
V P R
V ALPARAISO P OETRY R EVIEW
Contemporary Poetry and Poetics

~S TANLEY P LUMLY
"T HE M ORNING A MERICA C HANGED
Happened in the afternoon at Villa Serbelloni.
We’d closed up shop on the work for the day
and decided to make the long descent down
the elegant stone switchback path into Bellagio
for coffee and biscotti. It was still Tuesday
and a quarter to three and a good quarter hour to the exit gate or if you stopped to look at the snow on the Alps or at "the deepest lake in all of Italy" or looked both ways at once—as we say crossing a street—five, ten minutes longer. This day was longer because it was especially, if redundantly, beautiful, with the snow shining and the lake shining and the big white boats shining with tourists from Tremezzo and Varenna. And the herring gulls and swallows at different layers, shining like mica in the mountain rock. And the terra cotta tiles of the village roofs almost shining, almost close enough to touch. Judith was already in the pasticceria and I was looking skyward on Via Garibaldi, the one-way traffic lane circling the town

47. Poet Stanley Plumly Unveiled (News) Peter Davidson
Poet stanley plumly Unveiled —By Peter Davidson, The Atlantic. January 31, 2003 Issue Poet stanley plumly talks about poetry and his many influences.
http://www.utne.com/webwatch/2003_13/news/10288-1.html
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Poet Stanley Plumly Unveiled
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January 31, 2003 Issue The Atlantic
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48. Poet Stanley Plumly Unveiled
Poet stanley plumly Unveiled. January 31, 2003 By Peter Davidson, The Atlantic Poet stanley plumly talks about poetry and his many influences.
http://www.utne.com/cgi-bin/udt/im.display.printable?client.id=utne_web_watch&st

49. Poetry Magazine
FEATURED POET ARCHIVES stanley plumly stanley plumly s latest book of poems, THE MARRIAGE IN THE TREES, was nominated for the Lenore Marshall Award in 1998.
http://www.poetrymagazine.org/featured_poet_051799.html
CURRENT ISSUE POETRY Magazine
FEATURED POET ARCHIVES STANLEY PLUMLY
Wight
In the dark we disappear, pure being. Our mirror images, impure being. Being and becoming (Heidegger), being and nothingness (Sartre)which is purer being? Being alone is no way to be: thus loneliness is the test of pure being. Nights in love I fell too far or not quite far enoughone pure, one impure being. Clouds, snow, mist, the dragon's breath on water, smoke from firea metaphor's pure being. Stillness and more stillness and the light locked deep insideboth pure and impure being. Is is the verb of being, I the noun or pronoun for the purists of being. I was, I am, I looked within and saw nothing very clearly: purest being.
STANLEY PLUMLY 's latest book of poems, THE MARRIAGE IN THE TREES, was nominated for the Lenore Marshall Award in 1998. He is a Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland. This poem appears in the May 1999 issue of POETRY. (17 May 1999)

50. Prairie Schooner : Stanley Plumly, Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me.(Criti
Prairie Schooner stanley plumly, Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me.(Critical Essay) @ HighBeam Research. Read Prairie Schooner
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Stanley Plumly, Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me.(Critical Essay)
Prairie Schooner; June 22, 2002; Jackson, Richard
Jackson, Richard
Prairie Schooner
June 22, 2002
poem, book, poems, world, story, language, poetry, example, sense, process, kind, sort, life, self, past
Harper Collins Gerald Stem, Last Blue, WW Norton Sherod Santos, The
Pilot Star Elegies, WW Norton Anne Carson, Men In The Off Hours, Knopf
Lynn Emanuel, Then, Suddenly, University of Pittsburgh Mark Jarman,
Unholy Sonnets, Storyline
In his essay "Elegiac Stanzas," Stanley Plumly discusses
how Wordsworth "circles" his subject, dramatizing the process of self knowledge. And in an essay on his own poem, "Nobody

