E. E. Cummings

Edward Estlin Cummings (October 14, 1894 – September 3, 1962), often written in all lowercase as e e cummings, was an American poet, painter, essayist, author, and playwright. He wrote approximately 2,900 poems, two autobiographical novels, four plays, and several essays. He is often regarded as one of the most important American poets of the 20th century. Cummings is associated with modernist free-form poetry. Much of his work has idiosyncratic syntax and uses lower-case spellings for poetic expression.

e e cummings
Cummings in 1953
Born
Edward Estlin Cummings

(1894-10-14)October 14, 1894
DiedSeptember 3, 1962(1962-09-03) (aged 67)
Madison, New Hampshire, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University
OccupationAuthor
Signature

Life

Early years

Edward Estlin Cummings was born on October 14, 1894, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Edward Cummings and the former Rebecca Haswell Clarke, a well-known Unitarian couple in the city. His father was a professor at Harvard University who later became nationally known as the minister of South Congregational Church (Unitarian) in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] His mother, who loved to spend time with her children, played games with Cummings and his sister, Elizabeth. From an early age, Cummings's parents supported his creative gifts.[2] Cummings wrote poems and drew as a child, and he often played outdoors with the many other children who lived in his neighborhood. He grew up in the company of such family friends as the philosophers William James and Josiah Royce. Many of Cummings's summers were spent on Silver Lake in Madison, New Hampshire, where his father had built two houses along the eastern shore. The family ultimately purchased the nearby Joy Farm where Cummings had his primary summer residence.[3]

He expressed transcendental leanings his entire life. As he matured, Cummings moved to an "I, Thou" relationship with God. His journals are replete with references to "le bon Dieu", as well as prayers for inspiration in his poetry and artwork (such as "Bon Dieu! may i some day do something truly great. amen."). Cummings "also prayed for strength to be his essential self ('may I be I is the only prayer—not may I be great or good or beautiful or wise or strong'), and for relief of spirit in times of depression ('almighty God! I thank thee for my soul; & may I never die spiritually into a mere mind through disease of loneliness')".[4]

Cummings wanted to be a poet from childhood and wrote poetry daily from age 8 to 22, exploring assorted forms. He graduated from Harvard University with a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1915 and received a Master of Arts degree from the university in 1916.[5] In his studies at Harvard, he developed an interest in modern poetry, which ignored conventional grammar and syntax, while aiming for a dynamic use of language. Upon graduating, he worked for a book dealer.[6]

Masthead from volume 56 of The Harvard Monthly; Cummings was an editor and contributor to this literary journal while at Harvard

War years

In 1917, with the First World War ongoing in Europe, Cummings enlisted in the Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps. On the boat to France, he met William Slater Brown and they would become friends. Due to an administrative error, Cummings and Brown did not receive an assignment for five weeks, a period they spent exploring Paris. Cummings fell in love with the city, to which he would return throughout his life.[7]

During their service in the ambulance corps, the two young writers sent letters home that drew the attention of the military censors. They were known to prefer the company of French soldiers over fellow ambulance drivers. The two openly expressed anti-war views; Cummings spoke of his lack of hatred for the Germans.[8] On September 21, 1917, five months after starting his belated assignment, Cummings and William Slater Brown were arrested by the French military on suspicion of espionage and undesirable activities. They were held for three and a half months in a military detention camp at the Dépôt de Triage, in La Ferté-Macé, Orne, Normandy.[7]

They were imprisoned with other detainees in a large room. Cummings's father failed to obtain his son's release through diplomatic channels, and in December 1917 he wrote a letter to President Woodrow Wilson. Cummings was released on December 19, 1917, and Brown was released two months later. Cummings used his prison experience as the basis for his novel, The Enormous Room (1922), about which F. Scott Fitzgerald said, "Of all the work by young men who have sprung up since 1920 one book survives—The Enormous Room by e.e. cummings ... Those few who cause books to live have not been able to endure the thought of its mortality."[9]

Cummings returned to the United States on New Year's Day 1918. Later in 1918 he was drafted into the army. He served a training deployment[10] in the 12th Division at Camp Devens, Massachusetts, until November 1918.[11][12]

