fbpx
Wikipedia

Pierre Reverdy

Pierre Reverdy (French: [ʁəvɛʁdi]; 13 September 1889 – 17 June 1960) was a French poet whose works were inspired by and subsequently proceeded to influence the provocative art movements of the day, Surrealism, Dadaism and Cubism. The loneliness and spiritual apprehension that ran through his poetry appealed to the Surrealist credo. He, though, remained independent of the prevailing "-isms", searching for something beyond their definitions. His writing matured into a mystical mission seeking, as he wrote: "the sublime simplicity of reality."[1]

Pierre Reverdy
Pierre Reverdy (by Modigliani, 1915)
Born13 September 1889
Narbonne, France
Died17 June 1960(1960-06-17) (aged 71)
Solesmes, France
OccupationPoet, critic
NationalityFrench
Period1910–1960
Literary movementSurrealism

Early life edit

The son of a winegrower,[2] Reverdy was born in Occitanie (southern France), in the region of Narbonne, and grew up near the Montagne Noire. The Reverdy ancestors were stonemasons and sculptors associated with work commissioned for churches. The extant facts of his childhood and early years are few and obscured. Some source material indicates that at the time of Reverdy’s birth, his mother was a married woman whose husband was at the time living in Argentina. Further, it is believed that Reverdy’s father and mother were not able to marry each other until 1897.[3] His father schooled him at home, teaching him to read and write.

Paris edit

 
Feuille ouverte (wall poem in Leiden)

Reverdy arrived in Paris in October 1910, devoting his early years there to his writing. It was in Paris, at the artistic enclave centered around the Bateau-Lavoir in Montmartre that he met Guillaume Apollinaire, Max Jacob, Louis Aragon, André Breton, Philippe Soupault and Tristan Tzara. All would come to admire and champion Reverdy’s poetry.[4] Reverdy published a small volume of poetry in 1915. A second compilation of his work brought out in 1924, Les épaves du ciel, brought him greater recognition. The poems were short, fragmentary, the words an evocation of sharp visuals: the volume was the literary equivalent of the Plastic arts as practiced by Cubist painters and sculptors.[5] In the first Surrealist Manifesto, André Breton hailed Reverdy as "the greatest poet of the time." Louis Aragon said that for Breton, Soupault, Éluard and himself, Reverdy was "our immediate elder, the exemplary poet."[6] In 1917, together with Max Jacob, Vicente Huidobro and Guillaume Apollinaire, Reverdy founded the influential journal Nord-Sud ("North-South") which contained many Dadaist and Surrealist contributions. Sixteen issues of Nord-Sud were published, from 15 March 1917 to 15 October 1918. It is believed Reverdy took his inspiration for the title of his periodical from the subway line, the Paris Métro, which in 1910 instituted a route running from Montmartre to Montparnasse; it was Reverdy's intention to unite the vitality of these two distinctive city districts.[7]

By nature, Reverdy was a somber man, whose strong spiritual inclinations led him over time to distance himself from the frenetic world of bohemian Paris. In 1926, in a ritualistic act signifying the renunciation of the material world, he burned many of his manuscripts in front of an assembly of friends. He converted to Catholicism and retreated with his wife, Henriette, to a small house located in proximity to a Benedictine abbey at Solesmes. Excluding intermittent periods when he visited Paris, Solesmes was his home for the next thirty years where he lived a "quasi-monastic life."[8]

Retreat into seclusion edit

During this time in Solesmes, Reverdy wrote several collections including Sources du vent, Ferraille and Le Chant des morts. Besides this, Reverdy published two volumes containing critical matter (reflections on literature mingled with aphorisms) entitled En vrac and Le livre de mon bord. During the WWII German occupation of France, Reverdy became a partisan in the resistance movement. At the liberation of Paris from Nazi rule, his group of French Resistance fighters were responsible for the capture and arrest of French traitor and German espionage agent Baron Louis de Vaufreland.[9]

