Best of
Poetry

1964

Lunch Poems


Frank O'Hara - 1964
    Important poems by the late New York poet published in The New American Poetry, Evergreen Review, Floating Bear and stranger places.Often O'Hara, strolling through the noisy splintered glare of a Manhattan noon, has paused at a sample Olivetti to type up thirty or forty lines of ruminations, or pondering more deeply has withdrawn to a darkened ware- or firehouse to limn his computed misunderstandings of the eternal questions of life, coexistence, and depth, while never forgetting to eat lunch, his favorite meal.

The Sonnets


Ted Berrigan - 1964
    This new annotated edition, with an introduction by Alice Notley, includes seven previously uncollected works. Like Shakespeare's sonnets, Berrigan's poems involve friendship and love triangles, but while the former happen chronologically, Berrigan's happen in the moment, with the story buried beneath a surface of names, repetitions, and fragmented experience. Reflecting the new American sensibilities of the 1960's as well as timeless poetic themes, The Sonnets is both eclectic and classical — the poems are monumental riddles worth contemplating.

Jabberwocky and Other Poems


Lewis Carroll - 1964
    Over the course of almost 50 years, he created 150 poems, including nonsense verse, parodies, burlesques, acrostics, inscriptions, and more, many of them hilarious lampoons of some of the more sentimental and moralistic poems of the Victorian era. This carefully chosen collection contains 38 of Carroll's most appealing verses, including such classics as "The Walrus and the Carpenter," "The Mock Turtle's Song," and "Father William," plus such lesser-known gems as "My Fancy," "A Sea Dirge," "Brother and Sister," "Hiawatha's Photographing," "The Mad Gardener's Song," "What Tottles Meant," "Poeta Fit, non Nascitur," "The Little Man That Had a Little Gun," and many others. Filled with Carroll's special brand of imaginative whimsy and clever wordplay, this original anthology will delight fans of the author as well as other readers who relish a little laughter with their lyrics.

The Bat-Poet


Randall Jarrell - 1964
    Before long he began to see things differently from the other bats who from dawn to sunset never opened their eyes. The Bat-Poet is the story of how he tried to make the other bats see the world his way.With illustrations by Maurice Sendak, The Bat-Poet—a New York Times Best Illustrated Children's Book selection—is a collection of the bat's own poems and the bat's own world: the owl who almost eats him; the mockingbird whose irritable genius almost overpowers him; the chipmunk who loves his poems, and the bats who can't make heads or tails of them; the cardinals, blue jays, chickadees, and sparrows who fly in and out of Randall Jarrell's funny, lovable, truthful fable.

A Giraffe and a Half


Shel Silverstein - 1964
    "Infectiously funny . . . a good nonsensical text and illustrations".--Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books.

The Fourth Dimension


Yiannis Ritsos - 1964
    The volume also contains a group of modern narratives, including the famous, and much-anthologized, Moonlight Sonata. Ritsos, rightly, regarded the The Fourth Dimension as his finest achievement. It is now presented to English- speaking readers for the first time in its entirety.From PhiloctetesAll the speeches of great men, about the dead and about heroes. Astonishing, awesome words, pursued us even in our sleep, slipping beneath closed doors, from the banqueting hallwhere glasses and voices sparkled, and the veilof an unseen dancer rippled silentlylike a diaphanous, whirling wallbetween life and death. This throbbingour childhood nights, lightening the shadows of shieldsetched on white walls by slow moonlight.

The Far Field


Theodore Roethke - 1964
    The Far Field presents the most rewarding of his many volumes of poetry, both in brilliance of style and inner meaning. All of the poems have appeared previously in periodicals such as The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's, Ladies' Home Journal, The New Yorker, and The Partisan Review. Lightning Print on Demand Title

Collected Poems


Patrick Kavanagh - 1964
    His is a unique voice in modern lyrical poetry—ferociously independent, by turns ironic, colloquial, lyrical.

Isla Negra: A Notebook


Pablo Neruda - 1964
    Written in his "autumnal" period, from the vantage point of Isla Negra, the small village on the Pacific coast of Chile which he came to regard as the center of his world, the book reads like a series of notes in which present and past interact, and is perhaps the most self-confronting of all his collections.

Up the Line to Death: The War Poets 1914-1918: an anthology


Brian Gardner - 1964
    It includes poems by Edmund Blunden, Rupert Brooke, Robert Graves, Wilfred Owen, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon and sixty-six others.

Confucius to Cummings: An Anthology of Poetry


Ezra Pound - 1964
    

The Very Thing That Happens: Fables and Drawings


Russell Edson - 1964
    "Edson's brief, tightly-packed, highly-charged paragraphs are the crystallized essence of what could be long stories, and they are prose poems, and they are ontological probings into the nature of things: objects, animals, people."

Songs of Lalon Shah


Lalon Shah - 1964
    Bengali philosopher- poet, Fakir Lalon Shah. The song-poems are divided into 6 categories: hymns, devotional songs, self-knowledge, ultimate knowledge, body-mystery, ultimate knowledge and enquiry.

