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         Robinson Edwin Arlington:     more books (39)
  1. Edwin Arlington Robinson: A Critical Study by Ellsworth Barnard, 1939-06
  2. The Poetry of E.A. Robinson (Modern Library) by E.A. Robinson, 1999-05-11
  3. Edwin Arlington Robinson: The Literary Background of a Traditional Poet by Edwin S. Fussell, 1970-06
  4. Edwin Arlington Robinson: The Literary Background of a Traditionalpoet by Edwin S. Fussell, 1970-04
  5. Edwin Arlington Robinson, by Hoyt C. Franchere, 1968-06
  6. Edwin Arlington Robinson (Studies in Poetry) by Ben Ray Redman, 1974-06
  7. The Poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson: An Essay in Appreciation by Lloyd R. Morris, William Van R. Whitall, 1969-06
  8. Bibliography of the Writings & Criticisms of Edwin Arlington Robinson by Lillian Lippincott, 1974-06
  9. E.A.R. by Laura Elizabeth Richards, 1967-06
  10. Avons harvest by Edwin Arlington Robinson 1869-1935 Herman Finkelstein Collection (Library of Congress) DLC from old catalog, 1921-12-31
  11. E.A. Robinson - American Writers 17: University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers by Louis O. Coxe, 1962-12-30

41. Ear
Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935) became one of the most important poets in theUnited States in the first half of the twentieth century, being ranked by
http://www.gpl.lib.me.us/ear.htm
Gardiner Public Library
152 Water Street, Gardiner, Me 04345
Main Desk: 207-582-3312
Children's Room: 207-582-6894
Director: 207-582-6893 Edwin Arlington Robinson
Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935) became one of the most important poets in the United States in the first half of the twentieth century, being ranked by one recent scholar with Hardy, Yeats, Frost, Pound, Eliot, Stevens, Crane, and Williams. He was born in the village of Head Tide in Alna, Maine but came to Gardiner, Maine with his parents the following year. His formative years were spent at the family residence of 67 Lincoln Avenue, the city's only listing on the list of National Historic Landmarks By age twenty he knew that "I was doomed, or elected, or sentenced for life, to the writing of poetry." In Gardiner he found early mentors, including Caroline Swan, Dr. Alanson Tucker Schumann, and most importantly, Laura E. Richards . He studied at Harvard for two years until the family money was lost. In 1896 he self published The Torrent and the Night Before which he sent to reviewers and friends. In 1897 Laura E. Richards and Hays Gardiner helped him to publish

42. FINDING AID NAME LIST
George M. (George Maxwell), 18291897Correspondence Robeson, Paul, 1898-1976Robinson, Earl, 1910- Robinson, Edwin Arlington, 1869-1935 Robinson, Edwin
http://memory.loc.gov/faid/faidname022.html
Library of Congress Search Finding Aids
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Rankin, Jeremiah Eames, 1828-1904Correspondence
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43. "Tact" - Edwin Arlington Robinson
Edwin Arlington Robinson Tact written in 1910, ©Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935)Observant of the way she told So much of what was true, No vanity could
http://www.euronet.nl/users/jubo/robinson.html
Edwin Arlington Robinson
"Tact"

44. Volume D: American Literature Between The Wars, 1914-1945
Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935). Edwin Arlington Robinson's mostmemorable poems portray people trapped in painful lives and
http://www.wwnorton.com/naal/vol_D/bio/robinson.htm
Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935)
Edwin Arlington Robinson's most memorable poems portray people trapped in painful lives and unable to return to the security of the past. Like his poetic characters, Robinson suffered hardships throughout his life. His father's business failed in the Great Panic of 1893, one brother became a drug addict, another brother became an alcoholic, and Robinson himself struggled for years trying to earn money as a poet. After his first two volumes of poetry received favorable notice, he moved from his home in Gardiner, Maine, to New York City. His financial and critical status improved with his first Pulitzer Prize in 1922, and he went on to win two more Pulitzers in the following five years. Robinson's works include Children of the Night The Man against the Sky Avon's Harvest Collected Poems (1922), and

