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         Williams William Carlos:     more books (100)
  1. The Revolution in the Visual Arts and the Poetry of William Carlos Williams (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture) by Peter Halter, 2009-03-12
  2. The Collected Earlier Poems of William Carlos Williams by William Carlos Williams, 1951-01-01
  3. Selected letters by William Carlos Williams, 1957
  4. The desert music, and other poems by William Carlos Williams, 1954-03-25
  5. The Farmers' Daughters by William Carlos Williams, 1974-01-01
  6. White Mule: A Novel by William Carlos Williams, 1967-06
  7. William Carlos Williams: the critical heritage by Charles (ed) DOYLE, 2007
  8. Modernism, Medicine, & William Carlos Williams (Oklahoma Project for Discourse and Theory) by T. Hugh Crawford, 1995-03
  9. Countries of the Mind: The Poetry of William Carlos Williams by G. Stanley Koehler, 1999-01
  10. Patterson by William Carlos Williams, 1963
  11. La Primavera y Todo by William Carlos Williams, 1980
  12. Cerddi Bardd y Werin: Detholiad o Farddoniaeth Crwys (Welsh Edition) by William Carlos Williams, 1994-07
  13. Paterson by William Carlos Williams, 1992
  14. Paterson (Letras Universales / Universal Writings) (Spanish Edition) by William Carlos Williams, 2001-06-30

81. William Carlos Williams Quotes And Quotations - BrainyQuote
william carlos williams Quotes, Afraid lest william carlos williams Ithink all writing is a disease. You can t stop it. william carlos
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William Carlos Williams Quotes Afraid lest he be caught up in a net of words tripped up, bewildered and so defeated - thrown aside - a man hesitates to write down his innermost convictions.
William Carlos Williams

I think all writing is a disease. You can't stop it.
William Carlos Williams

Nothing whips my blood like verse.
William Carlos Williams

The better work men do is always done under stress and at great personal cost.
William Carlos Williams
Time is a storm in which we are all lost. William Carlos Williams What power has love but forgiveness? William Carlos Williams When they ask me, as of late they frequently do, how I have for so many years continued an equal interest in medicine and the poem, I reply that they amount for me to nearly the same thing. William Carlos Williams Type: Poet Quotes Date of Birth: Year of Birth: Year of Death: Nationality: American Biography: William Carlos Williams Biography Find on Amazon: William Carlos Williams Quotes RSS Feeds About Us Inquire Privacy Terms

82. William Carlos Williams On The Web
william carlos williams on the Web. william carlos williams 5 TheDial This site outlines the career of williams as a modernist.
http://www.cwru.edu/artsci/engl/VSALM/mod/johnson/WCWLNX.HTM
William Carlos Williams on the Web
  • William Carlos Williams 1: General This website provides a short biography with links to a complete list of works, information about the cultural significance of New Jersey, and information about poets Williams has influenced.
  • William Carlos Williams 2: Poems This site contains 22 complete poems, including "The Dance", "El Hombre", "Impromptu: The Suckers", "Love Song", "The Sea-Elephant", and "The Red Wheelbarrow".
  • William Carlos Williams 3: NYU This site contains links to annotated works, complete with keywords, summaries, commentary, and other related information about William Carlos Williams.
  • William Carlos Williams 4: UTexas This site examines the connections between poetry and visual art in the works of William Carlos Williams. There is a useful link to the 1913 Armory Show exhibition of painting and sculpture; a link to Walter Arensberg's apartment, a salon off Central Park on West 67th Street where modernists would meet the host poet/patron and undoubtedly 'psych' other guests; a link to the galleries of 291, officially named by Alfred Stieglitz the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession; and links to informational outlines of Cubism and Dadaism.
  • William Carlos Williams 5: The Dial This site outlines the career of Williams as a modernist. It also provides a bibliography of secondary scholarship on Williams and offers links to e-texts of several poems, including 6 as they appeared in

83. William Carlos Williams Resources At Questia - The Online Library
william carlos williams Resources at Questia The Online Library of Books and Journals.william carlos williams. Questia. Primary Content. william carlos williams.
http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/william_carlos_williams.jsp

84. Poet William Carlos Williams Describes The Crowd At The Ballpark
Poet william carlos williams Describes the Crowd at the Ballpark. Source williamcarlos williams, “The Crowd at the Ball Game,” Dial, 1921. See Also
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5086/