Buffalo Bill's
defunct
  who used to
  ride a watersmooth-silver
  stallion
and break onetwothreefourfive pigeonsjustlikethat
  Jesus

he was a handsome man
  and what i want to know is
how do you like your blueeyed boy
Mister Death

"Buffalo Bill's" (1920)

Post-war years

Cummings returned to Paris in 1921 and lived there for two years before returning to New York. His collection Tulips and Chimneys was published in 1923 and his inventive use of grammar and syntax is evident. The book was heavily cut by his editor. XLI Poems was published in 1925. With these collections, Cummings made his reputation as an avant garde poet.[6]

During the rest of the 1920s and 1930s, Cummings returned to Paris a number of times, and traveled throughout Europe, meeting, among others, artist Pablo Picasso. In 1931 Cummings traveled to the Soviet Union, recounting his experiences in Eimi, published two years later. During these years Cummings also traveled to Northern Africa and Mexico. He worked as an essayist and portrait artist for Vanity Fair magazine (1924–1927).

In 1926, Cummings's parents were in a car crash; only his mother survived, although she was severely injured. Cummings later described the crash in the following passage from his i: six nonlectures series given at Harvard (as part of the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures) in 1952 and 1953:

A locomotive cut the car in half, killing my father instantly. When two brakemen jumped from the halted train, they saw a woman standing – dazed but erect – beside a mangled machine; with blood spouting (as the older said to me) out of her head. One of her hands (the younger added) kept feeling her dress, as if trying to discover why it was wet. These men took my sixty-six-year old mother by the arms and tried to lead her toward a nearby farmhouse; but she threw them off, strode straight to my father's body, and directed a group of scared spectators to cover him. When this had been done (and only then) she let them lead her away.

His father's death had a profound effect on Cummings, who entered a new period in his artistic life. He began to focus on more important aspects of life in his poetry. He started this new period by paying homage to his father in the poem "my father moved through dooms of love".[13][14]

In the 1930s Samuel Aiwaz Jacobs was Cummings's publisher; he had started the Golden Eagle Press after working as a typographer and publisher.

Final years

Grave of E. E. Cummings

In 1952, his alma mater, Harvard University, awarded Cummings an honorary seat as a guest professor. The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures he gave in 1952 and 1955 were later collected as i: six nonlectures.

i thank You God for most this amazing
day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

From "i thank You God for most this amazing" (1950)

Cummings spent the last decade of his life traveling, fulfilling speaking engagements, and spending time at his summer home, Joy Farm, in Silver Lake, New Hampshire. He died of a stroke on September 3, 1962, at the age of 67 at Memorial Hospital in North Conway, New Hampshire.[15] Cummings was buried at Forest Hills Cemetery in Boston, Massachusetts. At the time of his death, Cummings was recognized as the "second most widely read poet in the United States, after Robert Frost".[16]

Cummings's papers are held at the Houghton Library at Harvard University and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.[7]

Personal life

Marriages

Sketched self-portrait circa 1920

Cummings was married briefly twice, first to Elaine Thayer, then to Anne Minnerly Barton. His longest relationship lasted more than three decades with Marion Morehouse.

In 2020, it was revealed that in 1917, before his first marriage, Cummings had shared several passionate love letters with a Parisian prostitute, Marie Louise Lallemand.[17] Despite Cummings's efforts, he was unable to find Lallemand upon his return to Paris after the front.[17]

Cummings's first marriage, to Elaine Orr, his cousin, began as a love affair in 1918 while she was still married to Scofield Thayer, one of Cummings's friends from Harvard. During this time he wrote a good deal of his erotic poetry.[18] After divorcing Thayer, Orr married Cummings on March 19, 1924. The couple had a daughter together out of wedlock. However, the couple separated after two months of marriage and divorced less than nine months later.

Cummings married his second wife Anne Minnerly Barton on May 1, 1929. They separated three years later in 1932. That same year, Minnerly obtained a Mexican divorce; it was not officially recognized in the United States until August 1934. Anne died in 1970 aged 72.

