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E. E. Cummings

Edward Estlin Cummings, who was mainly known as e e cummings and also E. E. Cummings, (October 14, 1894 – September 3, 1962), was an American poet, painter, essayist, author, and playwright. He was an ambulance driver during World War I and was in an internment camp, which provided the basis for his novel The Enormous Room (1922). The following year he published his first collection of poetry, Tulips and Chimneys, which showed his early experiments with grammar and typography. He wrote four plays; HIM (1927) and Santa Claus: A Morality (1946) were most successful. He wrote EIMI (1933), a travelogue of the Soviet Union, and delivered the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures in poetry, published as i—six nonlectures (1953). Fairy Tales (1965), a collection of short stories, was published posthumously.

E. E. Cummings
Cummings in 1953
BornEdward Estlin Cummings
(1894-10-14)October 14, 1894
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedSeptember 3, 1962(1962-09-03) (aged 67)
Madison, New Hampshire, U.S.
OccupationAuthor
Alma materHarvard University
Signature

Cummings wrote approximately 2,900 poems. He is often regarded as one of the most important American poets of the 20th century. He is associated with modernist free-form poetry, and much of his work uses idiosyncratic syntax and lower-case spellings for poetic expression. M. L. Rosenthal wrote that:[1]

The chief effect of Cummings' jugglery with syntax, grammar, and diction was to blow open otherwise trite and bathetic motifs through a dynamic rediscovery of the energies sealed up in conventional usage ... He succeeded masterfully in splitting the atom of the cute commonplace.

For Norman Friedman, Cummings's inventions "are best understood as various ways of stripping the film of familiarity from language to strip the film of familiarity from the world. Transform the word, he seems to have felt, and you are on the way to transforming the world."[2]

The poet Randall Jarrell said of Cummings, "No one else has ever made avant-garde, experimental poems so attractive to the general and the special reader." James Dickey wrote, "I think that Cummings is a daringly original poet, with more vitality and more sheer, uncompromising talent than any other living American writer." Dickey described himself as "ashamed and even a little guilty in picking out flaws" in Cummings’s poetry, which he compared to noting "the aesthetic defects in a rose. It is better to say what must finally be said about Cummings: that he has helped to give life to the language."[3]

Life edit

Early years edit

Edward Estlin Cummings was born on October 14, 1894, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Edward Cummings and Rebecca Haswell (née 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.[4] His mother, who loved to spend time with her children, played games with Edward and his sister, Elizabeth. From an early age, Cummings' parents supported his creative gifts.[5] 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' 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.[6][7]

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')".[8]

Cummings wanted to be a poet from childhood and wrote poetry daily from age 8 to 22, exploring assorted forms. He studied Latin and Greek at Cambridge Latin High School. He attended Harvard University, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa society in 1915. The following year, he received a Master of Arts degree from the university. During his studies at Harvard, he developed an interest in modern poetry, which ignored conventional grammar and syntax and aimed for a dynamic use of language. His first published poems appeared in Eight Harvard Poets (1917). Upon graduating, he worked for a book dealer.[9]

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

War years edit

In 1917, with the First World War going on in Europe, Cummings enlisted in the Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps. On the boat to France, he met William Slater Brown and they quickly became friends.[9] 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.[10]

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.[11] 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.[10]

They were imprisoned with other detainees in a large room. Cummings' father made strenuous efforts to obtain his son's release through diplomatic channels; although advised his son's release was approved, there were lengthy delays, with little explanation. In frustration, Cummings' father wrote a letter to President Woodrow Wilson in December 1917. Cummings was released on December 19, 1917, returning to his family in the U.S. by New Year's Day, 1918. Cummings, his father, and Brown's family continued to agitate for Brown's release. By mid-February, he, too, was America-bound. 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."[12][13][14] Later in 1918 he was drafted into the army. He served a training deployment[9] in the 12th Division at Camp Devens, Massachusetts, until November 1918.[15][16]

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)[a]

Post-war years edit

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.[9]

During the rest of the 1920s and 1930s, Cummings returned to Paris a number of times, and traveled throughout Europe. 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, and he worked as an essayist and portrait artist for Vanity Fair magazine (1924–1927).[17][18][19]

In 1926, Cummings' 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:[20][21]

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.

— E. E. Cummings (1952). "i & my parents: Nonlecture one", p. 12

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".[b][23]

In the 1930s, Samuel Aiwaz Jacobs was Cummings' publisher; he had started the Golden Eagle Press after working as a typographer and publisher.[24]

Final years edit

 
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.[25]

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)[c]

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.[27] 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".[28]

Cummings' papers are held at the Houghton Library at Harvard University and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.[10]

Personal life edit

Marriages edit

 
Sketched self-portrait circa 1920

Cummings was married briefly twice, first to Elaine Orr Thayer, then to Anne Minnerly Barton. His longest relationship lasted more than three decades with Marion Morehouse.[29]

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.[30] Despite Cummings' efforts, he was unable to find Lallemand upon his return to Paris after the front.[30]

Cummings' first marriage, to Elaine Orr, began as a love affair in 1918 while she was still married to Scofield Thayer, one of Cummings' friends from Harvard. During this time, he wrote a good deal of his erotic poetry.[26][31] The couple had a daughter while Orr was still married to Thayer; after Orr divorced Thayer, Cummings and Orr married on March 19, 1924. Thayer had been registered on the child's birth certificate as the father, but Cummings legally adopted her after his marriage to Orr. Although his relationship with Orr stretched back several years, the marriage was brief: the couple separated after two months of marriage and divorced less than nine months later.[9][29][32] She had while on a trip to Paris met and fallen in love with the Irish nobleman, future politician, author, journalist, and former banker Frank MacDermot.