51. Papers On Language & Literature : A Darkness Pulled Out Of Us: Stanley Plumly An
Papers on Language Literature A darkness pulled out of us stanley plumly and the elegy of relationship.(Critical Essay) @ HighBeam Research.
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A darkness pulled out of us: Stanley Plumly and the elegy of relationship.(Critical Essay)
Walpert, Bryan
June 22, 2002
father, plumly, poem, nature, speaker, death, modern family, new york, poems, elegies, relationship, consolation, find consolation, ecco press, ramazani
"Language is a darkness pulled out of us."
Stanley Plumly, "Infidelity"
In seven volumes over 30 years, Stanley Plumly has written numerous
elegiesfor friends, for poets, for his motherthat have much in
common with the traditional elegy, particularly the use of nature as a
source of consolation. But Plumly chooses an elegy for his father to
title his recent selected poems: Now that my Father Lies Down Beside Me
of alcoholism at 56, are of particular interest because Plumly mourns

52. AGNI | Poetry | 54 | 'For Jan Palach . . .' By Stanley Plumly
19, 1969. by stanley plumly. (Agni 54). stanley plumly is Professor of English at the University of Maryland, College Park. His honors
http://www.bu.edu/agni/poetry/print/2001/54-plumly.html
For Jan Palach, a Name Drawn by Lot, on the Anniversary of His Death the Third Day after Attempted Self-Immolation in Protest of Communist Occupation
of Czechoslovakia, January 19, 1969
by Stanley Plumly I taught in your building once,
the one renamed for you
by the professors of philosophy,
a beautiful four-square block
of a building built to last centuries,
facing west into the hills backing
the great Vltava. Afternoons
in class, looking across the river
through the wall-high windows,
I could see the thousand-year-old crown of the Castle glittering, and at night, standing on the Charles, celestial above the city. From here, in the old ghetto, at the new century, it looked benign, like a blessing on your house and the half-dozen synagogues and dozen blocks of dwellings brought back to life after your cold war imitation of the bonze priests in Vietnam

53. George Gloeckler And Stanley Plumly Receive University's Highest Honor
George Gloeckler and stanley plumly Receive University s Highest Honor. George Gloeckler and stanley plumly recently received one
http://www.inform.umd.edu/outlook/1998-04-28/apr-28/honor.html
George Gloeckler and Stanley Plumly Receive University's Highest Honor
George Gloeckler and Stanley Plumly recently received one of academe's highest honors, when President William E. Kirwan granted each of them the title of Distinguished University Professor. The title acknowledges Gloeckler's and Plumly's significant contributions to their fields of study. One of the world's leading researchers in space radiation, George Gloeckler has conceived, developed and flown unique instruments on Earth satellites and deep space probes, greatly increasing our understanding of physical processes operating in the solar system and in the galaxy. His instruments have studied the regions near Earth, probed the radiations of the outer planets Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune, and have circumnavigated the solar poles. In the process, they have brought back dozens of discoveries concerning particle radiations on the sun, in interplanetary space, and in the magnetic fields of the major planets. George Gloeckler, above, and Stanley Plumly, below, recently were named Distinguished University Professors. Most space radiations are individual atoms with one or more of their orbital electrons missing. By inventing instruments that recognize the individual ions and the number of electrons removed, Gloeckler was able to identify the original sources of the ions and the mechanisms energizing them.

54. Www.booksense.com/search/search.jsp?affiliateId=AmerPoets Searchauthor=Stanley%2
National Book Critics Circle Awards Library Journal). plumly, stanley. Argument Song Sources Silences in Poetry.(Brief Article)(Book Review) (Library Journal). (book
http://www.booksense.com/search/search.jsp?affiliateId=AmerPoets&searchauthor=St

55. Magazines
Among the recorded poets are stanley plumly, stanley Kunitz, Linda Pastan, Robert Pinsky, Donald Hall. B A New Fiction Fiction, reviews.
http://www.wordcircuits.com/literature/mags.htm
Reading Room
Literary Magazines Magazines Publishing Poetry and Ficiton
Other Directories of Magazines
Last updated
Magazines
Magazine also published in print, with full text appearing on-line. Magazine also published in print, with only excerpts appearing on-line. (In these entries, the listing of genres and authors published applies only to the work appearing on the Web.) Offers recorded readings of poetry or fiction. Some of the poetry or fiction incorporates animation or hypertext. Highly recommended. Site has moved and new URL is not yet available.
The 2River View
Poetry, art, essays. Published quarterly since 1996 by 2River, which also publishes occasional chapbooks by individual authors. Work by Robert Creeley.
Abraxus Reader
Poetry, fiction. Readers can customize what the magazine shows them.
AGNI
Poetry, fiction, essays, reviews. An important and influential literary magazine in print for more than 25 years. Work by Louise Glück, Adrienne Rich, Mark Strand, Hayden Carruth.
The Alsop Review
Poetry, fiction, reviews. One of the poems found here is James Kirkup's homoerotic poem "The Love That Dares To Speak Its Name," which is banned from publication in England on the grounds of blasphemy. Extensive selection of poetry by Frank Stanford. No unsolicited submissions.