In 1934, after his separation from his second wife, Cummings met Marion Morehouse, a fashion model and photographer. Although it is not clear whether the two were ever formally married, Morehouse lived with Cummings until his death in 1962. She died on May 18, 1969,[19] while living at 4 Patchin Place, Greenwich Village, New York City, where Cummings had resided since September 1924.[20]

Political views

According to his testimony in EIMI, Cummings had little interest in politics until his trip to the Soviet Union in 1931.[21] He subsequently shifted rightward on many political and social issues.[22] Despite his radical and bohemian public image, he was a Republican and later an ardent supporter of Joseph McCarthy.[23]

Work

Poetry

Despite Cummings's familiarity with avant-garde styles (likely affected by the Calligrammes of French poet Apollinaire, according to a contemporary observation[24]), much of his work is quite traditional. Many of his poems are sonnets, albeit often with a modern twist. He occasionally used the blues form and acrostics. Cummings's poetry often deals with themes of love and nature, as well as the relationship of the individual to the masses and to the world. His poems are also often rife with satire.

While his poetic forms and themes share an affinity with the Romantic tradition, Cummings's work universally shows a particular idiosyncrasy of syntax, or way of arranging individual words into larger phrases and sentences. Many of his most striking poems do not involve any typographical or punctuation innovations at all, but purely syntactic ones.

i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
  i fear
no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you

here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)

From "i carry your heart with me(i carry it in" (1952)[25]

As well as being influenced by notable modernists, including Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound, Cummings in his early work drew upon the imagist experiments of Amy Lowell. Later, his visits to Paris exposed him to Dada and Surrealism, which he reflected in his work. He began to rely on symbolism and allegory, where he once had used simile and metaphor. In his later work, he rarely used comparisons that required objects that were not previously mentioned in the poem, choosing to use a symbol instead. Due to this, his later poetry is "frequently more lucid, more moving, and more profound than his earlier".[26] Cummings also liked to incorporate imagery of nature and death into much of his poetry.

While some of his poetry is free verse (with no concern for rhyme or meter), many have a recognizable sonnet structure of 14 lines, with an intricate rhyme scheme. A number of his poems feature a typographically exuberant style, with words, parts of words, or punctuation symbols scattered across the page, often making little sense until read aloud, at which point the meaning and emotion become clear. Cummings, who was also a painter, understood the importance of presentation, and used typography to "paint a picture" with some of his poems.[27]

The seeds of Cummings's unconventional style appear well established even in his earliest work. At age six, he wrote to his father:[28]

FATHER DEAR. BE, YOUR FATHER-GOOD AND GOOD,
HE IS GOOD NOW, IT IS NOT GOOD TO SEE IT RAIN,
FATHER DEAR IS, IT, DEAR, NO FATHER DEAR,
LOVE, YOU DEAR,
ESTLIN.

Following his autobiographical novel, The Enormous Room, Cummings's first published work was a collection of poems titled Tulips and Chimneys (1923). This work was the public's first encounter with his characteristically eccentric use of grammar and punctuation.

Some of Cummings's most famous poems do not involve much, if any, idiosyncratic typography or punctuation, but they still carry his unmistakable style, particularly in unusual and impressionistic word order.

anyone lived in a pretty how town
(with up so floating many bells down)
spring summer autumn winter
he sang his didn't he danced his did

Women and men (both little and small)
cared for anyone not at all
they sowed their isn't they reaped their same
sun moon stars rain

From "anyone lived in a pretty how town" (1940)[29]

Cummings's works often do not follow the conventional rules that generate typical English sentences (for example, "they sowed their isn't"). In addition, a number of Cummings's poems feature, in part or in whole, intentional misspellings, and several incorporate phonetic spellings intended to represent particular dialects. Cummings also made use of inventive formations of compound words, as in his poem "in Just", which features words such as "mud-luscious", "puddle-wonderful", and "eddieandbill". This poem is part of a sequence of poems titled Chansons Innocentes;[30] it has many references comparing the "balloonman" to Pan, the mythical creature that is half-goat and half-man. Literary critic R.P. Blackmur has commented that this use of language is "frequently unintelligible because [Cummings] disregards the historical accumulation of meaning in words in favour of merely private and personal associations".[31]

