An Anthology Of English And American Verse

In this post, we will see the book An Anthology Of English And American Verse.

About the book

A collection of various verses by American and British authors.

The book was translated from Russian by was published in 1972 by Progress Publishers.
Credits to original uploader.
Original scan by DLI.
You can get the book here.
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BALLADS

CONTENTS

English Verse

1. Sir Patrick Spens . 25

2. E d w a r d . 28

3. The Three R a u e n s 30

THOMAS WYATT

4. The Lover’s A p p e a l – 31 5. They Flee From Me, That Sometime Did Me Seek . . . . 32

HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY

6. The Happy Life 33 7. Love’s Patience 33

EDMUND SPENSER Sonnets Amoretti:

8. Sonnet

X I X . 35

9. Sonnet 10. Sonnet 11. Sonnet 12. Sonnet

13. Sonnet

14. Sonnet

15. Sonnet

16. Sonnet

17. Sonnet

18. Mutabilitie ( The FaerieQueene) . 39

X X I . 35 X X V I 36 X X X 36 X L V I 37 L I V . 37 L X I I I 37 L X X I V 38 L X X X . 38 L X X X I 39

WALTER RALEIGH

19. A Vision of “The FairyQueen” . 42 20. Her Reply . 42

21. The Silent L o v e r . 43

22. All or N o n e . 44

PHILIP SIDNEY

23. A D i t t y . 46 24. With Plow Sad Steps, O Moon . 46 25. Come, Sleep; 0 Sleep,the Certain Knot of Peace . . . . 47 26. Highway, Since You My ChiefParnassus Be . 47

1* 3

ROBERT SOUTHWELL

27. Times Go by Turns ‘ SAMUEL DANIEL

Sonnets:

28. Beauty, Sweet Love, Is Like the Morning Dew . . . . 29. Care-Charmer Sleep, Son of the Sable Night . 30. Let Others Sing of Knights and Paladines .

MICHAEL DRAYTON

31. Since There’s No Help * . 32. To the Cambro-Britons and Their Harp, His Ballad of

48

49 49

50

51

Agincourt . 51

CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE

33. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love . . . . . . . *

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

56

58 58 59 59 60 60 61 61 62 62 62 63 63 64 64 66 67

67

67

68 69

34. Sonnet

35. Sonnet

36. Sonnet

37. Sonnet

38. Sonnet

39. Sonnet

40. Sonnet

41. Sonnet

42. Sonnet

43. Sonnet

44. Sonnet

45. Sonnet

46. Sonnet

47. Sonnet

X X I

L I V . L V L X V L X V I . L X X I I I . LXXVII X C

X C I . C X V I . C X X X .

C X X X V I I I . C X L I .

C X L V I .

48. The Phoenix and T u r t l e .

49. When Icicles Hang by the Wall (Love’s Labour s Lost) . .

50. Over Hill, Over Dale (A Midsummer Night’s Dream) . .

51. Under the Greenwood Tree (As You Like I t )

52. Come Away, Come Away, Death (Twelfth Night) . .

53. Full Fathom Five Thy Father Lies (The Tempest) . . . .

THOMAS NASHE

54. Song

THOMAS CAMPION

55. 56. 57.

Integer Vitse . Cherry-Ripe . [W inter Nights]

4

HENRY WOTTON

58. Elizabeth of Bohemia . 73 59. Character of a Happy L ife ’ ‘ 73

BEN JONSON

60. V i v a m u s . 75

61. To Celia . 75

62. To the Memory of My Beloved, the Author, Mr. William

Shakespeare: and What He Hath Left U s 76

JOHN DONNE

63. The Good-Morrow 79

64. The Sun Rising 79

65. S o n g . 80

66. A Valediction: Forbidding M ourning 82

67. The

68. His

69. The

F l e a . 83 Picture. An E le g y . 84 S t o r m . 84

Holy Sonnets:

70. Sonnet V II 86

71. Sonnet X 87

ROBERT BURTON

72. The Author’s Abstract of Melancholy, Aia^oycDg . . . . 88

FRANCIS BEAUMONT and JOHN FLETCHER

73. Shake Off Your Heavy Trance 91 74. Adieu, Fond Love 91

WILLIAM DRUMMOND OF HAWTHORNDEN

75. Sonnet . 92

ROBERT HERRICK

76. To Electra 93

77. Night-Piece to J u l i a 93

78. To Anthea, Who May Command Him Any T h in g 94

79. Counsel to G i r l s . 95

80. The Poetry of D ress 95

81. T o D i a n e m e . 96

82. C h e r r y – R i p e 96

GEORGE HERBERT

83. Virtue 97 84. Love 97

5

THOMAS CAREW

85. Song . 99 86. Mediocrity in Love Rejected . 99

JAMES SHIRLEY

87. Victorious Men of Earth . 101 88. The Glories of Our Blood and S t a t e . 101

WILLIAM DAVENANT

89. Aubade . 103 90. The Philosopher and the Lover: to a Mistress Dying . . . 103

EDMUND W ALLER

99. 100.

JOHN

On His Blindness 112 To the Lord General Cromwell . 113

SUCKLING

91. 92. 93.

Song 105 On a G i r d l e . 105 Old A g e 106

JOHN

94. Song. May M o r n i n g . 107

L ’A l l e g r o 107 On Shakespeare Ill

MILTON

95.

96.

97. [On His 24th B i r t h d a y ] 112 98. O N i g h t i n g a l e 112

101.

102. I Pry thee Send Me Back My H e a r t 114

Advice to aL o v e r . 114 SAMUEL BUTLER

103. From H u d i b r a s 116 RICHARD CRASHAW

104. The Weeper:Mary M agdalene . 118 105. An Epitaph: Upon a Young Married Couple Dead and

Buryed T o g e t h e r 119 JOHN DENHAM

106. From Cooper’s H i l l 120 RICHARD LOVELACE

107. To Althea, from P r i s o n 122 108. To Lucasta, Going Beyond the Seas . . 123 109. To Lucasta, Going to the W a r s . 124

6

ABRAHAM COWLEY

110. The C h a n g e . 125

ANDREW MARVELL

111. To His Coy M i s t r e s s 126

112. B e r m u d a s 127

113. The Definition of L o v e 128

HENRY VAUGHAN

114. The B i r d 130

115. From The Golden A g e . 131 JOHN DRYDEN

116. Alexander’s Feast; or, the Power of Music 133 DANIEL DEFOE

117. From A Hymn to the Pillory . 137 MATTHEW PRIOR

118. To a Child of Q u a l i t y 139 JONATHAN SWIFT

119. From On the Death of Doctor S w i f t 141 EDW ARD YOUNG

120. On Procrastination (The Complaint) . 143 JOHN GAY

121. A Ballad . 145 122. The Shepherd’s Dog and the W o l f 146

ALEXANDER POPE

123. Self-Knowledge (Essay on M a n ) 148

JAMES THOMSON

124. From W i n t e r 149 125. Come, Gentle God of Soft Desire 152

THOMAS GRAY

126. Ode on the S p r i n g 154 127. Elegy Written in a Country Church-Yard 155

7

WILLIAM COLLINS

128. Ode to Evening ^

OLIVER GOLDSMITH

129. From The Deserted V i l l a g e . 162

WILLIAM COWPER

130. From The Task 164

ERASMUS DARWIN

131. From The Temple of Nature, or the Origin of Society . . 167

JAMES MACPHERSON

132. Oina-Morul (The Works of Ossian, the Son of Fingal) 168

THOMAS CHATTERTON

133. Song from Aella . 171

GEORGE CBABBE

134. From The V i l l a g e . 174

135. His Mother’s WeddingR in g . 175

WILLIAM BLAKE

136. Song 176

137. Songs of Innocence:I n t r o d u c t i o n 176

138. The Little Black B o y 177

139. From The Book of T h e l 178

140. The T y g e r . 179

141. L o n d o n . 180

142. The Crystal Cabinet 181

ROBERT BURNS

143. The Poet’s Welcome toHis Illegitimate Child . . . . 182 144. Auld Lang S y n e 183 145. Lament of Mary, Queen of Scots, on the Approach of

S p r i n g 184 146. Oh, Open the D o o r 185

147. Contented wi’ L ittle . 186

148. Liberty—a Fragm ent 187

Epigrams:

149. The Book-W orms 187

150. The Creed of Poverty . , . 187

151. On Seeing the Beautiful Seat of Lord Galloway 188

8

SAMUEL ROGERS

152. [Byron Recollected at Bologna] ( I t a l y ) 189

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH

153. [ L u c y ] . 192

154. The Solitary R e a p e r 195

155. Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1803 196

156. Where Lies the Land to Which Yon Ship Must Go . . . 197

157. The World Is Too Much with Us; Late and Soon . . . . 197

158. To Toussaint L’Ouverture . . . 198

159. London: 1802 198

WALTER SCOTT

160. Song (The Lady of the Lake) 199 161. To an Oak Tree . 200 162. The Dreary Change . . 201

SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE

163. From The Rime of the Ancient M a r i n e r 203 164. From Fears in Solitude 205 165. A Fragment 206

ROBERT SOUTHEY

166. The Battle of Blenheim . 207 167. [Kehama’s Curse] . 210

WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR

168. [Poems Addressed to I a n t h e ] 211

THOMAS CAMPBELL

169. H o h e n l i n d e n 213 170. A Thought Suggested by the New Y e a r 214

THOMAS MOORE

171. Go Where Glory Waits Thee (Irish Melodies) 216 172. She Is Far From the Land, Where Her Young Hero Sleeps

(Irish Melodies) . 217 173. Sweet Innisfallen, Fare Thee Well (Irish Melodies) . . 217 174. [The Peri’s Lament for Hinda] (Lalla Rookh) . . . . 219

GEORGE GORDON NOEL BYRON

175. Stanzas for Music . 221 176. Oh! Snatch’d Away in Beauty’s Bloom (Hebrew Melodies) 221 177. Thy Days Are Done, Thy Fame Begun (Hebrew Melodies) 222 178. Sun of the Sleepless! Melancholy Star (Hebrew Melodies) 223

9

179. Fare Thee W ell 223 180. To Thomas Moore 225 181. Journal in Cephalonia . 226

182. On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year . . . . 226

183. So, We’ll Go No More a Roving 228

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY

184. Stanzas—April, 1 8 1 4 229

185. Ode to the West W in d . 230

186. Hymn to Intellectual Beauty . 233

187. The C l o u d . 235

188. To Night 237

189. L i n e s . 238

190. Song to the Men of England 239

JOHN CLARE

191. No Single Hour Can Stand for N a u g h t 242

192. Language Has Not the Power to Speak What Love

I n d i t e s 243

JOHN KEATS

193. [Book I] ( E n d y m i o n ) 244

194. Ode to a Nightingale 245

195. Ode on a Grecian U r n . 248

196. La Belle Dame sans M erci . 249

197. Sonnet: When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be . . 252

GEORGE DARLEY

198. [Lilian’s S o n g ] . 253

THOMAS HOOD

199. R u t h . 254 200. The Song of the Shirt . 254

THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES

201. Dirge 258 202. Dream-Pedlary 258

ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING

Sonnets from the Portuguese:

203. I Thought Once How Theocritus Had S u n g 261 204. If Thou Must Love Me, Let itBe for Nought 261

ALFRED TENNYSON

205. Break, Break, Break . 263 206. Come Not, When I Am Dead . 263

10

207. The Splendour Falls on Castle Walls (The Princess) 264 208. Tears, Idle Tears, I Know Not What They Mean (The

P r i n c e s s ) 264 EDW ARD FITZGERALD

209. From Rubaiyat of Omar K h a y y a m 266 ROBERT BROWNING

210. The Lost L e a d e r 271

211. The Lost M istress . 272

212. Home-Thoughts, fromAbroad 272

213. Home-Thoughts, from theS e a 273

214. M e m o r a b i l i a 273

215. Love in a L i f e 274

216. Life in a L o v e . 275

217. E p i l o g u e . 275

EMILY JANE BRONTE

218. The Night Is Darkening RoundM e 277 219. A Little While, a Little W h ile . 277

ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH

220. The Latest Decalogue 280 221. Say Not the Struggle Nought A vaileth 280 222. To Spend Uncounted Years of Pain 281

ERNEST JONES

223. Onward 282

MATTHEW ARNOLD

224. Dover B e a c h . 283

225. P a l l a d i u m 284

226. The Last W ord . 285

GERALD MASSEY

227. The Men of “Forty-Eight” . 286

DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI

228. The W oodspurge 288

229. From The House of L i f e 288

GEORGE MEREDITH

230. [XIII] I Play for Seasons; Not Eternities (Modern Love) 290 231. [X LI 11J Mark Where the Pressing Wind Shoots Javelin-