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.[29]

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,[33] while living at 4 Patchin Place, Greenwich Village, New York City, where Cummings had resided since September 1924.[34]

Political views edit

According to his testimony in EIMI, Cummings had little interest in politics until his trip to the Soviet Union in 1931.[35] He subsequently shifted rightward on many political and social issues.[36] Despite his radical and bohemian public image, he was a Republican and later an ardent supporter of Joseph McCarthy.[37]

Works and style edit

Poetry edit

As well as being influenced by notable modernists, including Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound, Cummings was particularly drawn to early imagist experiments; later, his visits to Paris exposed him to Dada and Surrealism, which was reflected in his writing style.[38] Cummings critic and biographer Norman Friedman remarks that in Cummings' later work the "shift from simile to symbol" created poetry that is "frequently more lucid, more moving, and more profound than his earlier".[39]

Despite Cummings' familiarity with avant-garde styles (likely affected by the calligrammes of French poet Apollinaire, according to a contemporary observation[40]), much of his work is quite traditional. For example, many of his poems are sonnets, albeit described by Richard D. Cureton as "revisionary ... with scrambled rhymes and rearranged, disproportioned structures; awkwardly unpredictable metrical variation; clashing, mawkish diction; complex, wandering syntax; etc."[41] He occasionally drew from the blues form and used acrostics. Many of Cummings' poems are satirical and address social issues[d] but have an equal or even stronger bias toward Romanticism: time and again his poems celebrate love, sex, and the season of rebirth.[42][e]

While his poetic forms and themes share an affinity with the Romantic tradition, critic Emily Essert asserts that Cummings' work is particularly modernist and frequently employs what linguist Irene Fairley calls "syntatic deviance".[43][44] Some 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)[f]

While some of his poetry is free verse (and not beheld to rhyme or meter), Cureton has remarked that many of his sonnets follow an intricate rhyme scheme, and often employ pararhyme.[41] A number of Cummings' poems feature his typographically exuberant style, with words, parts of words, or punctuation symbols scattered across the page, wherein Essert asserts "feeling is first" and the work begs to "be re-read in order to be understood";[43] Cummings, also a painter, created his texts not just as literature, but as "visual objects" on the page, and used typography to "paint a picture".[9][45]

The seeds of Cummings' unconventional style appear well established even in his earliest work. At age six, he wrote to his father:[46]

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' first published work was a collection of poems titled Tulips and Chimneys (1923). This early work already displayed Cummings' characteristically eccentric use of grammar and punctuation, although a fair amount of the poems are written in conventional language.[9]

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)[g]

Cummings' works often do not follow the conventional rules that generate typical English sentences, or what Fairley identifies as "ungrammar".[44] In addition, a number of Cummings' poems feature, in part or in whole, intentional misspellings, and several incorporate phonetic spellings intended to represent particular dialects.[48] Cummings also employs what Fairley describes as "morphological innovation", wherein he frequently creates what critic Ian Landles calls: "unusual compounds suggestive of 'a child's language'" like "'mud-luscious' and 'puddle-wonderful'".[44][49] 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 favor of merely private and personal associations".[50]

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."[51]

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.[52]

Cummings included ethnic slurs in his writing, which proved controversial. In his 1950 collection Xaipe: Seventy-One Poems, Cummings published two poems containing words that caused outrage in some quarters. Friedman considered these two poems to be "condensed" and "cryptic" parables, "sparsely told", in which setting the use of such "inflammatory material" was likely to meet with reader misapprehension. Poet William Carlos Williams spoke out in his defense.[53][54][55]

Cummings biographer Catherine Reef notes of the controversy:[53]

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.

Plays edit

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:[56]

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 remained unperformed until 2015.[57]


Santa Claus: A Morality was probably Cummings' 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.

Art edit

Cummings was an avid painter, referring to writing and painting as his twin obsessions[58] and to himself as a poetandpainter.[59] He painted continuously, relentlessly, from childhood until his death, and left in his estate more than 1600 oils and watercolors (a figure that does not include the works he sold during his career) and over 9,000 drawings.[59] In a self-interview from Foreword to an Exhibit: II (1945), the artist asked himself, Tell me, doesn’t your painting interfere with your writing? and answered, Quite the contrary: they love each other dearly.[60]

Cummings had more than 30 exhibits of his paintings in his lifetime.[59] He received substantial acclaim as an American cubist and an abstract, avant garde painter between the World Wars, but with the publication of his books The Enormous Room and Tulips and Chimneys in the 1920s, his reputation as a poet eclipsed his success as a visual artist.[59] In 1931, he published a limited edition volume of his artwork entitled CIOPW, named for his media of charcoal, ink, oil, pencil, and watercolor. About this same time, he began to break from Modernist aesthetics and employ a more subjective and spontaneous style;[59] his work became more representational: landscapes, nudes, still lifes, and portraits.[61]

Name and capitalization edit

Cummings' publishers and others have often echoed the unconventional orthography in his poetry by writing his name in lower case.[62] Cummings himself used both the lowercase and capitalized versions, though he most often signed his name with capitals.[62]

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".[25] According to Cummings' widow, however, this is incorrect.[62] 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.[63] 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.[62] 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."[64]

Adaptations edit

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' 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' poems to music:

  • In 1970, Pierre Boulez composed Cummings ist der Dichter ('cummings is the Poet') from poems by E. E. Cummings.[65]
  • Aribert Reimann set Cummings to music in "Impression IV" (1961) for soprano and piano.[66]
  • Morton Feldman (1926–1987) in 1951 composed "4 Songs to e.e. cummings" for soprano, piano and cello, using material from Cummings' 50 Poems of 1940: "!Blac", "Air", "(Sitting In A Tree-)" and "(Moan)".
  • The Icelandic singer Björk used lines from Cummings' 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, among many others:[67]

