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         Swenson May:     more books (100)
  1. The Complete Love Poems of May Swenson by May Swenson, 2003-08-15
  2. Nature: Poems Old and New by May Swenson, 2000-04-19
  3. The Complete Poems to Solve by May Swenson, 1993-04
  4. Dear Elizabeth by May Swenson, 2000-06-01
  5. The Love Poems of May Swenson by May Swenson, 1991-11-11
  6. American Sports Poems by R. R. Knudson, May Swenson, 1995-10
  7. Iconographs by May(Signed) Swenson, 1970
  8. May Swenson: Poets Life In Photos by R. R. Knudson, 1997-01-01
  9. The wonderful pen of May Swenson. by R. R Knudson, 1992
  10. Body My House: May Swenson's Work and Life
  11. Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, and May Swenson: The Feminist Poetics of Self-Restraint by Kirstin Riter Hotelling Zona, 2002-12-10
  12. May Out West by May Swenson, 1996-01-01
  13. New and Selected Things Taking Place by May Swenson, 1978-11
  14. More Poems to Solve. by May Swenson, 1971-06

1. Search Results
May May Tulip - SnoWonders 7727 Click here to buy. May. Price $16.50*. May - Tulip SnoWonders SnoWonder Pals Item 7727 Nothing says Spring like Tulips.
http://www.midnightcollector.com/cgi-bin/searchweb/smartsearch.cgi?keywords=swen

2. May Swenson
May Swenson. 1919 1989 May Swenson was born in Logan, Utah, in 1919. She attended Utah State University, Logan, and received a bachelor s degree in 1939.
http://www.edwardsly.com/swenson.htm
May Swenson
May Swenson was born in Logan, Utah, in 1919. She attended Utah State University, Logan, and received a bachelor's degree in 1939. She taught poetry at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California at Riverside, Purdue University and Utah State University and was an editor at New Directions publishers from 1959 to 1966. Her poems appeared in Antaeus, The Atlantic Monthly, Carleton Miscellany, The Nation, The New Yorker, Paris Review, Parnassus and Poetry. She served as a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets from 1980 to 1989. She died in Oceanview, Delaware,in 1989. Her first book of poems, Another Animal, appeared in 1954, followed by A Cage of Spines (1958), and To Mix with Time New and Selected Poems (1963). From 1959 to 1966, she served as editor at New Directions publishers and taught poetry at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California, Riverside, Purdue University, and Utah State University. Though much of her later poetry is devoted to children, she also published translations of contemporary Swedish poets, including the collection Iconographs (1970) and the selected poems of Tomas Transtromer. A recipient of numerous grants and fellowships-among them a Guggenheim, a Ford Foundation Poet-Playwright Grant, an Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship, and a Robert Frost Fellowship-she was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and served as chancellor of The Academy of American Poets from 1980 until her death in 1989. According to critic Harold Bloom, she ranks with Marianne Moore and Elizabeth Bishop as one of the three best women poets of the twentieth century.

3. May Swenson
May Swenson A Legacy of Names for the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer communities. The May Swenson Poetry Award. Utah State University Press.
http://www.queertheory.com/histories/s/swenson_may.htm

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... May Out West : Poems of May Swenson by May Swenson More Books...
May Swenson
Online Resources Texts: May Swenson Texts: Queer Histories Texts: Authors Index ... Used Books: LGBT Studies Names Index: A B C D ... Scholars Index Made With Words by May Swenson , Gardner McFall (Editor) May Swenson (1913-1989) has long been a personal favorite of mine. Much of her work is difficult to find, or out of print. Gardner McFall, a poet herself,has done a wonderful job of editing the prose, reviews, introductions and the correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop(1913-1979) and May Swenson, although there is much to be found in the St. Louis's, Washington University Archives, where the bulk of May's papers are housed,this is a generous selection. I am hoping that the McFall book will set May's publishers to consider a "Complete Works" of the wonderful May Swenson. McFall, however, is to be applauded for her rounding up and editing of these important prose selections. The book, part of the prestigious "Poets on Poetry"series from the University of Michigan Press, is a gift to both fans and scholars alike. Anonymous Review