Fellow poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, in her equivocal letter recommending Cummings for the Guggenheim Fellowship he was awarded in 1934, expressed her frustration at his opaque symbolism. "[I]f he prints and offers for sale poetry which he is quite content should be, after hours of sweating concentration, inexplicable from any point of view to a person as intelligent as myself, then he does so with a motive which is frivolous from the point of view of art, and should not be helped or encouraged by any serious person or group of persons... there is fine writing and powerful writing (as well as some of the most pompous nonsense I ever let slip to the floor with a wide yawn)... What I propose, then, is this: that you give Mr. Cummings enough rope. He may hang himself; or he may lasso a unicorn."[32]

Many of Cummings's poems are satirical and address social issues[33] but have an equal or even stronger bias toward romanticism: time and again his poems celebrate love, sex, and the season of rebirth.[34]

Cummings also wrote children's books and novels. A notable example of his versatility is an introduction he wrote for a collection of the comic strip Krazy Kat.[35]

Controversy

Cummings is known for controversial subject matter, as he wrote numerous erotic poems. He also sometimes included ethnic slurs in his writing. For instance, in his 1950 collection Xaipe: Seventy-One Poems, Cummings published two poems containing words that caused outrage in some quarters.[36]

one day a nigger
caught in his hand
a little star no bigger
than not to understand

i'll never let you go
until you've made me white"
so she did and now
stars shine at night.
[37]

and

a kike is the most dangerous
machine as yet invented
by even yankee ingenu
ity(out of a jew a few
dead dollars and some twisted laws)
it comes both prigged and canted
[37]

Cummings biographer Catherine Reef notes of the controversy:[38]

Friends begged Cummings to reconsider publishing these poems, and the book's editor pleaded with him to withdraw them, but he insisted that they stay. All the fuss perplexed him. The poems were commenting on prejudice, he pointed out, and not condoning it. He intended to show how derogatory words cause people to see others in terms of stereotypes rather than as individuals. "America (which turns Hungarian into 'hunky' & Irishman into 'mick' and Norwegian into 'square-head') is to blame for 'kike,'" he said.

William Carlos Williams spoke out in his defense.[38]

Plays

During his lifetime, Cummings published four plays. HIM, a three-act play, was first produced in 1928 by the Provincetown Players in New York City. The production was directed by James Light. The play's main characters are "Him", a playwright, portrayed by William Johnstone, and "Me", his girlfriend, portrayed by Erin O'Brien-Moore.

Cummings said of the unorthodox play:[39]

Relax and give the play a chance to strut its stuff—relax, stop wondering what it is all 'about'—like many strange and familiar things, Life included, this play isn't 'about,' it simply is. . . . Don't try to enjoy it, let it try to enjoy you. DON'T TRY TO UNDERSTAND IT, LET IT TRY TO UNDERSTAND YOU."

Anthropos, or the Future of Art is a short, one-act play that Cummings contributed to the anthology Whither, Whither or After Sex, What? A Symposium to End Symposium. The play consists of dialogue between Man, the main character, and three "infrahumans", or inferior beings. The word anthropos is the Greek word for "man", in the sense of "mankind".

Tom, A Ballet is a ballet based on Uncle Tom's Cabin. The ballet is detailed in a "synopsis" as well as descriptions of four "episodes", which were published by Cummings in 1935. It has never been performed.[40]

Santa Claus: A Morality was probably Cummings's most successful play. It is an allegorical Christmas fantasy presented in one act of five scenes. The play was inspired by his daughter Nancy, with whom he was reunited in 1946. It was first published in the Harvard College magazine, Wake. The play's main characters are Santa Claus, his family (Woman and Child), Death, and Mob. At the outset of the play, Santa Claus's family has disintegrated due to their lust for knowledge (Science). After a series of events, however, Santa Claus's faith in love and his rejection of the materialism and disappointment he associates with Science are reaffirmed, and he is reunited with Woman and Child.