Awards edit

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

Books edit

 
"the hours rise up" on a wall in Leiden

Prose books edit

Poetry edit

  • 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)
  • Selected Poems 1923-1958 (1960)
  • 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 edit

Collections edit

References edit

Poems cited edit

Full text of poetry available at:

  1. ^ "Buffalo Bill's" available at the Poetry Foundation
  2. ^ "my father moved through dooms of love", [22]
  3. ^ See: Selected works (1994)[26]: 167 
  4. ^ For example, "why must itself up every of a park"
  5. ^ For example, "[anyone lived in a pretty how town]"
  6. ^ "i carry your heart with me(i carry it in" at the Poetry Foundation.
  7. ^ Text from the Poetry Foundation: [anyone lived in a pretty how town][47]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Rosenthal, M. L. The Modern Poets: A Critical Introduction.
  2. ^ Friedman, Norman. E. E. Cummings: The Growth of a Writer.
  3. ^ Dickey, James. Babel to Byzantium.
  4. ^ Collins, Leo W. This is Our Church. Boston, Massachusetts: Society of the First Church in Boston, 2005: 104.
  5. ^ . english.illinois.edu. Archived from the original on March 25, 2019. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  6. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), p. 10.
  7. ^ , The Center for the Book at New Hampshire State Library, Spotlight on New Hampshire Authors, n.d., archived from the original on June 16, 2023, retrieved August 10, 2023
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on September 2, 2006.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h . Poetry Foundation. Archived from the original on October 1, 2017. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  10. ^ a b c "E. E. Cummings: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center", Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, retrieved May 9, 2010
  11. ^ Friedman, Norman "Cummings, E[dward] E[stlin]". In Steven Serafin, The Continuum Encyclopedia of American Literature, 2003, Continuum, p. 244.
  12. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), pp. 120, 127, 133–134.
  13. ^ Bloom (1985), p. 1814.
  14. ^ Fitzgerald, F. Scott (1958) [Essay first published 1926]. "How to Waste Material: A Note on My Generation". Afternoon of an Author. London: The Bodley Head. pp. 150–155.
  15. ^ Kennedy (1994), p. 186.
  16. ^ "Data on U.S. Army Divisions during World War I, WWI, The Great War".
  17. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), pp. 256–275.
  18. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), Chapters 11 and 12: "Abroad"; "An American In Paris".
  19. ^ Friedman (1964), Chapter 7: "Eimi (1933)". pp. 109–124.
  20. ^ Friedman (1964), pp. 153–154, 305.
  21. ^ Cummings, E. E. (1954). "i & my parents: Nonlecture one". i: Six Nonlectures. [The Charles Elliot Norton Lectures 1952–1953]. Cambridge, MA, U. S.: Harvard University Press. pp. 2–20.
  22. ^ . Poetry: Berkeley. Archived from the original on March 15, 2005.
  23. ^ 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.
  24. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), pp. 241, 366.
  25. ^ a b In Friedman, Norman (volume author) Moore, Harry T. (1964a). "Preface". E. E. Cummings: The growth of a writer. Southern Illinois University Press: Carbondale. pp. v–viii.
  26. ^ a b Cummings, E. E. (1994). Richard S. Kennedy (ed.). Selected poems. With introduction and commentary by Richard S. Kennedy. New York: Liveright. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-87140-153-3.
  27. ^ "E. E. Cummings Dies of Stroke. Poet Stood for Stylistic Liberty". The New York Times. September 4, 1962.
  28. ^ a b c d e "E. E. Cummings". Poets.org. Academy of American Poets.
  29. ^ a b c Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), Chapter 14: "Marriage and UnMarriage". pp. 237–254.
  30. ^ a b Alberge, Dalya (July 19, 2020). "Revealed: How a Parisian sex worker stole the heart of poet EE Cummings". The Guardian.
  31. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), pp. 145–146.
  32. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), p. 161.
  33. ^ "Marion Morehouse Cummings, Poet's Widow, Top Model, Dies". The New York Times. May 19, 1969. p. 47 – via NYT Archives.
  34. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno (2004), pp. 255, 363, 378–380.
  35. ^ Carla Blumenkranz, "The Enormous Poem: When E.E. Cummings Repunctuated Stalinism". Poetry Foundation.
  36. ^ "E. E. Cummings – Author Page". Heath Anthology of American Literature.
  37. ^ Wetzsteon, Ross (2002). Republic of Dreams: Greenwich Village: The American Bohemia, 1910–1960. Simon & Schuster. p. 449. ISBN 9780684869964 – via Google Books.
  38. ^ Norman, Charles (1967). E. E. Cummings, a biography. U.S.A.: E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc. p. 38.
  39. ^ Friedman, Norman Friedman (2019). E. E. Cummings: The Art of His Poetry. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801802072.
  40. ^ Taupin, Rene (1985). The Influence of French Symbolism on Modern American Poetry 1927. (Translated by William Pratt). AMS Inc: New York ISBN 0404615791
  41. ^ a b Cureton, Richard D. (2020). "Pararhyme in E. E. Cummings' "Sonnets— Realities"". University of Michigan.
  42. ^ Friedman (1964), pp. 3–22, 47.
  43. ^ a b Essert, Emily (Fall 2006). ""Since Feeling Is First": E. E. Cummings and Modernist Poetic Difficulty". Spring (14–15): 199. JSTOR 43915269 – via JSTOR.
  44. ^ a b c Fairley, Irene (1975). E. E. Cummings and ungrammar : a study of syntactic deviance in his poems. Searington, N.Y.: Watermill Publisher.
  45. ^ Landles, Iain (2001). "An Analysis of Two Poems by E. E. Cummings". Spring: Journal of the E. E. Cummings Society (10): 31–43. ISSN 0735-6889. JSTOR 43898141.
  46. ^ 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
  47. ^ Cummings, E. E. (1991) [Poem first published 1940, Poetry Foundation Magazine, LVI (V)]. "[anyone lived in a pretty how town]". In George J. Firmage (ed.). Complete Poems 1904-1962. Trustees for the E. E. Cummings Trust. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via Poetry Foundation.
  48. ^ Friedman, Norman (December 1957). "Diction, Voice, and Tone: The Poetic Language of E. E. Cummings". PMLA. 72 (5): 1036–1039. doi:10.2307/460378. JSTOR 460378. S2CID 163935794 – via JSTOR.
  49. ^ Landles, Ian (October 2001). "An Analysis of Two Poems by E.E. Cummings". Spring (10): 31–43. JSTOR 43898141 – via JSTOR.
  50. ^ Friedman (1967), pp. 61–62.
  51. ^ 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.
  52. ^ Olsen, Taimi (October 2005). "Krazies...of indescribable beauty: George Herriman's Krazy Kat and E. E. Cummings". Spring (14/15). E. E. Cummings Society: 220–221. JSTOR 43915279.
  53. ^ a b E. E. Cummings (2006) by Catherine Reef, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, p. 115 ISBN 978-0-618-56849-9
  54. ^ Friedman (1964), pp. 153–154: "This is a condensed and cryptic tale, and it is likely that Cummings counted too heavily on the reader's ability (1) to think clearly about racial issues and their accompanying languages, and (2) to make inferences about what the poem says on the basis of a sparsely told parable ... I think the trouble is the same here, that the poem uses inflammatory material in too condensed and cryptic a fashion.".
  55. ^ Cummings (1950). Xaipe: Seventy-one Poems. New York: Oxford University Press.
  56. ^ Kennedy (1994), p. 295.
  57. ^ Webster, Michael. "Tom: A Ballet (1935)". Spring: The Journal of the E. E. Cummings Society. Retrieved December 14, 2023.
  58. ^ Cohen, Milton (1987). Poetandpainter: The aesthetics of E. E. Cummings's early works. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-1845-2. OCLC 59693901.
  59. ^ a b c d e Cohen, Milton (1982). E. E. Cumming's paintings: The hidden career. University of Texas at Dallas. OCLC 9353165.
  60. ^ Cummings, E. E. (1966). E. E. Cummings: A Miscellany (First British Commonwealth ed.). London: Peter Owen Limited. p. 316.
  61. ^ Hobbs, Patricia (October 18, 2018). "Recent Gift Illustrates Poet's 'Twin Obsessions'". The Columns. Retrieved February 21, 2023.
  62. ^ a b c d Friedman, Norman (1992). "Not "e. e. cummings"". Spring. 1: 114–121. Retrieved December 13, 2005.
  63. ^ Friedman, Norman (1995). "Not "e. e. cummings" Revisited". Spring. 5: 41–43. Retrieved May 12, 2007.
  64. ^ "Capitalization of Personal Names". Chicago Manual of Style (16 ed.). Chicago University Press. 2010. p. 388.
  65. ^ "Pierre Boulez: cummings ist der dichter" (work details) (in French and English). IRCAM.
  66. ^ Reimann, Aribert; Cummings, E. E. (1990). Impression IV : nach einem Gedicht von E.E. Cummings : four Singstimme und Klavier (1961) / Aribert Reimann. music. Schott – via National Library of Australia.
  67. ^ "Author: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings (1894–1962)", The LiederNet Archive, April 25, 2019, retrieved June 10, 2019
  68. ^ a b "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | E. E. Cummings".
  69. ^ "Shelley Winners – Poetry Society of America". poetrysociety.org. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  70. ^ "Poetry Award Is Made; E. E. Cummings Wins the 1950 Harriet Monroe Prize". The New York Times. June 11, 1950. Retrieved April 20, 2018.