Personal life edit

One of Reverdy’s most enduring and profound relationships was with the couturier Coco Chanel. The intense period of their romantic liaison lasted from 1921-1926. Yet after the fire of this initial involvement cooled, they still maintained a deep bond and great friendship, which would continue for some forty years.[10] He had always been both appalled and intrigued by the wealth and excess that comprised Chanel’s social circle. Reverdy had become enamored with American jazz, which had just become a popular craze in Paris, a type of nightlife for which Chanel expressed contempt.[11] Chanel, however, was a necessary catalyst for his poetic output. She bolstered his confidence, supported his creative ability and further helped assuage his financial instability by secretly buying his manuscripts through his publisher.[12]

It is postulated that the legendary maxims attributed to Chanel and published in periodicals were crafted under the mentorship of Reverdy—a collaborative effort. "A review of her correspondence reveals a complete contradiction between the clumsiness of Chanel the letter writer and the talent of Chanel as a composer of maxims…After correcting the handful of aphorisms that Chanel wrote about her métier, Reverdy added to this collection of 'Chanelisms' a series of thoughts of a more general nature, some touching on life and taste, others on allure and love."[13]

Purportedly, Reverdy was not fully aware of the extent of Chanel’s wartime collaboration with the Nazis. However, as he subscribed to a belief that women were the weaker, more vulnerable sex, he rationalized that Chanel had been manipulated by men who convinced her to champion German interests. Further, as a staunch Catholic, Reverdy was able to absolve Chanel of her transgressions. Indeed, so strong was his tie to her that in 1960, sensing his death was imminent, he wrote a poem to the woman whom he had loved for the past forty years.[14]

Dear Coco, here it is
The best of my hand
And the best of me
I offer it thus to you
With my heart
With my hand
Before heading toward
The dark road’s end
If condemned
If pardoned
Know you are loved

Death edit

Reverdy died in 1960 at Solesmes.

Praise edit

A glass of papaya juice
and back to work. My heart is in my
pocket, it is Poems by Pierre Reverdy.
Frank O'Hara, "A Step Away From Them"[15]

"Reverdy's strange landscapes, which combine an intense inwardness with a proliferation of sensual data, bear in them the signs of a continual search for an impossible totality. Almost mystical in their effect, his poems are nevertheless anchored in the minutiae of the everyday world; in their quiet, at times monotone music, the poet seems to evaporate, to vanish into the haunted country he has created. The result is at once beautiful and disquieting as if Reverdy had emptied the space of the poem in order to let the reader inhabit it" —Paul Auster[16]