Name and capitalization

Cummings's publishers and others have often echoed the unconventional orthography in his poetry by writing his name in lower case.[41] Cummings himself used both the lowercase and capitalized versions, though he most often signed his name with capitals.[41]

The use of lower case for his initials was popularized in part by the title of some books, particularly in the 1960s, printing his name in lower case on the cover and spine. In the preface to E. E. Cummings: The Growth of a Writer by Norman Friedman, critic Harry T. Moore notes Cummings "had his name put legally into lower case, and in his later books the titles and his name were always in lower case".[42] According to Cummings's widow, however, this is incorrect.[41] She wrote to Friedman: "You should not have allowed H. Moore to make such a stupid & childish statement about Cummings & his signature." On February 27, 1951, Cummings wrote to his French translator D. Jon Grossman that he preferred the use of upper case for the particular edition they were working on.[43] One Cummings scholar believes that on the rare occasions that Cummings signed his name in all lower case, he may have intended it as a gesture of humility, not as an indication that it was the preferred orthography for others to use.[41] Additionally, The Chicago Manual of Style, which prescribes favoring non-standard capitalization of names in accordance with the bearer's strongly stated preference, notes "E. E. Cummings can be safely capitalized; it was one of his publishers, not he himself, who lowercased his name."[44]

Adaptations

In 1943, modern dancer and choreographer Jean Erdman presented "The Transformations of Medusa, Forever and Sunsmell" with a commissioned score by John Cage and a spoken text from the title poem by E. E. Cummings, sponsored by the Arts Club of Chicago. Erdman also choreographed "Twenty Poems" (1960), a cycle of E. E. Cummings's poems for eight dancers and one actor, with a commissioned score by Teiji Ito. It was performed in the round at the Circle in the Square Theatre in Greenwich Village.

Numerous composers have set Cummings's poems to music:

  • In 1961, Pierre Boulez composed cummings ist der dichter from poems by E. E. Cummings.[45]
  • Aribert Reimann set Cummings to music in "Impression IV" (1961) for soprano and piano.[46]
  • Morton Feldman (1926–1987) in 1951 composed "4 Songs to e.e. cummings" for soprano, piano and cello, using material from Cummings's "50 poems" of 1940: "!Blac", "Air", "(Sitting In A Tree-)" and "(Moan)".
  • The Icelandic singer Björk used lines from Cummings's poem "I Will Wade Out" for the lyrics of "Sun in My Mouth" on her 2001 album Vespertine. On her next album, Medúlla (2004), Björk used his poem "It May Not Always Be So" as the lyrics for the song "Sonnets/Unrealities XI".
  • The American composer Eric Whitacre wrote a cycle of works for choir titled The City and the Sea, which consists of five poems by Cummings set to music. He also wrote music for “little tree” and “i carry your heart,” among others.
  • Others who have composed settings for his poems include Dominic Argento, William Bergsma, Leonard Bernstein, Marc Blitzstein, John Cage, Romeo Cascarino, Aaron Copland, Serge de Gastyne, David Diamond, John Duke, Margaret Garwood, Daron Hagen, Michael Hedges, Timothy Hoekman, Richard Hundley, Barbara Kolb, Leonard Lehrman, Robert Manno, Salvatore Martirano, William Mayer, John Musto, Paul Nordoff, Tobias Picker, Vincent Persichetti, Ned Rorem, Peter Schickele, Elie Siegmeister, Ann Loomis Silsbee, Aki Takase, Hugo Weisgall, Dan Welcher, and James Yannatos, among many others.[47]

Awards

During his lifetime, Cummings received numerous awards in recognition of his work, including:

  • Dial Award (1925)[48]
  • Guggenheim Fellowship (1933)[49]
  • Shelley Memorial Award for Poetry (1945)[50]
  • Harriet Monroe Prize from Poetry magazine (1950)[51]
  • Fellowship of American Academy of Poets (1950)[52]
  • Guggenheim Fellowship (1951)[49]
  • Charles Eliot Norton Professorship at Harvard (1952–1953)[52]
  • Special citation from the National Book Award Committee for his Poems, 1923–1954 (1957)
  • Bollingen Prize in Poetry (1958)[52]
  • Boston Arts Festival Award (1957)
  • Two-year Ford Foundation grant of $15,000 (1959)[52]

Books

"the hours rise up" on a wall in Leiden
  • CIOPW (1931), art works
  • i—six nonlectures (1953), Harvard University Press

Prose books

  • The Enormous Room (1922)
  • EIMI (1933), Soviet travelogue
  • Fairy Tales (1965), collection of short stories