Like (Modern L o v e ) . 290 11

252. Juggling Jerry 233. Dirge in Woods . .

291 295

296 296

CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI

234. Echo . 235. Up-Hill

CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON (LEWIS CARROLL)

236. From The Hunting of the Snark .

298 237. Lo, Thus, as Prostrate (The City of Dreadful Night) . . 300

JAMES THOMSON (“BYSSHE V ANOLIS”)

238. Of All Things Human (The City of Dreadful Night) . . 301

WILLIAM MORRIS

239. An Apology (The Earthly Paradise) . . . . 303

240. October (The Earthly Paradise) . 304 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE

241. From Atalanta in Calydon . 306

242. R o n d e l . 307

243. Love and S l e e p . 308

244. A Leave-Taking . 308

245. A Forsaken G a r d e n 310

THOMAS HARDY

246. The Darkling Thrush 313

247. The Night of Trafalgar (The Dynasts) . 314

248. On the Departure Platform . 315

249. When I Set Out for L y o n n e s s e 315

250. Ah, Are You Digging for My Grave . 316

ARTHUR WILLIAM EDGAR O’SHAUGHNESSY

251. Ode

GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS

252. The Leaden Echo

253. Not, I’ll Not, Carrion Comfort .

254. No Worst, There Is None. Pitched Past Pitch of Grief . . 322 255. Patience, Hard Thing! the Hard Thing but to Pray . . .

ROBERT BRIDGES

256. I Will Not Let Thee G o 257. London S n o w .1 ! ! ! *.

12

323

324 325

318

321 321

WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY

258. Out of the Night That Covers Me (Life and Death) . . . 327 259. I Am the Reaper (Life and Death) 327 260. On the W ay to Kew (Life and D e a t h ) 328

ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON

261. Heather A le 330

262. Romance 332

263. Requiem 333

OSCAR WILDE

264. The Harlot’s H ouse . 334

265. From The Ballad of Reading Goal . . 335

FRANCIS THOMPSON

266. Daisy ■. 337

ALFRED EDW ARD HOUSMAN

267. To an Athlete Dying Y o u n g . . . . . . . 340 268. On the Idle Hill of Summer 341 269. Oh, When I Was in LoveW ith Y o u 341

RUDYARD KIPLING

270. A Code of M orals 342

271. La Nuit B lanche . 344

272. T o m m y . 346

273. For to A dm ire . . . 348

274. Cities and Thrones andPowers . . . . . 349

275. A Piet S o n g . . ■ 350

276. I f . 351

277. The A ppeal . WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS

278. 279. 280. 281. 282.

. 352

An Old Song Resung .

The Sorrow of Love

The Cap and B e l l s 354 Easter 1 9 1 6 . 355 Leda and the S w a n 357

ERNEST DOWSON

283.A Last Word . . . 284. To One in Bedlam .