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Poet William Carlos Williams Describes the Crowd at the Ballpark
Dial in 1923. The crowd at the ball game is moved uniformly by a spirit of uselessness all the exciting detail of the chase and the escape, the error all to no end save beauty So in detail they, the crowd, are beautiful for this to be warned against It is alive, venomous it smiles grimly The flashy female with her It is the Inquisition, the Revolution It is beauty itself that lives day by day in them This is the power of their faces It is summer, it is the solstice the crowd is cheering, the crowd is laughing in detail permanently, seriously without thought Source: Dial See Also: The National Pastime in the 1920s: The Rise of the Baseball Fan
Journalists Pay Homage to Babe Ruth and the House That He Built

85. [minstrels] Variations On A Theme By William Carlos Williams -- Kenneth Koch
278 Variations on a Theme by william carlos williams. Title Variations ona Theme by william carlos williams. Poet Kenneth Koch. Date 30 Nov 1999.
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/278.html
[278] Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams
Title : Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams Poet : Kenneth Koch Date : 30 Nov 1999 Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq Imagism is all very well, but... Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams 1 I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer. I am sorry, but it was morning, and I had nothing to do and its wooden beams were so inviting. 2 We laughed at the hollyhocks together and then I sprayed them with lye. Forgive me. I simply do not know what I am doing. 3 I gave away the money that you had been saving to live on for the next ten years. The man who asked for it was shabby and the firm March wind on the porch was so juicy and cold. 4 Last evening we went dancing and I broke your leg. Forgive me. I was clumsy and I wanted you here in the wards, where I am the doctor! Kenneth Koch A brilliant takeoff on William Carlos Williams' 'This is Just to Say'[1] - I still can't read it without laughing. Koch has the tone down perfectly - it is tempting to say that he dislikes Imagism, and is trying to skewer it for its [perceived] pretentiousness, but I feel he is laughing more with than at the genre (see his comments about seriousness in the notes). Perhaps the proper comparison is with Porter's 'Japanese Jokes'[2] - at first glance a rather cutting parody, but nonetheless genuinely sympathetic to the form. And finally I feel more than usually compelled to point out that all the above is strictly my opinion - feel free to ignore it and simply enjoy the poem for its very considerable merits. - m. [1] run just a few days ago - see

86. [minstrels] This Is Just To Say -- William Carlos Williams
Title This Is Just To Say. Poet william carlos williams. Date 27 Nov 1999. Forgiveme they were delicious so sweet and so cold. william carlos williams.
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/274.html
[274] This Is Just To Say
Title : This Is Just To Say Poet : William Carlos Williams Date : 27 Nov 1999 I have eaten Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq This Is Just To Say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast. Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold. William Carlos Williams poem #83 along with the first poem of his to be run on the Minstrels, 'The Red Wheelbarrow'. Another typical Williams slice-of-life is 'The Artist', which you can read at poem #213 More on Imagism can be found in the essay accompanying Amy Lowell's 'Generations', Minstrels poem #102 , at poem #102 One of my favourite poems by an Imagist poet is Ezra Pound's 'The River Merchant's Wife: A Letter', which you can read at poem #70 And of course, you can read all our other poems at http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/ hquach@ bearcub@ sebastianesser@ From: This is not a nice person! He at the plums he KNEW you were saving for breakfast, barely makes a decent apology, and then gloats over the wonderful way they tasted. This guy is not a great guy! Try Kenneth Koch's poems in tribute to this one...cannot remember the names, but it really makes one understand this work by WCW. benita.kape@

87. CONTEXT: William Carlos Williams On The Work Of Gertrude Stein
william carlos williams. The Work of Gertrude Stein by william carlos williamsis from Imaginations, copyright © 1970 by Florence H. williams.
http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/context/no6/williams.html
No. 6
Online Edition SPECIAL SALEany 100 Dalkey titles for $500 "The Work of Gertrude Stein"
William Carlos Williams By locating traces of Tristram Shandy in Stein's Geography and Plays, Williams identifies an entire tradition of literature that is concerned foremost with language rather than logic, with "the words." Would I have seen a white bear!
(for how can I imagine it?)
Let it be granted that whatever is new in literature the germ of it will be found somewhere in the writings of other times; only the modern emphasis gives work a present distinction. The necessity for this modern focus and the meaning of the changes involved are, however, another matter, the everlasting stumbling block to criticism. Here is a theme worth development in the case of Gertrude Steinyet signally neglected. Why in fact have we not heard more generally from American scholars upon the writings of Miss Stein? Is it lack of heart or ability or just that theirs is an enthusiasm which fades rapidly of its own nature before the risks of today? Now I quote from Sterne:
    The verbs auxiliary we are concerned in here, continued my father, are am; was; have; had; do; did; could; owe; make; made; suffer; shall; should; will; would; can; ought; used; or is wont . . . or with these questions added to them;Is it? Was it? Will it be? . . . Or affirmatively . . . Or chronologically . . . Or hypothetically . . . If it was? If it was not? What would follow?If the French beat the English? If the Sun should go out of the Zodiac?