General and cited references edit

  • Bloom, Harold (1985). Twentieth-century American Literature. Vol. 3. New York: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-0-87754-802-7.
  • Friedman, Norman, ed. (1972). E. E. Cummings: A collection of critical essays. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., U.S.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-195552-3. ISBN 978-0-9829733-0-1
  • Friedman, Norman (1967). E. E. Cummings the Art of His Poetry. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Friedman, Norman (1964). E. E. Cummings: The growth of a writer. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-0978-5. With a preface by Harry Thornton Moore:
    • Chapter 10. "Xaipe (1950), 95 Poems (1958)". E. E. Cummings: The growth of a writer. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 152–173.
    • Chapter 11. "i: six nonlectures (1953)". E. E. Cummings: The growth of a writer. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 174–186.
  • 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 edit

  • 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. ", 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.
  • Ordeman, John T.; Firmage, George J. (October 2000). "Cummings' Titles". Spring. New Series (9). E. E. Cummings Society: 160–170. JSTOR 43915118.

External links edit

  • Works by E. E. Cummings in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by E. E. Cummings at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about E. E. Cummings at Internet Archive
  • Works by E. E. Cummings at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • E. E. Cummings, Lifelong Unitarian Biography of Cummings and his relationship with Unitarianism
  • E. E. Cummings Personal Library at LibraryThing
  • Papers of E. E. Cummings at the Houghton Library at Harvard University
  • E. E. Cummings Collection May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Jonathan Yardley, E. E. Cummings: A Biography, Sunday, October 17, 2004, Page BW02, The Washington Post Book Review
  • SPRING:The Journal of the E. E. Cummings Society
  • Modern American Poetry October 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • E. E. Cummings at Library of Congress Authorities – with 202 catalog records
  • Biography and poems of E. E. Cummings at Poets.org
  • Finding aid to Edward Estlin Cummings correspondence at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