HILAIRE BELLOC

285. Four Beasts . . • . .

13

353 353

286. Sonnet . 361 287. Six Epigrams . 362

WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES

288. Days Too Short 363

289. The Moon 363

290. The Hour of Magic . 364

JOHN MILLINGTON SYNGE

291. P r e l u d e 365

292. A Question . 365

293. In M a y . 365

RALPH HODGSON

294. The H a m m e r s 367 295. The Mystery 367 296. Stupidity Street . 367

WALTER DE LA MARE

297. The T r u a n t s . 369 298. Silver 369 299. M artha 370

GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON

300. From L e p a n t o 372

JOHN MASEFIELD

301. A Wanderer’s Song 374

302. The West W in d . 374

303. Sur les P o i n t e s 375

304. Who Is That Old Fellow in the Wings 376

JAMES JOYCE

305. I Hear an Army Charging Upon the L a n d 377

306. O Sweetheart, Hear Y o u . 377

307. On the Beach at Fontana 378

DAVID HERBERT LAWRENCE

308. Kisses in the T r a i n 379

309. A W inter’s T a l e . 380

310. A Young W ife 380

311. Cherry R o b b e r s 381

SIEGFRIED SASSOON

312. D r e a m e r s 383

313. A f t e r m a t h . 383

14

RUPERT BROOKE

314. The Chilterns . 385

315. The Busy H e a r t 386

EDITH SITWELL

316. Spinning Song 387

317. Street S o n g . 388

RICHARD ALDINGTON

318. A Moment’s Interlude . 390

CHRISTOPHER MURREY GRIEVE (HUGH MACDIARMID)

319. From Third Hymn to L e n i n 391

SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER

320. Triumph of Sensibility 394 321. Au Maquis . 394

CHARLES HAMILTON SORLEY

322. The Song of the Ungirt Runners 396 323. Rooks 396

ROBERT GRAVES

324. Lost L o v e 398

325. A Pinch of Salt . 398

CECIL DAY-LEWIS

326. Sonnet 400

327. Marriage of Two 400

LOUIS MACNIECE

328. Sunday M orning 402

329. Museums . . . 402

WYSTAN HUGH AUDEN

330. This Lunar B e a u ty 404 331. O Where Are You Going 404

STEPHEN SPENDER

332. I Think Continually of Those Who Were Truely Great 406 333. Discovered in Mid-Ocean . 407 334. Memento 407

15

GEORGE BARKER

335. From Pacific Sonnets 408 336. Summer Song I 408 337. Summer Song I I . 409

DYLAN THOMAS

338. And Death Shall Have No D o m in io n 410 339. This Bread I Break Was Once the O a t . 411 340. In My Craft of Sullen A rt . 411

JOHN CORNFORD

341. Poem (To Margo Heinemann) . . . . . . 413

CHARLES CAUSLEY

342. From A Normandy Crucifix of 1632 ■, . . . . . ‘. . . 414

KINGSLEY AMIS

343. Ode to the East-North-East-by-East W in d 415 344. The End 416

PHILIP LARKIN

345. A m b u l a n c e s 417

JOHN WAIN

346. This Above All Is Precious andRemarkable . 419 347. Wise Men, All QuestioningD o n e . 420

ELIZABETH JENNINGS

348. A Requiem . . 421

PETER PORTER

349. L e g e n d . 422

TED HUGHES

350. P i k e . 424

GEORGE MACBETH

351. The D r a w e r # 425

JAMES 352.

SIMMONS

Me and the W orld

16

427

JOHN WILLIAMSON

353. Indescribable R o s e . 429 354. Unshakespearian Sonnet 429

DOM MORAES

355. Song . 430 356. The Garden . 431

American Verse

PHILIP FRENEAU

357. The Indian Burying Ground 435

WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT

358. To a Waterfowl .* 437 359. Thanatopsis . 438 360. The Death of the Flowers 440

361. The Western W orld .

RALPH WALDO EMERSON

362. The Snowstorm .

363. Forbearance

364. Give All to Love

JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER

441

444 . 445 445

365. The Hunters of M en . 447

366. I c h a h o d . . . *. . . 448

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

367. E x c e l s i o r .

368. The Rainy Day . 451

369. The Quadroon G i r l 452

370. To the Driving Cloud . 453

371. The Day Is Done, and the Darkness . 455

372. Shakespeare . 456

373. Robert B urns . 457

374. Four by the Clock 458

375. My Books . 459

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES

376. Old Ironsides . . 460 377. The Old Man Dreams 460

17

450

EDGAR ALLAN POE

378. 379. 380. 381. 382. 383. 384.

JAMES

385. 386. 387.