88. William Carlos Williams, Manuscripts
Folder Contents. 1940, 3 Jan. williams, william carlos, 18831963. 1945, 1 Mar.williams, william carlos, 1883-1963. Paterson Book I . Typed Poem Signed.
http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/literature/poetry/williams.html
William Carlos Williams, Manuscripts, 1940-1965
Prepared By Dean Keller Revised by Athena Salaba 11th Floor, .33 cubic ft.
Biographical sketch
William Carlos Williams was born on September 17, 1883, in Rutherford, N.J., and died March 4, 1963, in Rutherford. The son of William George and Raquel Helene (Hoheb) Williams, Williams received an M.D. from University of Pennsylvania in 1906, and did postgraduate studies at University of Leipzig. He is considered to be one of the finest American poets of his generation. A man of various talents, he was a novelist, playwright, editor, essayist, and practicing physician. Williams' poetic expression was more natural than the poetic style established by Eliot. Among the numerous awards he received over the years was the Pulitzer Prize in poetry for Pictures From Brueghel in 1963. Among his poetic works are: The Tempers Sour Grapes The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams, 1906-1938 Paterson The Clouds The Desert Music and Other Poems (1954), etc. He also wrote: The Great American Novel A Voyage to Pagany (novel, 1928);

89. WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS: PHYSICIAN AND AUTHOR
william carlos williams PHYSICIAN AND AUTHOR 18831963. william carlos williams wasborn in a comfortably middle class home in Rutherford, New Jersey, in 1883.
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/wcw.html
Recommended Reading Notable Unitarians Home Harvard Square Library Home
WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS: PHYSICIAN AND AUTHOR
by Patrick Murfin
President of the Congregational Unitarian Church, Woodstock, Illinois
Many of his patients were Paterson mill girls, others were local prostitutes and desperate young mothers with too many babies. Yet he also saw the proper middle-class ladies of his hometown. The experience of his practice influenced his poetry and other literary endeavors.
While at the University of Pennsylvania, he fell in with the brilliant Ezra Pound. Pound profoundly influenced the poetry Williams continued to write. He joined the Imagist movement, writing unsentimental poetry in evocative language and experimental forms. Pound arranged for the publication of Williams's second volume of poetry, The Tempers in London in 1913. Back in Rutherford, Williams continued to produce poetry, essays, plays, and fiction. He slowly built a reputation second only to Pound as an Imagist. This position would be challenged by the emergence of T. S. Eliot in the 1920s. By that time Williams was drifting away from the Imagists, considering them, especially Eliot, too bound to European culture, too elitist, and too obscure. He continued to experiment adventurously with poetic form and typography. This experimentation was evident in his

90. Williams, William Carlos Forum Frigate
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91. William Carlos Williams: Poems
Click Here. POEMS BY william carlos williams for william carlos williamscollectibles. Find articles on william carlos williams Click Here.
http://www.poetry-archive.com/w/williams_william_carlos.html
POEMS BY WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS: RELATED LINKS Find articles on WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS: BROWSE THE POETRY ARCHIVE: A B C D ... Email Poetry-Archive.com