cummings, politician, civil, rights, advocate, elijah, cummings, edward, estlin, cummings, mainly, known, cummings, also, october, 1894, september, 1962, american, poet, painter, essayist, author, playwright, ambulance, driver, during, world, internment, camp,. For the politician and civil rights advocate see Elijah E Cummings Edward Estlin Cummings who was mainly known as e e cummings and also E E Cummings October 14 1894 September 3 1962 was an American poet painter essayist author and playwright He was an ambulance driver during World War I and was in an internment camp which provided the basis for his novel The Enormous Room 1922 The following year he published his first collection of poetry Tulips and Chimneys which showed his early experiments with grammar and typography He wrote four plays HIM 1927 and Santa Claus A Morality 1946 were most successful He wrote EIMI 1933 a travelogue of the Soviet Union and delivered the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures in poetry published as i six nonlectures 1953 Fairy Tales 1965 a collection of short stories was published posthumously E E CummingsCummings in 1953BornEdward Estlin Cummings 1894 10 14 October 14 1894Cambridge Massachusetts U S DiedSeptember 3 1962 1962 09 03 aged 67 Madison New Hampshire U S OccupationAuthorAlma materHarvard UniversitySignature Cummings wrote approximately 2 900 poems He is often regarded as one of the most important American poets of the 20th century He is associated with modernist free form poetry and much of his work uses idiosyncratic syntax and lower case spellings for poetic expression M L Rosenthal wrote that 1 The chief effect of Cummings jugglery with syntax grammar and diction was to blow open otherwise trite and bathetic motifs through a dynamic rediscovery of the energies sealed up in conventional usage He succeeded masterfully in splitting the atom of the cute commonplace For Norman Friedman Cummings s inventions are best understood as various ways of stripping the film of familiarity from language to strip the film of familiarity from the world Transform the word he seems to have felt and you are on the way to transforming the world 2 The poet Randall Jarrell said of Cummings No one else has ever made avant garde experimental poems so attractive to the general and the special reader James Dickey wrote I think that Cummings is a daringly original poet with more vitality and more sheer uncompromising talent than any other living American writer Dickey described himself as ashamed and even a little guilty in picking out flaws in Cummings s poetry which he compared to noting the aesthetic defects in a rose It is better to say what must finally be said about Cummings that he has helped to give life to the language 3 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 War years 1 3 Post war years 1 4 Final years 2 Personal life 2 1 Marriages 2 2 Political views 3 Works and style 3 1 Poetry 3 2 Plays 3 3 Art 3 4 Name and capitalization 4 Adaptations 5 Awards 6 Books 6 1 Prose books 6 2 Poetry 6 3 Plays 6 4 Collections 7 References 7 1 Poems cited 7 2 Citations 7 3 General and cited references 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife editEarly years edit Edward Estlin Cummings was born on October 14 1894 in Cambridge Massachusetts to Edward Cummings and Rebecca Haswell nee 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 4 His mother who loved to spend time with her children played games with Edward and his sister Elizabeth From an early age Cummings parents supported his creative gifts 5 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 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 6 7 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 amp may I never die spiritually into a mere mind through disease of loneliness 8 Cummings wanted to be a poet from childhood and wrote poetry daily from age 8 to 22 exploring assorted forms He studied Latin and Greek at Cambridge Latin High School He attended Harvard University graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa society in 1915 The following year he received a Master of Arts degree from the university During his studies at Harvard he developed an interest in modern poetry which ignored conventional grammar and syntax and aimed for a dynamic use of language His first published poems appeared in Eight Harvard Poets 1917 Upon graduating he worked for a book dealer 9 nbsp Masthead from volume 56 of The Harvard Monthly Cummings was an editor and contributor to this literary journal while at Harvard War years edit In 1917 with the First World War going on in Europe Cummings enlisted in the Norton Harjes Ambulance Corps On the boat to France he met William Slater Brown and they quickly became friends 9 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 10 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 11 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 Depot de Triage in La Ferte Mace Orne Normandy 10 They were imprisoned with other detainees in a large room Cummings father made strenuous efforts to obtain his son s release through diplomatic channels although advised his son s release was approved there were lengthy delays with little explanation In frustration Cummings father wrote a letter to President Woodrow Wilson in December 1917 Cummings was released on December 19 1917 returning to his family in the U S by New Year s Day 1918 Cummings his father and Brown s family continued to agitate for Brown s release By mid February he too was America bound 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 12 13 14 Later in 1918 he was drafted into the army He served a training deployment 9 in the 12th Division at Camp Devens Massachusetts until November 1918 15 16 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 a Post war years edit 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 9 During the rest of the 1920s and 1930s Cummings returned to Paris a number of times and traveled throughout Europe 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 and he worked as an essayist and portrait artist for Vanity Fair magazine 1924 1927 17 18 19 In 1926 Cummings 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 20 21 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 E E Cummings 1952 i amp my parents Nonlecture one p 12 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 b 23 In the 1930s Samuel Aiwaz Jacobs was Cummings publisher he had started the Golden Eagle Press after working as a typographer and publisher 24 Final years edit nbsp 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 25 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 c 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 27 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 28 Cummings papers are held at the Houghton Library at Harvard University and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin 10 Personal life editMarriages edit nbsp Sketched self portrait circa 1920 Cummings was married briefly twice first to Elaine Orr Thayer then to Anne Minnerly Barton His longest relationship lasted more than three decades with Marion Morehouse 29 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 30 Despite Cummings efforts he was unable to find Lallemand upon his return to Paris after the front 30 Cummings first marriage to Elaine Orr began as a love affair in 1918 while she was still married to Scofield Thayer one of Cummings friends from Harvard During this time he wrote a good deal of his erotic poetry 26 31 The couple had a daughter while Orr was still married to Thayer after Orr divorced Thayer Cummings and Orr married on March 19 1924 Thayer had been registered on the child s birth certificate as the father but Cummings legally adopted her after his marriage to Orr Although his relationship with Orr stretched back several years the marriage was brief the couple separated after two months of marriage and divorced less than nine months later 9 29 32 She had while on a trip to Paris met and fallen in love with the Irish nobleman future politician author journalist and former banker Frank MacDermot 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 29 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 33 while living at 4 Patchin Place Greenwich Village New York City where Cummings had resided since September 1924 34 Political views edit According to his testimony in EIMI Cummings had little interest in politics until his trip to the Soviet Union in 1931 35 He subsequently shifted rightward on many political and social issues 36 Despite his radical and bohemian public image he was a Republican and later an ardent supporter of Joseph McCarthy 37 Works and style editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia The reason given is The literary review style analysis would be better attributed in text as it stands it appears most are in Wikipedia s voice See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Poetry edit As well as being influenced by notable modernists including Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound Cummings was particularly drawn to early imagist experiments later his visits to Paris exposed him to Dada and Surrealism which was reflected in his writing style 38 Cummings critic and biographer Norman Friedman remarks that in Cummings later work the shift from simile to symbol created poetry that is frequently more lucid more moving and more profound than his earlier 39 Despite Cummings familiarity with avant garde styles likely affected by the calligrammes of French poet Apollinaire according to a contemporary observation 40 much of his work is quite traditional For example many of his poems are sonnets albeit described by Richard D Cureton as revisionary with scrambled rhymes and rearranged disproportioned structures awkwardly unpredictable metrical variation clashing mawkish diction complex wandering syntax etc 41 He occasionally drew from the blues form and used acrostics Many of Cummings poems are satirical and address social issues d but have an equal or even stronger bias toward Romanticism time and again his poems celebrate love sex and the season of rebirth 42 e While his poetic forms and themes share an affinity with the Romantic tradition critic Emily Essert asserts that Cummings work is particularly modernist and frequently employs what linguist Irene Fairley calls syntatic deviance 43 44 Some 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 f While some of his poetry is free verse and not beheld to rhyme or meter Cureton has remarked that many of his sonnets follow an intricate rhyme scheme and often employ pararhyme 41 A number of Cummings poems feature his typographically exuberant style with words parts of words or punctuation symbols scattered across the page wherein Essert asserts feeling is first and the work begs to be re read in order to be understood 43 Cummings also a painter created his texts not just as literature but as visual objects on the page and used typography to paint a picture 9 45 The seeds of Cummings unconventional style appear well established even in his earliest work At age six he wrote to his father 46 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 first published work was a collection of poems titled Tulips and Chimneys 1923 This early work already displayed Cummings characteristically eccentric use of grammar and punctuation although a fair amount of the poems are written in conventional language 9 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 g Cummings works often do not follow the conventional rules that generate typical English sentences or what Fairley identifies as ungrammar 44 In addition a number of Cummings poems feature in part or in whole intentional misspellings and several incorporate phonetic spellings intended to represent particular dialects 48 Cummings also employs what Fairley describes as morphological innovation wherein he frequently creates what critic Ian Landles calls unusual compounds suggestive of a child s language like mud luscious and puddle wonderful 44 49 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 favor of merely private and personal associations 50 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 51 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 52 Cummings included ethnic slurs in his writing which proved controversial In his 1950 collection Xaipe Seventy One Poems Cummings published two poems containing words that caused outrage in some quarters Friedman considered these two poems to be condensed and cryptic parables sparsely told in which setting the use of such inflammatory material was likely to meet with reader misapprehension Poet William Carlos Williams spoke out in his defense 53 54 55 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 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 no 24 from Xaipe 1950 no 46 from Xaipe 1950 Cummings biographer Catherine Reef notes of the controversy 53 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 amp Irishman into mick and Norwegian into square head is to blame for kike he said Plays edit 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 56 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 remained unperformed until 2015 57 Santa Claus A Morality was probably Cummings 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 Art edit Cummings was an avid painter referring to writing and painting as his twin obsessions 58 and to himself as a poetandpainter 59 He painted continuously relentlessly from childhood until his death and left in his estate more than 1600 oils and watercolors a figure that does not include the works he sold during his career and over 9 000 drawings 59 In a self interview from Foreword to an Exhibit