56. Powell's Books - Search Party: Collected Poems By William Matthews
ISBN 0618350071 Subtitle Collected Poems Editor Matthews, Sebastian Editor plumly, stanley Publisher Houghton Mifflin Company Subject American General
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-0618350071-0

57. POETS READING: The FIELD Symposia
Preface. 1. Emily Dickinson. Essays by Nancy Willard, Charles Simic, David Walker, stanley plumly, Martha Collins, and David Young. 2. Gerard Manley Hopkins.
http://www.oberlin.edu/ocpress/FieldEditions/PoetsReading.html
POETS READING:
The FIELD Symposia
(edited by David Walker)
Almost every year since 1979, FIELD magazine has celebrated the work of a major modern poet in a unique symposium: a number of current poets are invited to choose favorite poems by the featured poet and explore them in short essays. The results have become one of the most popular features of the magazine: passionate, insightful and often provocative, the FIELD symposia reassert poetry as a living art, charged with immediacy and excitement. POETS READING assembles the first eighteen symposia, on Emily Dickinson, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, Marianne Moore, Anna Akhmatova, Osip Mandelstam, Eugenio Montale, Robert Francis, Pablo Neruda, Theodore Roethke, Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Hayden, Randall Jarrell, William Stafford, Miroslav Holub, and W. S. Merwin. This collection is a thoughtful exploration of the poetic legacy of this century, and a rich testimonial to the continuing vitality of poetry today.
paper $25.00

58. Alibris: William Matthews
sale, Search Party Collected Poems more books like this by Matthews, William, and Matthews, Sebastian (Editor), and plumly, stanley (Editor) William Matthews s
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Browse for author " william matthews " matched 98 titles. Sometimes it pays off to expand your search to view all available copies of books matching your search terms. Page of 4 sort results by Top Selling Title Author Used Price New Price The Diary of Samuel Pepys more books like this by Latham, Robert (Editor), and Matthews, William (Editor) Pepys's accounts of life in Restoration London offer a fascinating view of the society and culture of that period. He witnessed some of the most significant events of his time, including the return of Charles II in 1660, the Great Plague in 1665, the Fire of London in 1666, and the burning of the English fleet by the Dutch in 1667. Although all... buy used: from buy new: from After All: Last Poems more books like this by Matthews, William

59. Alibris - Click Here To Find Books By This Author!
Plumer, William S. Plumez, Jacqueline Hornor Plumley, J. Martin ~ Plumley, Lisa ~ Plumley, Rhey ~ Plumley, Sue ~ Plumley, Susan plumly, stanley Plumme, Don E
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60. Weekly Features: The Magazine: The Kenyon Review
The Magazine. BiWeekly Feature. stanley plumly. Elevens. stanley plumly is a Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland.
http://www.kenyonreview.org/Magazine/features/week1.asp
CURRENT Issue:
Spring '04
order back issues... THE BEST OF THE KENYON REVIEW
is now available
order it online today
at Powell's
The Magazine
Bi-Weekly Feature
STANLEY PLUMLY
Elevens
The sun flatlining the horizon, the wind
the morning beach walk north lasting less
in the middle of the room that long
trying to get your breath back to normal.
It seems to take all the time there is,
as if a flake of ash burning off the sun
had entered at the mouth, turned ice,
and had, in slow-borne seconds, grown glacial, granite, dark. The summer in the mountains there was snow, new snow, you could walk in fifteen minutes down ghostweed, spiraea, and stunted laurel trees blossoming their own snow-on-the-mountain. Ten, eleven thousand feet, and the water, with a spirit of its own, moving over rock without once touching, flying toward the world. The thin fresh air too spiritual as well. Down below, with lights, Durango, Colorado.

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