- Published
-
[New York] :
The Library of America
[2003]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Other Authors
- Physical Description
- 231 pages : illustrations
- Bibliography
- Includes index.
- ISBN
- 9781931082358
- Introduction
- I.
- from Renascence and Other Poems (1917)
- Renascence
- Interim
- Afternoon on a Hill
- Witch-Wife
- When the Year Grows Old
- "Time does not bring relief; you all have lied"
- "If I should learn, in some quite casual way"
- Bluebeard
- from A Few Figs from Thistles (1920)
- First Fig
- Second Fig
- Recuerdo
- To the Not Impossible Him
- Grown-up
- Daphne
- Midnight Oil
- The Philosopher
- "I think I should have loved you presently"
- "I shall forget you presently, my dear"
- from Second April (1921)
- Eel-Grass
- Elegy Before Death
- Weeds
- Passer Mortuus Est
- Alms
- Inland
- Ebb
- from Memorial to D. C.
- I.. Epitaph
- IV.. Dirge
- V.. Elegy
- "Only until this cigarette is ended"
- "Once more into my arid days like dew"
- "When I too long have looked upon your face"
- "And you as well must die, beloved dust"
- "As to some lovely temple, tenantless"
- Wild Swans
- from The Harp-Weaver and Other Poems (1923)
- Autumn Chant
- Feast
- The Betrothal
- The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver
- Never May the Fruit Be Plucked
- Hyacinth
- To One Who Might Have Borne a Message
- "Love is not blind. I see with single eye"
- "Pity me not because the light of day"
- "Here is a wound that never will heal, I know"
- "Your face is like a chamber where a king"
- "I, being born a woman and distressed"
- "What lips my lips have kissed, and where, and why"
- "How healthily their feet upon the floor"
- "Euclid alone has looked on Beauty bare"
- Sonnets from an Ungrafted Tree
- from The Buck in the Snow (1928)
- To the Wife of a Sick Friend
- To a Friend Estranged from Me
- The Buck in the Snow
- Evening on Lesbos
- Dirge Without Music
- Lethe
- To Inez Milholland
- To Jesus on His Birthday
- "Not that it matters, not that my heart's cry"
- II.
- Aria da Capo (1921)
- from The King's Henchman (1927)
- AElfrida's Song
- Love Scene
- Translations from Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire (1936)
- The Fang
- Parisian Dream
- Invitation to the Voyage
- The Old Servant
- Late January
- The King of the Rainy Country
- Mists and Rains
- A Memory
- III.
- Fatal Interview (1931)
- IV.
- from Wine from These Grapes (1934)
- Valentine
- In the Grave No Flower
- Childhood Is the Kingdom Where Nobody Dies
- The Solid Sprite Who Stands Alone
- Spring in the Garden
- Sonnet ("Time, that renews the tissues of this frame")
- Desolation Dreamed Of
- On the Wide Heath
- Two Sonnets in Memory
- Conscientious Objector
- Epitaph for the Race of Man
- from Conversation at Midnight (1937)
- "Thus are our altars polluted; nor may we flee..."
- "The mind thrust out of doors"
- from Huntsman, What Quarry? (1939)
- The Snow Storm
- Not So Far as the Forest
- "Fontaine, Je Ne Boirai Pas De Ton Eau!"
- The True Encounter
- Czecho-Slovakia
- Underground System
- Two Voices
- This Dusky Faith
- To a Young Poet
- To Elinor Wylie
- "Now that the west is washed of clouds and clear"
- "I too beneath your moon, almighty Sex"
- "Thou famished grave, I will not fill thee yet"
- "Not only love plus awful grief"
- from Make Bright the Arrows (1940)
- "Make bright the arrows"
- An Eclipse of the Sun Is Predicted
- "Gentlemen Cry, Peace!"
- "I must not die of pity; I must live"
- from The Murder of Lidice (1942)
- "They marched them out to the public square"
- from Mine the Harvest (1954)
- Small Hands, Relinquish All
- Ragged Island
- "To whom the house of Montagu"
- "The courage that my mother had"
- Armenonville
- Dream of Saba
- For Warmth Alone, for Shelter Only
- "Black hair you'd say she had, or rather"
- Steepletop
- "Look how the bittersweet with lazy muscle moves aside"
- "Those hours when happy hours were my estate"
- "Not to me, less lavish--though my dreams have been splendid"
- "Tranquility at length, when autumn comes"
- Sonnet in Dialectic
- "It is the fashion now to wave aside"
- "Admetus, from my marrow's core I do"
- "I will put Chaos into fourteen lines"
- "And must I then, indeed, Pain, live with you"
- "Felicity of Grief!--even Death being kind"
- "If I die solvent--die, that is to say"
- Biographical Note
- Note on the Texts
- Notes
- Index of Titles and First Lines
Review by Library Journal Review