Poetry

  • Tulips and Chimneys (1923)
  • & (1925), self-published
  • XLI Poems (1925)
  • is 5 (1926)
  • ViVa (1931)
  • No Thanks (1935)
  • Collected Poems (1938)
  • 50 Poems (1940)
  • 1 × 1 (1944)
  • XAIPE: Seventy-One Poems (1950)
  • Poems, 1923–1954 (1954)
  • 95 Poems (1958)
  • 73 Poems (1963, posthumous)
  • Etcetera: The Unpublished Poems (1983)
  • Complete Poems, 1904–1962, edited by George James Firmage (2008), Liveright
  • Erotic Poems, edited by George James Firmage (2010), Norton

Plays

  • HIM (1927)
  • Santa Claus: A Morality (1946)

References

Citations

  1. Collins, Leo W. This is Our Church. Boston, Massachusetts: Society of the First Church in Boston, 2005: 104.
  2. "E. E. Cummings' Life". english.illinois.edu. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  3. Sawyer-Lauçanno 2004, p. .
  4. "E. E. Cummings: Poet And Painter". Archived from the original on September 2, 2006.
  5. "E. E. Cummings Biography – life, family, children, story, death, wife, mother, book, old, information, born". Notablebiographies.com. September 3, 1962. Retrieved December 24, 2015.
  6. "E. E. Cummings". November 21, 2016.
  7. "E. E. Cummings: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center". Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. Retrieved May 9, 2010.
  8. Friedman, Norman "Cummings, E[dward] E[stlin]", in Steven Serafin, The Continuum Encyclopedia of American Literature, 2003, Continuum, p. 244.
  9. Bloom 1985, p. 1814.
  10. "ee Cummings Foundation". Archived from the original on October 1, 2017.
  11. Kennedy 1994, p. 186.
  12. "Data on U.S. Army Divisions during World War I, WWI, The Great War".
  13. "My father moved through dooms of love". Archived from the original on March 15, 2005.
  14. Lane, Gary (1976). I Am: A Study of E. E. Cummings' Poems. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. pp. 41–43. ISBN 0-7006-0144-9.
  15. "E. E. Cummings Dies of Stroke. Poet Stood for Stylistic Liberty". The New York Times. September 4, 1962.
  16. Cummings, E. E. (February 4, 2014). "E. E. Cummings". Retrieved May 25, 2018.
  17. "Revealed: How a Parisian sex worker stole the heart of poet EE Cummings". TheGuardian.com. July 19, 2020.
  18. Selected Poems, Ed. Richard S. Kennedy, Liveright, 1994.
  19. Marion Morehouse Cummings, Poet's Widow, Top Model, Dies, The New York Times, May 19, 1969.
  20. Sawyer-Lauçanno 2004, p. 255.
  21. Carla Blumenkranz, "The Enormous Poem: When E.E. Cummings Repunctuated Stalinism". Poetry Foundation.
  22. "Heath Anthology of American Literature E.E. cummings – Author Page".
  23. Wetzsteon, Ross. 'Republic of Dreams: Greenwich Village: The American Bohemia, 1910–1960', pp. 449 Google Books
  24. Taupin, Rene, The Influence of French Symbolism on Modern American Poetry 1927 (Trans. William Pratt), AMS Inc, New York 1985 ISBN 0404615791
  25. "i carry your heart with me(i carry it in" at the Poetry Foundation.
  26. Friedman, Norman. E. E. Cummings the Art of His Poetry. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1967. p. 89.
  27. Landles, Iain (2001). "An Analysis of Two Poems by E. E. Cummings". Spring, the Journal of the e. E. Cummings Society. 10: 31–43.
  28. Selected letters of E. E. Cummings, (1972) Edward Estlin Cummings, Frederick Wilcox Dupee, George Stade. University of Michigan p. 3 ISBN 978-0-233-95637-4
  29. ""anyone lived in a pretty how town"". Poetry Foundation. June 2, 2022.
  30. "Chansons Innocentes". Archived from the original on December 27, 2005. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
  31. Friedman, Norman. E. E. Cummings the Art of His Poetry. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1967. pp. 61–62.
  32. Millay to Mr. Moe of the Guggenheim Foundation, March 1934. Quoted in Milford, Nancy (2001) Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay, Doubleday: New York, NY. p370.
  33. "why must itself up every of a park". Archived from the original on August 13, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
  34. "anyone lived in a pretty how town". Archived from the original on July 26, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
  35. Olsen, Taimi (October 2005). "Krazies...of indescribable beauty: George Herriman's Krazy Kat and E. E. Cummings". Spring. E. E. Cummings Society (14/15): 220–221. JSTOR 43915279.
  36. Friedman, Norman, and Harry Thornton Moore. E. E. Cummings the Growth of a Writer. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1964. pp. 153–154.
  37. Cummings, Xaipe, Seventy-one Poems. New York: Oxford UP, 1950.
  38. E. E. Cummings (2006) by Catherine Reef, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, p. 115 ISBN 978-0-618-56849-9
  39. Kennedy 1994, p. 295.
  40. GVSU.edu The E. E. Cummings Society Archived April 23, 2005, at the Wayback Machine.
  41. Friedman, Norman (1992). "Not "e. e. cummings"". Spring. 1: 114–121. Retrieved December 13, 2005.
  42. Friedman, Norman (1964). E. E. Cummings: The Growth of a Writer. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-0978-5.
  43. Friedman, Norman (1995). "Not "e. e. cummings" Revisited". Spring. 5: 41–43. Retrieved May 12, 2007.
  44. "Capitalization of Personal Names". Chicago Manual of Style (16 ed.). Chicago University Press. 2010. p. 388.
  45. "Pierre Boulez: cummings ist der dichter" (work details) (in French and English). IRCAM.
  46. Reimann, Aribert; Cummings, E. E. (Edward Estlin). "Impression IV : nach einem Gedicht von E.E. Cummings : four Singstimme und Klavier (1961) / Aribert Reimann. music" via National Library of Australia.
  47. "Author: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings (1894–1962)", The LiederNet Archive, April 25, 2019, retrieved June 10, 2019
  48. "E. E. Cummings". Poetry Foundation. April 19, 2018. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  49. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | E. E. Cummings".
  50. "Shelley Winners – Poetry Society of America". poetrysociety.org. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  51. "Poetry Award Is Made; E.E. Cummings Wins the 1950 Harriet Monroe Prize". The New York Times. June 11, 1950. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  52. Cummings, E. E. (February 4, 2014). "E. E. Cummings". Retrieved April 20, 2018.