Works edit

 
St. Peter's Abbey, Solesmes
  • 1915 Poèmes en prose (Paris, Imprimerie Birault).
  • 1916 La Lucarne ovale (Birault).
  • 1916 Quelques poèmes (Birault).
  • 1917 Le Voleur de Talan, roman (Avignon, Imprimerie Rullière).
  • 1918 Les Ardoises du toit, illustrated by Georges Braque (Birault).
  • 1918 Les Jockeys camouflés et période hors-texte, (Imprimerie F. Bernouard).
  • 1919 La Guitare endormie, (Imprimerie Birault).
  • 1919 Self defence. Critique-Esthétique. (Birault).
  • 1921 Étoiles peintes, (Paris, Sagittaire).
  • 1921 Cœur de chêne, (Éditions de la Galerie Simon).
  • 1922 Cravates de chanvre, (Éditions Nord-Sud).
  • 1924 Pablo Picasso et son œuvre, in Pablo Picasso(Gallimard).
  • 1924 Les Épaves du ciel (Gallimard).
  • 1925 Écumes de la mer, (Gallimard).
  • 1925 Grande nature (Paris, Les Cahiers libres).
  • 1926 La Peau de l'homme, (Gallimard).
  • 1927 Le Gant de crin (Plon).
  • 1928 La Balle au bond, (Marseille, Les Cahiers du Sud).
  • 1929 Sources du vent, (Maurice Sachs éditeur).
  • 1929 Flaques de verre (Gallimard).
  • 1930 Pierres blanches, (Carcassonne, Éditions d'art Jordy).
  • 1930 Risques et périls, contes 1915-1928 (Gallimard).
  • 1937 Ferraille (Brussels).
  • 1937 Preface for Déluges by Georges Herment (José Corti).
  • 1940 Plein verre (Nice).
  • 1945 Plupart du temps, poèmes 1915-1922, which collects Poèmes en prose, Quelques poèmes, La Lucarne ovale, Les Ardoises du toit, Les Jockeys camouflés, La Guitare endormie, Étoiles peintes, Cœur de chêne et Cravates de chanvre (Gallimard, reedited in 1969 in the « Poésie » series).
  • 1945 Preface for Souspente by Antoine Tudal (Paris, Éditions R.J. Godet).
  • 1946 Visages, (Paris, Éditions du Chêne).
  • 1948 Le Chant des morts, (Tériade éditeur).
  • 1948 Le Livre de mon bord, notes 1930-1936 (Mercure de France).
  • 1949 Tombeau vivant, Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori, in Tombeau de Jean-Sébastien Galanis (Paris, imprimé par Daragnès).
  • 1949 Main d'œuvre, poèmes 1913-1949, which collects: Grande nature, La Balle au bond, Sources du vent, Pierres blanches, Ferraille, Plein verre and Le Chant des morts and adds Cale sèche and Bois vert, (Mercure de France).
  • 1950 Une aventure méthodique, (Paris, Mourlot).
  • 1953 Cercle doré, (Mourlot).
  • 1955 Au soleil du plafond, (Tériade éditeur).
  • 1956 En vrac (Monaco, Éditions du Rocher).
  • 1959 La Liberté des mers, (Éditions Maeght).
  • 1962 À René Char, (Alès, P. A. Benoît, poème épistolaire tiré à 4 ex.)
  • 1966 Sable mouvant, (Paris, L. Broder éditeur).

Translations in English edit

English translations of Reverdy's work have appeared in a smattering of volumes over the years, most of which are now out of print but still available used. Beginning in the early sixties, several writers have produced translations of Reverdy's work, notably Kenneth Rexroth, John Ashbery, Mary Ann Caws, Patricia Ann Terry and, more recently, Ron Padgett.

  • Pierre Reverdy: Selected Poems - translated by Kenneth Rexroth (New Directions, 1969)
  • Roof Slates and Other Poems of Pierre Reverdy - translated by Caws & Terry (Northeastern Univ. Press, 1981)
  • Selected Poems by Pierre Reverdy - edited by Timothy Bent and Germaine Brée (Wake Forest Univ. Press / Bloodaxe (UK), 1991)
  • Prose Poems - translated by Ron Padgett (Black Square Editions, 2007)
  • Haunted House (long prose poem) - translated by John Ashbery (Black Square Editions, 2007)
  • Pierre Reverdy - edited by Mary Ann Caws (New York Review of Books, 2013)
  • The Song of the Dead - translated by Dan Bellm (Black Square Editions, 2016)
  • The Thief of Talant - translated by Ian Seed (Wakefield Press, 2016)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Retrieved from: www.poetryfoundation.org
  2. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 24
  3. ^ http://www.kickacan.com/pierre[permanent dead link] reverdy, retrieved August 2, 2012
  4. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 24
  5. ^ "Pierre Reverdy". www.poetryfoundation.org. Retrieved August 2, 2012.
  6. ^ Reverdy, Pierre, "Selected Poems," Bloodaxe Books, title page
  7. ^ http://www.killacan.com/pierre[permanent dead link] reverdy, retrieved August 2, 2012
  8. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 24
  9. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 53
  10. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 23
  11. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 53
  12. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 24
  13. ^ Charles-Roux, Edmonde, "Chanel and her World," Hachette-Vendome, 1981, p. 328, ISBN 9780865651593
  14. ^ Vaughan, Hal, "Sleeping With The Enemy, Coco Chanel's Secret War, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011, p. 222
  15. ^ A Step Away From Them - A poem by Frank O'Hara - American Poems
  16. ^ Bloodaxe Books: Title Page > Pierre Reverdy: Selected Poems 2011-05-27 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • The Cubist Poetry of Pierre Reverdy - essay by Kenneth Rexroth (first published as the Introduction to Selected Poems)
  • - eight poems online at Milk Magazine
  • - published in Jubilat 3
  • Bookworm Interview with John Ashbery and Ron Padgett on the works of Pierre Reverdy (June, 2007)
  • at FudoMouth.net - translated by Kenneth Rexroth (from Selected Poems)