92. Williams's Influence On Burke
william carlos williams s Influence on Kenneth Burke. Works Cited. Bremen, Brian A.william carlos williams and the Diagnostics of Culture. NY Oxford UP, 1993.
http://www.sla.purdue.edu/people/engl/dblakesley/burke/blake.html
William Carlos Williams's Influence
on Kenneth Burke David Blakesley , Purdue University Presented at the Modern Language Association Conference
Toronto, December 1997 Williams scholars have, of course, paid the Burke-Williams connection considerable attention. Paul Mariani's biography, William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked (1981), is perhaps the first work to stress Burke's presence in Williams's life and thought. While interested less in the mutual influence of these two writers than in developing an alternative reading of Williams's poetry, Bernard Duffey's A Poetry of Presence (1986) reads Williams through the lens of Burke's pentad, his terminology in A Grammar of Motives for answering the question, "What is involved, when we say what people are doing and why they are doing it?" (xv). Brian Bremen's William Carlos Williams and the Diagnostics of Culture (1993) argues that "Burke's 'damned theorizing' [Williams's way of putting it] is an essential means of understanding Williams's writing, just as Williams's writing provides an important critique of Burke's work" (62). Bremen offers by far the most thorough account of how Burke may have influenced Williams's aesthetics. Like Duffey, Bremen reads Williams via Burke, with the exception that the terminology is not limited to the pentad (which Burke and Williams hardly discussed) but encompasses specifically the ideas that Williams and Burke haggled over and that affected Williams most noticeably. Bremen doesn't really consider Williams's influence on Burke, but rather his understanding of Burke, with an emphasis on Williams’s "critique."

93. Daily Celebrations ~ William Carlos Williams, What Power Has Love ~ September 17
Love s greatest power is forgiveness. A celebration of poet william carloswilliams. william carlos williamsLove s greatest power is forgiveness.
http://www.dailycelebrations.com/091700.htm
September 17 ~  What Power Has Love Bread Without Sugar: Poems
W h a t power h a s love but forgiveness ~ William Carlos Williams Born on this day in Rutherford, New Jersey, poet William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) was a pediatrician before he became a successful writer. He was a life-long friend of Ezra Pound who shared his passion for verse. "The better work men do is always done under stress and at great personal cost," believed Williams who published his first volume of poetry in 1913. "He exemplified the art of the eye," praised American poet laureate Robert Pinsky. "What makes his poems persist is the art of ear and mind, the extraordinary sentences and rhythmns he made." Along with Pound and T.S. Eliot , William's poetry celebrated the Imagist movement and focused on the magic of American poetic. Like Robert Frost , Williams used idiom and language to capture the distinctive sounds of his native voice. His eight-lined The Red Wheelbarrow (1959) invited us to pay attention to the ordinary, everyday things in life, emphasizing the concrete, not the abstract, showing the contrast between the colors white and red "No ideas but in things," he wrote in

94. Powell's Books - New Directions Paperbook #730-: Collected Poems Of William Carl
Collected Poems of william carlos williams, Volume II, 19391962 (88 Edition) bywilliam carlos / Macgowan, Christopher (ed.) williams Condition Student Owned.
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=65-0811211886-2

95. William Carlos Williams: The Use Of Force
The Use of Force william carlos williams. They were new patients tome, all I had was the name, Olson. Please come down as soon as
http://www.fti.uab.es/sgolden/docencia/force.htm
The Use of Force
William Carlos Williams They were new patients to me, all I had was the name, Olson. Please come down as soon as you can, my daughter is very sick. When I arrived I was met by the mother, a big startled looking woman, very clean and apologetic who merely said, Is this the doctor? and let me in. In the back, she added. You must excuse us, doctor, we have her in the kitchen where it is warm. It is very damp here sometimes. The child was fully dressed and sitting on her father's lap near the kitchen table. He tried to get up, but I motioned for him not to bother, took off my overcoat and started to look things over. I could see that they were all very nervous, eyeing me up and down distrustfully. As often, in such cases, they weren't telling me more than they had to, it was up to me to tell them; that's why they were spending three dollars on me. The child was fairly eating me up with her cold, steady eyes, and no expression to her face whatever. She did not move and seemed, inwardly, quiet; an unusually attractive little thing, and as strong as a heifer in appearance. But her face was flushed, she was breathing rapidly, and I realized that she had a high fever. She had magnificent blonde hair, in profusion. One of those picture children often reproduced in advertising leaflets and the photogravure sections of the Sunday papers. She's had a fever for three days, began the father and we don't know what it comes from. My wife has given her things, you know, like people do, but it don't do no good. And there's been a lot of sickness around. So we tho't you'd better look her over and tell us what is the matter.