4. Finding-Aid For The May Swenson Papers (WTU00111)
swenson may, 1919. Correspondence, mss., editorial matter, 1954-1965 To Mix With Time (tss., printer’s copy) ca. 160 pp. 54/347.III. Swenson, May, 1919-.
http://library.wustl.edu/units/spec/manuscripts/mlc/findingaidshtml/wtu00111.htm
Finding-Aid for the May Swenson Papers (WTU00111)
Department of Special Collections Olin Library Campus Box 1061 1 Brookings Drive St. Louis, MO 63130 Fax: (314) 935-4045 spec@library.wustl.edu http://library.wustl.edu/units/spec
Funding and support for digitization of finding-aids provided by The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary Biographical Note Scope and Contents Note Box and Folder Listing ... Collection Outline
Collection Outline
May Swenson papers, Accrual 1 Series I. Correspondence Series II. Manuscripts by Swenson Series III. Interviews ... Return to the Table of Contents
Descriptive Summary
Title May Swenson papers, Dates: Quantity: ca. 5000 items Identification: Return to the Table of Contents
Biographical Note
Although acclaimed principally for her poetry, May Swenson is also a playwright, critic, translator, and editor. She was born in Utah and received a B.S. from the University of Utah in 1939, but has spent the greater part of her career in New York. Between 1959 and 1966, Swenson was an editor at New Directions; she has also taught for brief periods at several schools including Purdue University, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and the University of California at Riverside. She has been recognized with numerous awards and grants, most recently a Bollingen Prize in 1981. Swenson has produced nine volumes of poetry, one play, and one collection of translations of Swedish poetry. Critics have recognized her naturalist's ability to observe and describe details of the physical worlda distinguishing feature of her work which places her in a position of significant influence in contemporary poetry.

5. Paul Swenson
While swenson may or may not be alluding to such a question with her poem To Make A Play, she wasn t waiting around for a definitive answer.
http://weberstudies.weber.edu/archive/archive A Vol. 1-10.3/Vol. 8.1/8.1 P.Swen
Spring 1991, Volume 8.1
Poetry PAUL SWENSON May in October: Life and Death as Existential Riddles in May Swenson's Poetry The home in which poet May Swenson spent most of her childhood was torn down in 1986 by its new owner, Utah State University, which has allowed the property to deteriorate to a parking lot for junked cars and a weed-infested field. Located on east Fifth North Street in Logan, Utah, just below College Hill, the deep lot always had a hint of wildness. Not visible from the street were the overgrown ditch banks, the hives where her father kept bees, the thick tangle of raspberry bushes, the hollyhocks, the wild patches of chamomile, and the orchard of fruit trees in the back lot. Passersby saw the neat brick home her father built, the shade trees, and at a discreet distance behind the main house, a frame home containing apartments that her father later constructed to rent to college students. When I was little, when
the poplar was in leaf,
its shadow made a sheaf,
the quill of a great pen
dark upon the lawn
where I used to play. ("The Poplar's Shadow" stz. 1)

6. May Swenson
May Swenson. May Swenson (May 28, 1913December 4, 1989) was a United States poet and playwright. Weber Studies May Swenson. This article is a stub.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/may_swenson
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May Swenson
May Swenson May 28 December 4 ) was a United States poet and playwright.
External links
This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. Note: The original source of this article can be found on the main Wikipedia Web site. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License , which means that you can copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license. About This Site Editorial Staff Contribute News Advertise With Us Science Daily editor@sciencedaily.com

7. Information For May Swenson
May Swenson. For other contributions by May Swenson to Sunstone, see 1 Book(s) authored. Mercantile Items (Books). Books authored. May Out West poems.
http://www.sunstoneonline.com/mercantile/index/book_author_master.asp?AuthorID=2

8. MELVIN MORSE DOWNLOADS
Olaf swenson may have seen such a timeless spaceless Omega Point when he nearly died of a botched tonsillectomy at age 14. He
http://www.melvinmorse.com/e-what.htm
Order a signed copy of Dr. Morse's new book Where God Lives. Books Just Print it, it will easier to read... Click on FILE and then PRINT
(the shortcut is Ctrl P
He said: First the car filled up with water, and everything went all blank. Then I died. I went into a huge noodle. It wasn't like a spiral noodle, but it was very straight. When I told my Mom about it, I told her it was a noodle, but it must have been a tunnel, because it had a rainbow in it. Noodles don't have rainbows in them.
I was pushed along by wind, and I could float. I saw two tunnels in front of me, a human tunnel and an animal tunnel. First I went in the animal tunnel, and a bee gave me honey.
Then I saw the human heaven. It was like a castle, not all broken down, just a regular castle. As I looked at it, I heard some music. It was very loud, and it stuck in my head."
Although prior to his near death experience, Chris had little interest in music, since his near drowning, his mother bought him a keyboard and he has taught himself to play the heavenly music he heard.
NOT CULTURAL MYTHS
Chris clearly saw something he thought was real. The image of a rainbow in a noodle is so unique, it is unlikely to have its source in our cultural psychology. I had certainly never heard of one before. But was it really real?