II 1945 the artist asked himself Tell me doesn t your painting interfere with your writing and answered Quite the contrary they love each other dearly 60 Cummings had more than 30 exhibits of his paintings in his lifetime 59 He received substantial acclaim as an American cubist and an abstract avant garde painter between the World Wars but with the publication of his books The Enormous Room and Tulips and Chimneys in the 1920s his reputation as a poet eclipsed his success as a visual artist 59 In 1931 he published a limited edition volume of his artwork entitled CIOPW named for his media of charcoal ink oil pencil and watercolor About this same time he began to break from Modernist aesthetics and employ a more subjective and spontaneous style 59 his work became more representational landscapes nudes still lifes and portraits 61 Name and capitalization edit Cummings publishers and others have often echoed the unconventional orthography in his poetry by writing his name in lower case 62 Cummings himself used both the lowercase and capitalized versions though he most often signed his name with capitals 62 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 25 According to Cummings widow however this is incorrect 62 She wrote to Friedman You should not have allowed H Moore to make such a stupid amp childish statement about Cummings amp 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 63 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 62 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 64 Adaptations editIn 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 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 poems to music In 1970 Pierre Boulez composed Cummings ist der Dichter cummings is the Poet from poems by E E Cummings 65 Aribert Reimann set Cummings to music in Impression IV 1961 for soprano and piano 66 Morton Feldman 1926 1987 in 1951 composed 4 Songs to e e cummings for soprano piano and cello using material from Cummings 50 Poems of 1940 Blac Air Sitting In A Tree and Moan The Icelandic singer Bjork used lines from Cummings poem I Will Wade Out for the lyrics of Sun in My Mouth on her 2001 album Vespertine On her next album Medulla 2004 Bjork 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 among many others 67 Dominic ArgentoWilliam BergsmaLeonard BernsteinMarc BlitzsteinJohn CageRomeo CascarinoAaron CoplandSerge de GastyneDavid DiamondJohn DukeMargaret GarwoodDaron HagenMichael HedgesTimothy HoekmanRichard HundleyBarbara KolbLeonard LehrmanRobert MannoSalvatore MartiranoWilliam MayerJohn MustoPaul NordoffTobias PickerVincent PersichettiNed RoremPeter SchickeleElie SiegmeisterAnn Loomis SilsbeeAki TakaseHugo WeisgallDan WelcherJames YannatosMatthew PetersonAwards editDuring his lifetime Cummings received numerous awards in recognition of his work including Dial Award 1925 9 Guggenheim Fellowship 1933 68 Shelley Memorial Award for Poetry 1945 69 Harriet Monroe Prize from Poetry magazine 1950 70 Fellowship of American Academy of Poets 1950 28 Guggenheim Fellowship 1951 68 Charles Eliot Norton Professorship at Harvard 1952 1953 28 Special citation from the National Book Award Committee for his Poems 1923 1954 1957 Bollingen Prize in Poetry 1958 28 Boston Arts Festival Award 1957 Two year Ford Foundation grant of 15 000 1959 28 Books edit nbsp the hours rise up on a wall in Leiden CIOPW 1931 art works i six nonlectures 1953 Harvard University Press Prose books edit The Enormous Room 1922 EIMI 1933 Soviet travelogue Fairy Tales 1965 collection of short stories Poetry edit Tulips and Chimneys 1923 amp 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 Selected Poems 1923 1958 1960 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 edit HIM 1927 Santa Claus A Morality 1946 Collections edit CIOPW 1931 art works i six nonlectures 1953 Harvard University PressReferences editPoems cited edit Full text of poetry available at Buffalo Bill s available at the Poetry Foundation my father moved through dooms of love via Berkeley 22 See Selected works 1994 26 167 For example why must itself up every of a park For example anyone lived in a pretty how town i carry your heart with me i carry it in at the Poetry Foundation Text from the Poetry Foundation anyone lived in a pretty how town 47 Citations edit Rosenthal M L The Modern Poets A Critical Introduction Friedman Norman E E Cummings The Growth of a Writer Dickey James Babel to Byzantium Collins Leo W This is Our Church Boston Massachusetts Society of the First Church in Boston 2005 104 E E Cummings Life english illinois edu Archived from the original on March 25 2019 Retrieved April 27 2016 Sawyer Laucanno 2004 p 10 e e cummings 1894 1962 The Center for the Book at New Hampshire State Library Spotlight on New Hampshire Authors n d archived from the original on June 16 2023 retrieved August 10 2023 E E Cummings Poet And Painter Archived from the original on September 2 2006 a b c d e f g h Poets E E Cummings Poetry Foundation Archived from the original on October 1 2017 Retrieved August 9 2023 a b c E E Cummings An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center University of Texas retrieved May 9 2010 Friedman Norman Cummings E dward E stlin In Steven Serafin The Continuum Encyclopedia of American Literature 2003 Continuum p 244 Sawyer Laucanno 2004 pp 120 127 133 134 Bloom 1985 p 1814 Fitzgerald F Scott 1958 Essay first published 1926 How to Waste Material A Note on My Generation Afternoon of an Author London The Bodley Head pp 150 155 Kennedy 1994 p 186 Data on U S Army Divisions during World War I WWI The Great War Sawyer Laucanno 2004 pp 256 275 Sawyer Laucanno 2004 Chapters 11 and 12 Abroad An American In Paris Friedman 1964 Chapter 7 Eimi 1933 pp 109 124 Friedman 1964 pp 153 154 305 Cummings E E 1954 i amp my parents Nonlecture one i Six Nonlectures The Charles Elliot Norton Lectures 1952 1953 Cambridge MA U S Harvard University Press pp 2 20 My father moved through dooms of love Poetry Berkeley Archived from the original on March 15 2005 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 Sawyer Laucanno 2004 pp 241 366 a b In Friedman Norman volume author Moore Harry T 1964a Preface E E Cummings The growth of a writer Southern Illinois University Press Carbondale pp v viii a b Cummings E E 1994 Richard S Kennedy ed Selected poems With introduction and commentary by Richard S Kennedy New York Liveright p 72 ISBN 978 0 87140 153 3 E E Cummings Dies of Stroke Poet Stood for Stylistic Liberty The New York Times September 4 1962 a b c d e E E Cummings Poets org Academy of American Poets a b c Sawyer Laucanno 2004 Chapter 14 Marriage and UnMarriage pp 237 254 a b Alberge Dalya July 19 2020 Revealed How a Parisian sex worker stole the heart of poet EE Cummings The Guardian Sawyer Laucanno 2004 pp 145 146 Sawyer Laucanno 2004 p 161 Marion Morehouse Cummings Poet s Widow Top Model Dies The New