General and cited references

  • Bloom, Harold (1985). Twentieth-century American Literature. Vol. 3. New York: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-0-87754-802-7.
  • Friedman, Norman (editor), E. E. Cummings: A Collection of Critical Essays. ISBN 978-0-9829733-0-1
  • Friedman, Norman, E. E. Cummings: The Art of His Poetry.
  • Kennedy, Richard S. (October 17, 1994) [1980]. Dreams in the Mirror (2nd ed.). New York: Liveright. ISBN 0-87140-155-X.
  • Sawyer-Lauçanno, Christopher (2004). E. E. Cummings: A Biography. Sourcebooks. ISBN 978-1-57071-775-8.

Further reading

  • Cohen, Milton A. (1987). Poet and Painter: The Aesthetics of E. E. Cummings' Early Work. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-1845-4.
  • Galgano, Andrea, La furiosa ricerca di Edward E. Cummings, in Mosaico, Roma, Aracne, 2013, pp. 441–444 ISBN 978-88-548-6705-5
  • Heusser, Martin. I Am My Writing: The Poetry of E.E. Cummings. Tübingen: Stauffenburg, 1997.
  • Hutchinson, Hazel. The War That Used Up Words: American Writers and the First World War. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2015.
  • James, George, E. E. Cummings: A Bibliography.
  • McBride, Katharine, A Concordance to the Complete Poems of E.E.Cummings.
  • Mott, Christopher. "The Cummings Line on Race", Spring: The Journal of the E. E. Cummings Society, vol. 4, pp. 71–75, Fall 1995.
  • Norman, Charles, E. E. Cummings: The Magic-Maker, Boston, Little Brown, 1972.
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