9. Welcome To HarperCanada
female student the aggressor. Flawed as swenson may be, he s a complex character, and he makes us think. We cringe at each wrong
http://www.harpercanada.com/catalog/guide_xml.asp?isbn=0060953713

10. Louise Swenson Information Page
to Anthracnose. Observations on very sandy sites suggest that Louise swenson may be sensitive to droughty conditions. On sites of
http://www.littlefatwino.com/infolouise.html
Winter Hardiness Study, 2002 - 2003
Louise Swenson Variety Information Page Study Background information Some sources of hardy vines. to see other varieties please scroll down to the choices list To see results please visit the variety results chart page Comments from the Minnesota Grape Growers Association. This selection was bred from a cross of E.S. 2-3-17 x Kay Gray. However, as a wine grape, it will never be confused with Kay Gray. Berries average around 3 g and clusters are small to medium, conical, somewhat compact, and average 105 g (range 70-130 g). In five years of trials, the wine from Louise Swenson has been outstanding for its quality and consistency from year to year. The wine is without any negative hybrid characteristics, and has a typical delicate aroma of flowers and honey. This wine's only significant fault is that it is rather light in body. Blending with a variety such as Prairie Star makes it a more complete wine. Louise Swenson rarely exceeds 20 Brix, even if left to hang past midseason. Acidity is moderate and needs no reduction. Observed at many sites around south-central Minnesota, this variety has shown little or no winter injury even in the most severe (-40 o F) winters.

11. May 28
some three hours. See story below. RESIDENTS FIND BELL RINGING AN APPEALING HOBBY , By Matt swenson may 30, 2001. High above street
http://www.cathedral.org/wrs/gallery/peal-bands/100-peal/may-28.htm
May 28 July 4 September 3 Sue O'Neill, a member of the Washington Ringing Society from Fairfax, Va., has been ringing bells at Washington National Cathedral for 25 years. She began her bell-ringing career as a child in Nottingham, England, where she grew up. On Monday, the society attempted a full peal, which would require 5,039 ring changes taking some three hours. See story below "RESIDENTS FIND BELL RINGING AN APPEALING HOBBY",
By Matt Swenson May 30, 2001 High above street level in Washington National Cathedral's Gloria in Excelsis Tower is a carpeted room with tables, chairs and a blackboard. In essence, it looks like a really nice conference room with one of the best views available in the District.
That is, except for 10 ropes hanging in a circle in the middle of the room. The ropes lead one level higher into a room of 10 bells, or one rope per bell. By pulling on the ropes, a person controls the corresponding bell's actions and sound.

12. CPCUG Entrepreneurs And Consultants SIG October 2002 Meeting
announcement http//www.cpcug.org/user/entrepreneur/501meet.html. Heidi swenson may be reached at heidi@DigitalDivision.com. Earlier
http://www.cpcug.org/user/entrepreneur/1002meet.html

Advanced Search
Register for a SIG Meeting Schedule of SIG Meetings Make a Presentation Speaker Info Past Meetings
(some with PowerPoint or PDF files) Want To Help Kudos Seminars: 6 hour ; 3 hour Workshops Discussions
at Digital Division Sponsor Download Ken Chaletzky's Presentation
(screen-resolution PDF; 327 kbytes)
[Updated December 2002. File is merely the platform for the presentation; it was not designed to stand alone. If you missed the presentation at our meeting, you are invited to contact Ken to arrange a presentation for your group or organization.]
Presentation Description
Speaker Information Meeting Agenda Location ... Registration Saturday, October 19, 2002
Check-in: 12:50 pm
Program: 1:00 pm sharp! N OTE Location for Meeting
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, 2nd Floor, Large Meeting Room

3310 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Wash., DC
Door Prizes Include: the book, by Heidi Swenson [Must be a current member of CPCUG to be eligible to win a door prize.] Using Print on Demand and e-Publishing To Build Your Business Speaker: Ken Chaletzky