77 Dream Songs


John Berryman - 1964
    This will involve a new jacket design recalling the typographic virtues of the classic Faber poetry covers, connecting the backlist and the new titles within a single embracing cover solution. A major reissue program is scheduled, to include classic individual collections from each decade, some of which have long been unavailable: Wallace Stevens's Harmonium and Ezra Pound's Personae from the 1920s; W.H. Auden's Poems (1930); Robert Lowell's Life Studies from the 1950s; John Berryman's 77 Dream Songs and Philip Larkin's The Whitsun Weddings from the 1960s; Ted Hughes's Gaudete and Seamus Heaney's Field Work from the 1970s; Michael Hofmann's Acrimony and Douglas Dunn's Elegies from the 1980s. Timed to celebrate publication of Seamus Heaney's new collection, Electric Light, the relaunch is intended to re-emphasize the predominance of Faber Poetry, and to celebrate a series which has played a shaping role in the history of modern poetry since its inception in the 1920s.

The World, the Worldless


William Bronk - 1964
    

Stand Up, Friend, With Me


Edward Field - 1964
    

Selected Verse


Alexander Pushkin - 1964
    This is no exaggeration. When Pushkin started writing, Russian poetry was either composed from the lofty, solemn language of the old Church Slavonic, or from elements of French and German poetry, with a characteristic abundance of barbarism and cliché. Pushkin cast aside the conventional poetic language of his time, stripping it of pompous embellishments and incorporating into his work everyday words and expressions that his predecessors had regarded as vulgarisms. This transformation revitalised Russian literary language and opened the way for a new generation of poets to experiment further with new forms and subject matter.This book traces the development of Pushkin's verse from the Romantic poetry of his youth to the more mature and original style of his later works. With prose translations at the foot of each page, John Fennell's selection is designed to appeal to the general reader as well as the student of Russian language.

The Dead Lecturer


Amiri Baraka - 1964
    

Carmina Archilochi: The Fragments of Archilochos


Archilochos - 1964
    

Flowers for Hitler


Leonard Cohen - 1964
    What I'm Doing HereTo a Man Who ThinksHe Is Making an AngelI Had It for a Moment The HearthOn the Sickness of My LoveIsland Bulletin Portrait of the City HallCruel BabyIndependence CongratulationsFor MarianneThe House The Drawer's Condition on November 28, 1961The Failure of a Secular LifeOrder The SuitMy MentorsDestiny Business as UsualHydra 1960Queen Victoria and Me Indictment of the Blue HoleLeviathanThe Pure List and the Commentary Nothing I Can LoseHeirloomThe New Step (A Ballet-Drama in One Act) Police GazettePromiseThe Paper No PartnersSkyNursery Rhyme On the Death of an Uncharted PlanetWaiting for MarianneOld Dialogue I Wanted to Be a DoctorWhy I Happen to Be FreeWinter Bulletin On Hearing a NameLong UnspokenThe True DesireWhy Did You Give My Name to the Police? Finally I CalledThe Way BackGovernments Make Me Lonely StyleThe ProjectThe Lists Goebbels Abandons His Novel and Joins the PartyHydra 1963To the Indian Pilgrims Why Commands Are ObeyedAll There Is to Know about Adolph EichmannThe Music Crept By Us It Uses Us!The New LeaderThe Telephone The First MurderHow It Happened in the Middle of the DayDisguises My Teacher Is DyingFor E.J.P.Lot Montreal 1964The Glass DogOne of the Nights I Didn't Kill Myself Why Experience Is No TeacherA Migrating DialogueThe Big World For My Old LaytonThe BusNarcissus The Only Tourist in Havana Turns His Thoughts Homeward LaundryCherry Orchards The Invisible TroubleThe Rest Is DrossStreetcars Sick AloneHow the Winter Gets InBullets MillenniumPropagandaHitler Hitler the Brain-MoleOpium and HitlerFront Lawn Death of a LeaderFor Anyone Dressed in MarbleKerensky Alexander Trocchi, Public JunkiePriez Pour NousWheels, FirecloudsAnother Night with Telescope Three Good NightsFolk

Selected Poems of James Elroy Flecker


James Elroy Flecker - 1964
    

Wings from the Wind


Tasha Tudor - 1964
    

Sleeping With One Eye Open


Mark Strand - 1964
    Limited edition of Mark Strand's first collection of poems.

The Penguin Book of Japanese Verse


Anthony Thwaite - 1964
    The clichés of everyday speech are often to be traced to famous ancient poems, and the traditional forms of poetry are widely known and loved. The congenial attitude comes from a poetical history of about a millennium and a half. This classic collection of verse therefore contains poetry from the earliest, primitive period, through the Nara, Heian, Kamakura, Muromachi and Edo periods, ending with modern poetry from 1868 onwards, including the rising poets Tamura Ryuichi and Tanikawa Shuntaro.

People I'd Like to Keep


Mary O'Neill - 1964
    The charming illustrations are by Paul Galdone.

Ace of Pentacles


John Wieners - 1964