pierre, reverdy, french, ʁəvɛʁdi, september, 1889, june, 1960, french, poet, whose, works, were, inspired, subsequently, proceeded, influence, provocative, movements, surrealism, dadaism, cubism, loneliness, spiritual, apprehension, that, through, poetry, appe. Pierre Reverdy French ʁevɛʁdi 13 September 1889 17 June 1960 was a French poet whose works were inspired by and subsequently proceeded to influence the provocative art movements of the day Surrealism Dadaism and Cubism The loneliness and spiritual apprehension that ran through his poetry appealed to the Surrealist credo He though remained independent of the prevailing isms searching for something beyond their definitions His writing matured into a mystical mission seeking as he wrote the sublime simplicity of reality 1 Pierre ReverdyPierre Reverdy by Modigliani 1915 Born13 September 1889Narbonne FranceDied17 June 1960 1960 06 17 aged 71 Solesmes FranceOccupationPoet criticNationalityFrenchPeriod1910 1960Literary movementSurrealism Contents 1 Early life 2 Paris 3 Retreat into seclusion 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Praise 7 Works 8 Translations in English 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editThe son of a winegrower 2 Reverdy was born in Occitanie southern France in the region of Narbonne and grew up near the Montagne Noire The Reverdy ancestors were stonemasons and sculptors associated with work commissioned for churches The extant facts of his childhood and early years are few and obscured Some source material indicates that at the time of Reverdy s birth his mother was a married woman whose husband was at the time living in Argentina Further it is believed that Reverdy s father and mother were not able to marry each other until 1897 3 His father schooled him at home teaching him to read and write Paris edit nbsp Feuille ouverte wall poem in Leiden Reverdy arrived in Paris in October 1910 devoting his early years there to his writing It was in Paris at the artistic enclave centered around the Bateau Lavoir in Montmartre that he met Guillaume Apollinaire Max Jacob Louis Aragon Andre Breton Philippe Soupault and Tristan Tzara All would come to admire and champion Reverdy s poetry 4 Reverdy published a small volume of poetry in 1915 A second compilation of his work brought out in 1924 Les epaves du ciel brought him greater recognition The poems were short fragmentary the words an evocation of sharp visuals the volume was the literary equivalent of the Plastic arts as practiced by Cubist painters and sculptors 5 In the first Surrealist Manifesto Andre Breton hailed Reverdy as the greatest poet of the time Louis Aragon said that for Breton Soupault Eluard and himself Reverdy was our immediate elder the exemplary poet 6 In 1917 together with Max Jacob Vicente Huidobro and Guillaume Apollinaire Reverdy founded the influential journal Nord Sud North South which contained many Dadaist and Surrealist contributions Sixteen issues of Nord Sud were published from 15 March 1917 to 15 October 1918 It is believed Reverdy took his inspiration for the title of his periodical from the subway line the Paris Metro which in 1910 instituted a route running from Montmartre to Montparnasse it was Reverdy s intention to unite the vitality of these two distinctive city districts 7 By nature Reverdy was a somber man whose strong spiritual inclinations led him over time to distance himself from the frenetic world of bohemian Paris In 1926 in a ritualistic act signifying the renunciation of the material world he burned many of his manuscripts in front of an assembly of friends He converted to Catholicism and retreated with his wife Henriette to a small house located in proximity to a Benedictine abbey at Solesmes Excluding intermittent periods when he visited Paris Solesmes was his home for the next thirty years where he lived a quasi monastic life 8 Retreat into seclusion editDuring this time in Solesmes Reverdy wrote several collections including Sources du vent Ferraille and Le Chant des morts Besides this Reverdy published two volumes containing critical matter reflections on literature