13. Snow Or Dirt
5, 2002. Carl swenson may not have the commercial fame of Bo Jackson, but he does subscribe to Jackson s twosport regiment. US Cross
http://www.usolympicteam.com/news/020502ccskiing.html
Carl Swenson Snow or Dirt
Cross country's Carl Swenson has fat tire tendencies
By Doug Haney // usolympicteam.com
Feb. 5, 2002 Carl Swenson may not have the commercial fame of Bo Jackson, but he does subscribe to Jackson's two-sport regiment. U.S Cross Country 2002 Olympian, Swenson, 27 spends his summers burning up the pro mountain bike racing circuit. "I'm definitely a cross country skier first and a mountain biker second," said the 1994 XC Olympian. "Back when I started racing, mountain biking wasn't even a blip on the radar." A long time road biker, Swenson switched his focus after older brother Pete convinced him to check out riding his bike on dirt. A few years later Swenson found himself hitting mountain bike races every weekend from the middle of March until the end of September. Then it's only a few weeks of rest before he's back on the snow in preparation for a season of World Cup cross county skiing. "There is a line between the two that I don't cross," said the Boulder, Colo. resident. "In the winter I focus on skiing and in the summer I focus on biking, the two never over lap. It's definitely not the most conventional method of training for either sport, but it's worked so far and I enjoy them both so much that I couldn't break up with either one." After two years as the captain of the Dartmouth University cross country ski team, Swenson make his made his Olympic debut in 1994 at the Lillehammer Olympic Games. It was the first international competition of his young career. Eight years later and four World Championships in the hole (three for skiing, one for biking) and Swenson is skiing the best of his career.

14. College Research On May Swenson
May Swenson died on 4 December 1989 at Bethany Beach, Delaware. May Swenson. May Swenson died on 4 December 1989 at Bethany Beach, Delaware.
http://www.collegeresearch.us/show_essay/47254.html
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This is only a preview of the paper May Swenson Approximate Word count = 354 Approximate Pages = 1.4 (250 words per page double spaced) This is more of the essay, but the text is scrambled. Click here to register and get the full text. Existing members click here to login May Swenson Custom Essays Professional Papers Just submit your assignment to our professional writers and have them write it for you! Pre-written Papers Browse through thousands of professionally written papers! Support F.A.Q. Custom Essay Payment College Research Information Forgot Username? Forgot Password? Links Activation Email All Papers Are For Research And Reference Purposes Only! You may not turn these papers in as your own! You must cite our web site as your source!

15. May Swenson Poetry Award
Seeks original manuscripts, 50100 pages, on any theme. Prize $1,000, plus publication. Reading fee $25. Deadline September 30.
http://www.usu.edu/usupress/poetcomp.htm

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The May Swenson Poetry Award
This annual competition, named for May Swenson, honors her as one of America's most provocative, insouciant, and vital poets. In John Hollander's words, she was "one of our few unquestionably major poets." During her long career, May was loved and praised by writers from virtually every major school of poetry. She left a legacy of nearly fifty years of writing when she died in 1989. She is buried in Logan, Utah, her hometown. Utah State University Press is proud to announce the winner of the 2004 May Swenson Poetry Award: Frannie Lindsay of Cambridge, Massachusetts for Where She Always Was Frannie Lindsay's work has appeared most recently in Field, Folio, and Salamander. New work is forthcoming in Spire, Tampa Review, and Small Pond Magazine. Frannie has been awarded an NEA Literature Fellowship, and residencies at the MacDowell and Millay Colonies, and at Yaddo. She holds an MFA from the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She is a classical pianist who lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her three retired greyhounds. Judge for the 2004 competition was J. D. McClatchy

16. May Swenson - The Academy Of American Poets
The Academy of American Poets presents a biography, photograph, and selected poems.
http://www.poets.org/LIT/poet/mswenfst.htm
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits poetry map ... about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook May Swenson May Swenson was born in Logan, Utah, in 1919. She attended Utah State University, Logan, and received a bachelor's degree in 1939. She taught poetry at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California at Riverside, Purdue University and Utah State University and was an editor at New Directions publishers from 1959 to 1966. Her poems appeared in Antaeus The Atlantic Monthly Carleton Miscellany The Nation The New Yorker Paris Review Parnassus and Poetry . She served as a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets from 1980 to 1989. She died in Oceanview, Delaware, in 1989. This bio was last updated on Feb 15, 2001. photo courtesy of the Literary Estate of May Swenson A Selected Bibliography Poetry Another Animal
A Cage of Spines
To Mix with Time: New and Selected Poems
Poems to Solve
(1963) For children.
Half Sun, Half Sleep: New Poems
More Poems to Solve
(1971) For children.