York Times May 19 1969 p 47 via NYT Archives Sawyer Laucanno 2004 pp 255 363 378 380 Carla Blumenkranz The Enormous Poem When E E Cummings Repunctuated Stalinism Poetry Foundation E E Cummings Author Page Heath Anthology of American Literature Wetzsteon Ross 2002 Republic of Dreams Greenwich Village The American Bohemia 1910 1960 Simon amp Schuster p 449 ISBN 9780684869964 via Google Books Norman Charles 1967 E E Cummings a biography U S A E P Dutton amp Co Inc p 38 Friedman Norman Friedman 2019 E E Cummings The Art of His Poetry Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801802072 Taupin Rene 1985 The Influence of French Symbolism on Modern American Poetry 1927 Translated by William Pratt AMS Inc New York ISBN 0404615791 a b Cureton Richard D 2020 Pararhyme in E E Cummings Sonnets Realities University of Michigan Friedman 1964 pp 3 22 47 a b Essert Emily Fall 2006 Since Feeling Is First E E Cummings and Modernist Poetic Difficulty Spring 14 15 199 JSTOR 43915269 via JSTOR a b c Fairley Irene 1975 E E Cummings and ungrammar a study of syntactic deviance in his poems Searington N Y Watermill Publisher Landles Iain 2001 An Analysis of Two Poems by E E Cummings Spring Journal of the E E Cummings Society 10 31 43 ISSN 0735 6889 JSTOR 43898141 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 Cummings E E 1991 Poem first published 1940 Poetry Foundation Magazine LVI V anyone lived in a pretty how town In George J Firmage ed Complete Poems 1904 1962 Trustees for the E E Cummings Trust Retrieved August 10 2023 via Poetry Foundation Friedman Norman December 1957 Diction Voice and Tone The Poetic Language of E E Cummings PMLA 72 5 1036 1039 doi 10 2307 460378 JSTOR 460378 S2CID 163935794 via JSTOR Landles Ian October 2001 An Analysis of Two Poems by E E Cummings Spring 10 31 43 JSTOR 43898141 via JSTOR Friedman 1967 pp 61 62 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 Olsen Taimi October 2005 Krazies of indescribable beauty George Herriman s Krazy Kat and E E Cummings Spring 14 15 E E Cummings Society 220 221 JSTOR 43915279 a b E E Cummings 2006 by Catherine Reef Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 115 ISBN 978 0 618 56849 9 Friedman 1964 pp 153 154 This is a condensed and cryptic tale and it is likely that Cummings counted too heavily on the reader s ability 1 to think clearly about racial issues and their accompanying languages and 2 to make inferences about what the poem says on the basis of a sparsely told parable I think the trouble is the same here that the poem uses inflammatory material in too condensed and cryptic a fashion Cummings 1950 Xaipe Seventy one Poems New York Oxford University Press Kennedy 1994 p 295 Webster Michael Tom A Ballet 1935 Spring The Journal of the E E Cummings Society Retrieved December 14 2023 Cohen Milton 1987 Poetandpainter The aesthetics of E E Cummings s early works Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 1845 2 OCLC 59693901 a b c d e Cohen Milton 1982 E E Cumming s paintings The hidden career University of Texas at Dallas OCLC 9353165 Cummings E E 1966 E E Cummings A Miscellany First British Commonwealth ed London Peter Owen Limited p 316 Hobbs Patricia October 18 2018 Recent Gift Illustrates Poet s Twin Obsessions The Columns Retrieved February 21 2023 a b c d Friedman Norman 1992 Not e e cummings Spring 1 114 121 Retrieved December 13 2005 Friedman Norman 1995 Not e e cummings Revisited Spring 5 41 43 Retrieved May 12 2007 Capitalization of Personal Names Chicago Manual of Style 16 ed Chicago University Press 2010 p 388 Pierre Boulez cummings ist der dichter work details in French and English IRCAM Reimann Aribert Cummings E E 1990 Impression IV nach einem Gedicht von E E Cummings four Singstimme und Klavier 1961 Aribert Reimann music Schott via National Library of Australia Author E E Edward Estlin Cummings 1894 1962 The LiederNet Archive April 25 2019 retrieved June 10 2019 a b John Simon Guggenheim Foundation E E Cummings Shelley Winners Poetry Society of America poetrysociety org Retrieved April 20 2018 Poetry Award Is Made E E Cummings Wins the 1950 Harriet Monroe Prize The New York Times June 11 1950 Retrieved April 20 2018 General and cited references edit Bloom Harold 1985 Twentieth century American Literature Vol 3 New York Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 0 87754 802 7 Friedman Norman ed 1972 E E Cummings A collection of critical essays Englewood Cliffs N J U S Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 195552 3 ISBN 978 0 9829733 0 1 Friedman Norman 1967 E E Cummings the Art of His Poetry Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Friedman Norman 1964 E E Cummings The growth of a writer Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 0978 5 With a preface by Harry Thornton Moore Chapter 10 Xaipe 1950 95 Poems 1958 E E Cummings The growth of a writer Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press pp 152 173 Chapter 11 i six nonlectures 1953 E E Cummings The growth of a writer Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press pp 174 186 Kennedy Richard S October 17 1994 1980 Dreams in the Mirror 2nd ed New York Liveright ISBN 0 87140 155 X Sawyer Laucanno Christopher 2004 E E Cummings A Biography Sourcebooks ISBN 978 1 57071 775 8 Further reading editCohen 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 Tubingen 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 Ordeman John T Firmage George J October 2000 Cummings Titles Spring New Series 9 E E Cummings Society 160 170 JSTOR 43915118 External links editE E Cummings at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Works by E E Cummings in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by E E Cummings at Project Gutenberg Works by or about E E Cummings at Internet Archive Works by E E Cummings at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp E E Cummings Lifelong Unitarian Biography of Cummings and his relationship with Unitarianism E E Cummings Personal Library at LibraryThing Papers of E E Cummings at the Houghton Library at Harvard University E E Cummings Collection Archived May 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin Poems by E E Cummings at PoetryFoundation org Jonathan Yardley E E Cummings A Biography Sunday October 17 2004 Page BW02 The Washington Post Book Review SPRING The Journal of the E E Cummings Society Modern American Poetry Archived October 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine E E Cummings at Library of Congress Authorities with 202 catalog records Biography and poems of E E Cummings at Poets org Finding aid to Edward Estlin Cummings correspondence at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Poetry nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E E Cummings amp oldid 1219436075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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