96. Williams, William Carlos Forum Frigate
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97. The National Book Foundation
National Book Award Classics. william carlos williams 1950 Winner for Poetry,Paterson, Book III; and Selected Poems. william carlos williams.
http://www.nationalbook.org/dirletter_wcwilliams.html

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National Book Award Classics William Carlos Williams
1950 Winner for Poetry, Paterson, Book III ; and Selected Poems
By way of introduction: When I was approached by Audrey Seitz and Rob Earp of Ingram last fall with the opportunity to write this monthly column, I jumped at the chance. It is an unfortunate occupational hazard of my job as Executive Director of The National Book Foundation, sponsor of the National Book Awards, that (for obvious reasons) I can’t express my opinion on any of the contemporary books that have been Finalists for or have won this most prestigious honor. I say "contemporary" because if you go back far enough, as I intend to do, and return to the classics, then the critical statute of limitations no longer applies to me. So in this monthly column I am going to steer clear of recent times, and of writers who might still be contenders for the National Book Award.

98. George Washington As Seen By William Carlos Williams (Ftrain.com)
From “George Washington” in In the American Grain, a collection of essays bywilliam carlos williams, © 1933, (pp 142144). . By carlos williams, william.
http://www.ftrain.com/williams_george_washington.html
Up: Texts Related T Wednesday, June 20, 2001
George Washington as seen by William Carlos Williams
By Carlos Williams, William In the American Grain , a collection of essays by William Carlos Williams,  © 1933, (pp 142-144). Here was a man of tremendous vitality buried in a massive frame and under a rather stolid and untractable exterior which the ladies somewhat feared, I fancy. He must have looked well to them, from a distance, or say on horseback - but later it proved a little too powerful for comfort. And he wanted them too; violently. One can imagine him curiously alive to the need of dainty waistcoats, lace and kid gloves, in which to cover that dangerous rudeness which he must have felt about himself. His interest in dress at a certain period of his career is notorious. Some girl at Princeton, was it? had some joke with him about a slipper at a dance. He was full of it. And there was the obscene anecdote he told that night in the boat crossing the Delaware. America has a special destiny for such men, I suppose, great wench lovers - there is the letter from Jefferson attesting it in the case of Washington, if that were needed - terrible leaders they might make if one could release them. It seems a loss not compensated for by the tawdry stuff bred after them - in place of a splendor, too rare. They are a kind of American swan song, each one.

99. Creative Quotations From William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)
. . william carlos williams (18831963) born on Sep 3 US poet. Search millionsof documents for william carlos williams. Highbeam Research,
http://www.creativequotations.com/one/522.htm
CQHome Search CQ CQ Indexes CQ E-books ... creative
Creative Quotations from . . . William Carlos Williams 1883-1963) born on Sep 3 US poet. He made the ordinary appear extraordinary by the clarity and discreteness of his imagery, e.g., "Sour Grapes," 1921. Search millions of documents for William Carlos Williams
Creative Hats
Tshirts African Cichlids By listening to the language of his locality the poet learns his craft. It is his function to lift, by the use of his imagination . . . his environment to the sphere . . . where they will have a new currency.
Afraid lest he be caught up in a net of words, tripped up, bewildered and so defeated thrown aside a man hesitates to write down his innermost convictions. Times change and forms and their meanings alter. Thus new poems are necessary. Their forms must be discovered in the living language of their day, or old forms, embodying exploded concepts, will tyrannize over the imagination. I think all writing is a disease. You can't stop it. When they ask me . . . how I have for so many years continued an equal interest in medicine and the poem. I reply that they amount for me to nearly the same thing.
Published Sources for Quotations Above:
F: A Note on Poetry, 1938.

100. Ink Nineteen: William Carlos Williams
by S. Kern Telemarketing that happens to be one of the first subjects I discussedwith Rob Mallard of the band william carlos williams. Was it revealing?
http://www.ink19.com/issues_F/98_07/ink_spots/william_c_williams_nf.html
July 1998 Ink Spots
Dr. Plutonium Wilson
In The Nursery Phylr REO Speedealer ... The Undead William Carlos Williams This Issue
Feature
Ink Spots Live Streaks Wet Ink Columns ... Print
by S. Kern

Telemarketing... that happens to be one of the first subjects I discussed with Rob Mallard of the band William Carlos Williams. Was it revealing? No, considered everyone detests those pesty inquires. Trust me, surprising revelations are ahead. For instance, all members were in other bands, but it took one kitchen shift at Eats (Atlanta eatery), five boomboxes, and a conversation about music to bring these guys together. Soon after, they formed William Carlos Williams and began playing as the open mic night house band at Dottie's. By the second show, they had special guests (like Nancy from Nashville Pussy) play a few songs with them. July brings their second release on ShoeString Records, Collection Plate , and recently brought two of the members, Rob Mallard and later on Wes Daniel for a talk that brought up such subjects as White Women, record collections, CMJ...
So, why

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