17. Creative Quotations From May Swenson (1919-1989)
Creative Quotations from . . . may swenson (19191989) born on may 3 US poet. Search millions of documents for may swenson. Highbeam Research,
http://www.creativequotations.com/one/1638.htm
CQHome Search CQ CQ Indexes CQ E-books ... creative
Creative Quotations from . . . May Swenson 1919-1989) born on May 3 US poet. She wrote "New and Selected Things Taking Place," 1978. Search millions of documents for May Swenson
Creative Hats
Tshirts African Cichlids Human double-barreled eyes,
in their narrow blind,
hope to shoot and hit
if they can find it
the backward-speeding hole
of the Cyclops face of the future.
The summer that I was ten
Can it be there was only one summer that I was ten? It must
have been a long one then . THE DNA MOLECULE THE DNA MOLECULE THE DNA MOLECULE is The Nude Descending a Staircase a circular one. See the undersurfaces of the spiral treads and the spaces in between. I was the horse and the rider . . . We play in the den of the Gods and snort at death. Published Sources for Quotations Above:
F: In "Metaphors Dictionary," by Elyse Sommer and Dorrie Weiss, 1995. R: A: N: K: To Confirm A Thing, St. 2, "New and Selected Things Taking Place," 1978. Aquarium Fish Mortgage Info India Outsourcing Check out these Ebay items for May Swenson! be more creative.com

18. Glbtq >> Literature >> Swenson, May
One of America's most inventive and incisive poets, may swenson wrote many love poems celebrating lesbian sexuality. Subjects AB C-E F-L M-Z. swenson, may (1913-1989) Born in Logan, Utah, on may 28, 1913, may swenson became one of America's most inventive and incisive poets
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/swenson_m.html
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Swenson, May (1913-1989) Born in Logan, Utah, on May 28, 1913, May Swenson became one of America's most inventive and incisive poets. English was actually her second language since Swedish was spoken in her childhood home. Beginning in 1954, she published ten collections of poetry during her lifetime and one book of translations of the poems of Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer. These include works such as Another Animal To Mix With Time Iconographs New And Selected Things Taking Place (1978), and In Other Words (1987). Swenson died in Ocean View, Delaware, on December 4, 1989. Sponsor Message.
Swenson's work is wide and varied. Many of her poems delight in the natural world. Others incorporate scientific research, particularly that having to do with space exploration. Others root themselves in love and eroticism, especially lesbian sexuality. Many of her love poems were published as a single collection in 1991 as The Love Poems of May Swenson Nature and sexuality are not separate categories in her work; to be a part of Nature, as we all are, joins us to a common sexual energy. Her strongest love poems, such as "Fireflies," "Dark Wild Honey," and "Wednesday at The Waldorf," rely on Nature imagery for much of their vitality and beauty.

19. Swenson, May Nature Poems Old And New
Literature Annotations. swenson, may Nature Poems Old and New.
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Swenson, May Nature: Poems Old and New
On-Line Text Genre Collection (Poems) (240 pp.) Poem (240 pp.) Keywords Body Self-Image Death and Dying Nature Summary Swenson's poems about the body and death express the essential mystery of human experience and of observing the cycles of the natural world. In "Question" she wonders in metaphor about what will become of the Self after death, "when Body my good / bright dog is dead." In "Death, Great Smoothener" Swenson notices the odd roles that the personified death seems to play. In "Feel Me" the poet ponders the curious last words of her dying father, suspecting a considerable indictment of the living by the dying. In "Death Invited" she details the gruesome ending of a bullfight, with death personified by the bull, dragged from the ring only to be replaced by another: "Here comes trotting, snorting death / let loose again." Commentary Swenson's gift is to observe and catalog accurately while stretching possible meanings to a higher imaginative level. She is therefore both abstract and concrete at once. A vision akin to William Blake's is mixed with a homely vernacular diction like Robert Frost's or perhaps Roethke's, so that even the darker subjects are luminous with Swenson's unusual or new perspectives.

20. 56746. Swenson, May. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
when you are fallen. ATTRIBUTION may swenson (19191995), U.S. poet
http://www.bartleby.com/66/46/56746.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Quotations The Columbia World of Quotations PREVIOUS ... AUTHOR INDEX The Columbia World of Quotations. NUMBER: QUOTATION: Body my house
my horse my hound
what will I do
when you are fallen ATTRIBUTION:
New Poets of England and America. Donald Hall, Robert Pack, and Louis Simpson, eds. (1957) Meridian Books.

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