mingled with aphorisms entitled En vrac and Le livre de mon bord During the WWII German occupation of France Reverdy became a partisan in the resistance movement At the liberation of Paris from Nazi rule his group of French Resistance fighters were responsible for the capture and arrest of French traitor and German espionage agent Baron Louis de Vaufreland 9 Personal life editOne of Reverdy s most enduring and profound relationships was with the couturier Coco Chanel The intense period of their romantic liaison lasted from 1921 1926 Yet after the fire of this initial involvement cooled they still maintained a deep bond and great friendship which would continue for some forty years 10 He had always been both appalled and intrigued by the wealth and excess that comprised Chanel s social circle Reverdy had become enamored with American jazz which had just become a popular craze in Paris a type of nightlife for which Chanel expressed contempt 11 Chanel however was a necessary catalyst for his poetic output She bolstered his confidence supported his creative ability and further helped assuage his financial instability by secretly buying his manuscripts through his publisher 12 It is postulated that the legendary maxims attributed to Chanel and published in periodicals were crafted under the mentorship of Reverdy a collaborative effort A review of her correspondence reveals a complete contradiction between the clumsiness of Chanel the letter writer and the talent of Chanel as a composer of maxims After correcting the handful of aphorisms that Chanel wrote about her metier Reverdy added to this collection of Chanelisms a series of thoughts of a more general nature some touching on life and taste others on allure and love 13 Purportedly Reverdy was not fully aware of the extent of Chanel s wartime collaboration with the Nazis However as he subscribed to a belief that women were the weaker more vulnerable sex he rationalized that Chanel had been manipulated by men who convinced her to champion German interests Further as a staunch Catholic Reverdy was able to absolve Chanel of her transgressions Indeed so strong was his tie to her that in 1960 sensing his death was imminent he wrote a poem to the woman whom he had loved for the past forty years 14 Dear Coco here it is The best of my hand And the best of me I offer it thus to you With my heart With my hand Before heading toward The dark road s end If condemned If pardoned Know you are lovedDeath editReverdy died in 1960 at Solesmes Praise editA glass of papaya juice and back to work My heart is in my pocket it is Poems by Pierre Reverdy Frank O Hara A Step Away From Them 15 Reverdy s strange landscapes which combine an intense inwardness with a proliferation of sensual data bear in them the signs of a continual search for an impossible totality Almost mystical in their effect his poems are nevertheless anchored in the minutiae of the everyday world in their quiet at times monotone music the poet seems to evaporate to vanish into the haunted country he has created The result is at once beautiful and disquieting as if Reverdy had emptied the space of the poem in order to let the reader inhabit it Paul Auster 16 Works edit nbsp St Peter s Abbey Solesmes 1915 Poemes en prose Paris Imprimerie Birault 1916 La Lucarne ovale Birault 1916 Quelques poemes Birault 1917 Le Voleur de Talan roman Avignon Imprimerie Rulliere 1918 Les Ardoises du toit illustrated by Georges Braque Birault 1918 Les Jockeys camoufles et periode hors texte Imprimerie F Bernouard 1919 La Guitare endormie Imprimerie Birault 1919 Self defence Critique Esthetique Birault 1921 Etoiles peintes Paris Sagittaire 1921 Cœur de chene Editions de la Galerie Simon 1922 Cravates de chanvre Editions Nord Sud 1924 Pablo Picasso et son œuvre in Pablo Picasso Gallimard 1924 Les Epaves du ciel Gallimard 1925 Ecumes de la mer Gallimard 1925 Grande nature Paris Les Cahiers libres 1926 La Peau de l homme Gallimard 1927 Le Gant de crin Plon 1928 La Balle au bond Marseille Les Cahiers du Sud 1929 Sources du vent Maurice Sachs editeur 1929 Flaques de verre Gallimard 1930 Pierres