Marianne Moore

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Standard Name: Moore, Marianne
Birth Name: Marianne Craig Moore
MM was a pivotal figure in US poetry of the twentieth century. A recent editor has written that no major poet is cherished more and known less from that period in America.
Moore, Marianne. “Introduction”. The Poems of Marianne Moore, edited by Grace Schulman, Faber, p. xix - xxx.
xix
As well as poetry, MM wrote translations, essays, criticism, and personal letters. She had an influential period as editor of the modernist journal the Dial. Her poems are characterised by precise, irregular, unrhymed verse forms and minutely detailed observation, often of semi-mythical animals used as ways of talking about the human condition. Always reluctant to let her work go out of her hands, and often self-deprecating about it, she published few books and let much of her poetry remain in periodicals.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Friends, Associates Elizabeth Daryush
In 1969 the poet Roy Fuller , about to lecture on syllabics at Oxford and planning to centre his remarks on Marianne Moore , discovered just in time how important ED 's experiments were in...
Intertextuality and Influence Maria Edgeworth
Marianne Moore later dramatised this work.
Literary responses T. S. Eliot
In the month this volume was published, Pound printed in The Egoist a rollicking article about the outrage Eliot's poetry was producing. Only genius, he wrote, not mere talent, infallibly evokes a torrent of elderly...
Literary responses T. S. Eliot
Marianne Moore admired here TSE 's unhoodwinked self-control.
Grant, Michael, editor. T.S. Eliot: The Critical Heritage. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
1: 293
Literary responses T. S. Eliot
Marianne Moore discerned in it a mental chronology of evolvement and deepening technique, and two over-riding tendencies: the instinct for order and certitude, and contempt for sham.
Grant, Michael, editor. T.S. Eliot: The Critical Heritage. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
1: 350
Leisure and Society Rumer Godden
Her literary standards of judgement were high. Among women poets she accorded major status only to Sappho , Christina Rossetti , Emily Dickinson —not Elizabeth Barrett Browning —and to the more recent Edith Sitwell and Marianne Moore .
Godden, Rumer. A Time to Dance, No Time to Weep. Macmillan.
218 and n
Education H. D.
H. D. attended Bryn Mawr College in BrynMawr, Pennsylvania, for a year. One of her classmates was the poet Marianne Moore .
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
45
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Family and Intimate relationships H. D.
The two quickly began a romantic relationship that would be on and off again for ten years despite the disapproval of HD's father. Pound proposed for the first time in 1905 and was accepted. This...
Friends, Associates H. D.
In addition to Pound and her classmate Marianne Moore , HD's friends from her teenage years in Pennsylvania included another poet, William Carlos Williams .
Robinson, Janice S. H.D.: The Life and Work of an American Poet. Houghton Mifflin.
10
Friends, Associates H. D.
After her move to England, Ezra Pound introduced HD to his circle of friends, many of whom were important figures in the modernist movement. They included W. B. Yeats , T. S. Eliot ,...
Friends, Associates H. D.
In Chicago on her US visit of 1920-1, HD met with Harriet Monroe . In New York she renewed her acquaintance with friends from her early days in Pennsylvania: Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams
Textual Features H. D.
This issue opened with an editorial by Dora Marsden . It contained poetry by Aldington, HD, F. S. Flint , D. H. Lawrence , Marianne Moore , and May Sinclair and prose articles giving the...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text H. D.
HD's reviews of poetry volumes for The Egoist show some of her literary principles already formed: the artist's responsibility to society as well as to art, her belief that art can stand against the selfishness...
Publishing H. D.
HD's work also featured in the pages of Margaret Anderson 's and Jane Heap 's The Little Review and in the Dial, whose editor, Marianne Moore , gave specific attention to establishing her reputation...
Literary responses H. D.
The volume was reviewed on this day in the Times Literary Supplement. It was covered by Marianne Moore for the Dial.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Marek, Jayne E. Women Editing Modernism: "Little" Magazines & Literary History. University Press of Kentucky.
146

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