Sonnet—to Science To Helen The Raven . . . . IJlalume—a Ballad Eldorado Annabel Lee . . . The Bells

RUSSELL LOWELL

463 463 464 469 472 473 474

The Street . 478 On the Capture of Fugitive Slaves Near Washington . . 478 She Came and W ent . 480

WALT WHITMAN

388. From Song of M y s e l f . 482

389. To a Common Prostitute 484

390. I Hear America Singing 485

391. M a n n a h a t t a . 485

392. Come Up From the Fields Father . 486

393. 0 Captainl My C a p ta in 488

EMILY DICKINSON

394. Indian Summer . 490

395. I ’m Nobody. Who Are You . 490

396. This Is My Letter to the World 491

397. The Sky Is Low, the Clouds Are Mean 491

398. There Is No Frigate Like a B o o k 491

JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY

399. When the Frost Is on the P u n k i n . 492

400. A Parting Guest . 493

EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON

401. LukeHavergal 495

402. JohnEvereldovvn . 496

403. Richard C o r y 497

404. Mr. Flood’s P a r t y . 497

405. New England . 499

EDGAR LEE MASTERS

406. Silence . 500

407. Anne R u t l e d g e 502

408. Lucinda M atlock . 502

18

STEPHEN CRANE

409. I Saw a Man Pursuing the Horizon 504 410. The W a y f a r e r 504

AMY LOWELL

411. Wind and Silver 505 412. Night Clouds . 505

ROBERT FROST

413. The Pasture 506

414. After Apple Picking . 506

415. The Cow in Apple T i m e 507

416. The R u n a w a y . 508

417. Fire and I c e 508

418. Stopping by Woodson a Snowy Evening 509

419. Two Tramps in Mud Time . . . . : 509

CARL SANDBURG

420. F o g 512

421. B u n d l e s 512

422. C h i c a g o 513

423. Nocturne in a DesertedBrickyard 514

424. G r a s s . 514

425. Jazz F a n t a s i a . 515

426. Wind S o n g . . 515

427. Moist Moon People 516

428. S u n s e t s 517

VACHEL LINDSAY

429. From The C o n g o 518

430. Abraham Lincoln Walksat M idnight . 520

431. The Ghosts of theBuffaloes . 521

WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS

432. January . 524 433. D a i s y 524 434. On Gay Wallpaper . 525

ELINOR WYLIE

435. V elvet S h o e s 527

436. Pegasus L o s t . 527

ROBINSON JEFFERS

437. Clouds of Evening . 529

19

THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT

438. The Hollow Men . . 439. M arina . 440. East Coker (I) . .

LEW SARRETT

441. Feud 537

ARCHIBALD MACLEISH

442. Ars P o e t i c a 539

443. Poem in Prose 540

EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY

444. Wild Swans 542

. 445.

446. I Shall Go Back Again to the Bleak Shore 545

The Poet and His B o o k . 542

GENEVIEVE TAGGARD

447. With Child . 547

LANGSTON HUGHES

448. The W eary B l u e s . 548

449. Minstrel Man 549

450. Black M a r i a . 549

451. Morning After 550

452. Harlem 551

OGDEN NASH

453. The Ant . 552

454. The Fly 552

455. That Reminds Me . . . . 552

456. Portrait of the Artist asa Prematurely Old Man . . . . 553

457. Reflection on a Wicked World . 554

458. The P a r e n t 554

459. The K i t t e n 555

460. A Word to H usbands 555

ROBERT LOWELL

461. The Holy Innocents 556 462. For Sale 556 463. For the Union D e a d . 557

ROBERT DUNCAN

464. The Song of the Borderguard

20

560

LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI

465. From A Coney Island of the Mind . 562

RICHARD WILBUR

466. S h e 565

JACK KEROUAC

467. From Mexico City B l u e s 567

DENISE LEVERTOV

468. The S h a r k s 568

LOUIS SIMPSON

469. Early in the Morning ., . 569 470. The Ash and the O a k . 570

ROBERT CREELEY

471. A M arriage 571

472. Ballad of the Despairing H u s b a n d . 571

ALLEN GINSBERG

473. A Supermarket in California 574 474. The Shrouded Stranger . 575

FRANK O’HARA

475. Ode: Salute to the French Negro Poets 577

Ot cocTaBHTejien . . t . . 579 nocjiecjiOBue .

581 Bnorpa^HHecKne cnpaBKH h KOMMeHTapun 611

Index of Authors . . 713

 

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