blanches Carcassonne Editions d art Jordy 1930 Risques et perils contes 1915 1928 Gallimard 1937 Ferraille Brussels 1937 Preface for Deluges by Georges Herment Jose Corti 1940 Plein verre Nice 1945 Plupart du temps poemes 1915 1922 which collects Poemes en prose Quelques poemes La Lucarne ovale Les Ardoises du toit Les Jockeys camoufles La Guitare endormie Etoiles peintes Cœur de chene et Cravates de chanvre Gallimard reedited in 1969 in the Poesie series 1945 Preface for Souspente by Antoine Tudal Paris Editions R J Godet 1946 Visages Paris Editions du Chene 1948 Le Chant des morts Teriade editeur 1948 Le Livre de mon bord notes 1930 1936 Mercure de France 1949 Tombeau vivant Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori in Tombeau de Jean Sebastien Galanis Paris imprime par Daragnes 1949 Main d œuvre poemes 1913 1949 which collects Grande nature La Balle au bond Sources du vent Pierres blanches Ferraille Plein verre and Le Chant des morts and adds Cale seche and Bois vert Mercure de France 1950 Une aventure methodique Paris Mourlot 1953 Cercle dore Mourlot 1955 Au soleil du plafond Teriade editeur 1956 En vrac Monaco Editions du Rocher 1959 La Liberte des mers Editions Maeght 1962 A Rene Char Ales P A Benoit poeme epistolaire tire a 4 ex 1966 Sable mouvant Paris L Broder editeur Translations in English editEnglish translations of Reverdy s work have appeared in a smattering of volumes over the years most of which are now out of print but still available used Beginning in the early sixties several writers have produced translations of Reverdy s work notably Kenneth Rexroth John Ashbery Mary Ann Caws Patricia Ann Terry and more recently Ron Padgett Pierre Reverdy Selected Poems translated by Kenneth Rexroth New Directions 1969 Roof Slates and Other Poems of Pierre Reverdy translated by Caws amp Terry Northeastern Univ Press 1981 Selected Poems by Pierre Reverdy edited by Timothy Bent and Germaine Bree Wake Forest Univ Press Bloodaxe UK 1991 Prose Poems translated by Ron Padgett Black Square Editions 2007 Haunted House long prose poem translated by John Ashbery Black Square Editions 2007 Pierre Reverdy edited by Mary Ann Caws New York Review of Books 2013 The Song of the Dead translated by Dan Bellm Black Square Editions 2016 The Thief of Talant translated by Ian Seed Wakefield Press 2016 See also editStill Life with a Poem 1915 painting by Juan Gris which includes a poem by Reverdy References edit Retrieved from www poetryfoundation org Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 24 http www kickacan com pierre permanent dead link reverdy retrieved August 2 2012 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 24 Pierre Reverdy www poetryfoundation org Retrieved August 2 2012 Reverdy Pierre Selected Poems Bloodaxe Books title page http www killacan com pierre permanent dead link reverdy retrieved August 2 2012 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 24 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 53 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 23 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 53 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 24 Charles Roux Edmonde Chanel and her World Hachette Vendome 1981 p 328 ISBN 9780865651593 Vaughan Hal Sleeping With The Enemy Coco Chanel s Secret War Alfred A Knopf 2011 p 222 A Step Away From Them A poem by Frank O Hara American Poems Bloodaxe Books Title Page gt Pierre Reverdy Selected Poems Archived 2011 05 27 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editThe Cubist Poetry of Pierre Reverdy essay by Kenneth Rexroth first published as the Introduction to Selected Poems Pierre Reverdy translated by Tom Hibbard eight poems online at Milk Magazine Excerpt from Three Letters to Jean Rousselot 1951 published in Jubilat 3 Bookworm Interview with John Ashbery and Ron Padgett on the works of Pierre Reverdy June 2007 Pierre Reverdy Seven Poems at FudoMouth net translated by Kenneth Rexroth from Selected Poems Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Reverdy amp oldid 1159561007, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.