45. Special Collections: Edwin Arlington Ronbinson
Edwin Arlington Robinson's (18691935) poetry is often viewed as a transition betweenthe Romantic and Modern erasit is both a pessimistic portrayal of the
http://www.oberlin.edu/library/SCP/ear.html
Special Collections
Edwin Arlington Ronbinson
OBIS Electronic Texts Reference Sources News Sources ... Internet Resources
EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON
Search OBIS for Edwin Arlington Robinson Edwin Arlington Robinson's (1869-1935) poetry is often viewed as a transition between the Romantic and Modern erasit is both a pessimistic portrayal of the tragedies of life and an optimistic view of mankind's courage and spirit. The tragic element of his poetry may be the result of the personal misfortunes he experienced. Robinson was born to a wealthy family, but as the youngest son he was often ignored. His parents died when he was young. Robinson had one romantic interest, but when he did not marry herhe felt he had to choose either poetry or a familyshe married one of his brothers, and their marriage was quite unhappy. All of Robinson's brothers died of alcoholism or drug overdoses. Robinson too, developed into an impoverished alcoholic. Robinson attended Harvard from 1891 to 1893, and then moved to New York City, where he chose to devote his life to writing instead of seeking a secure job. Help arrived in 1905 when President Theodore Roosevelt became interested in Robinson's poetry. Roosevelt gave Robinson a job in the New York Customs House, where his minimal duties would give him ample time to write. Roosevelt also made sure that Scribner published Robinson's poetry, giving him national recognition for the first time. After Roosevelt' s presidential term was up, Robinson returned to his hometown of Gardiner, Maine, where he stayed, again in poverty, until 1916, when an anonymous benefactor began sending him a monthly stipend.

46. The Children Of The Night - Edwin Arlington Robinson
Edwin Arlington Robinson. The Children of the Night by Edwin Arlington RobinsonMaine Poet—18691935. This book was first published in 1897.
http://www.newformalist.com/ebooks/robinson.html
@import "robinson.css";
The Children of the Night
Edwin Arlington Robinson
The Children of the Night
Edwin Arlington Robinson
The Children of the Night
This book was first published in 1897.
The New Formalist

Leo Yankevich
To the Memory of my Father and Mother
The Children of the Night
For those that never know the light,
And they, the Children of the Night,
Are shut from countless hearts that seek
And if there be no other life,
To weigh their sorrow and their strife
But if there be a soul on earth
No light but for a mortal eye, If there be nothing, good or bad, God counts it for a soul gone mad, And if God be God, He is Love; It shows us we have played enough There is one creed, and only one, So cherish, that His will be done, It is the crimson, not the gray, It is the promise of the day It is the faith within the fear So let us in ourselves revere Let us, the Children of the Night, Let us be Children of the Light,
Three Quatrains
I
And haggard men will clamber to be kings
II
Drink to the splendor of the unfulfilled, The wines that flushed Lucullus are all spilled

47. Three Poems By Edwin Arlington Robinson
Set by John Duke (18991984) Texts by Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935),from The Children of the Night, published 1897. 1. Richard Cory.
http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/merge.cgi?873

48. E. Robinson
Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935). Texts. Calvary Duke (Friendlessand faint, with martyred steps and slow); Friendless and faint
http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/r/erobinson/
Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935)
Texts
  • Calvary: Duke Friendless and faint, with martyred steps and slow
  • Friendless and faint, with martyred steps and slow : Duke ( Calvary
  • Go to the western gate, Luke Havergal : Duke ( Luke Havergal
  • Luke Havergal: Duke
  • Miniver Cheevy: Duke
  • Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn : Duke ( Miniver Cheevy
  • Richard Cory: Duke
  • Whenever Richard Cory went down town : Duke ( Richard Cory
Back to the Lied and Song Texts Page

49. Edwin Arlington Robinson Collection, 1897-1965 (bulk 1930-1965)
View Separated Material Access Terms. Bates, Esther Willard, b. 1884; Robinson,Edwin Arlington, 18691935; Scott, Winfield Townley, 1910-1968;
http://elibrary.unm.edu/oanm/NmU/nmu1#mss7bc/nmu1#mss7bc_m7.html

50. Edwin Arlington Robinson's Poem
Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935). Richard Cory. Whenever RichardCory went down town, We people on the pavement looked at him He
http://www.usglobe.com/NorthAm/America/robinson1.html

51. Children Of The Night By Edwin Arlington Robinson
Zimmerman. The Children of the Night by Edwin Arlington Robinson MainePoet 18691935. This text was first published in 1897.
http://encyclopediaindex.com/b/chnit10.htm
Children of the Night
by Edwin Arlington Robinson
Hypertext Meanings and Commentaries
from the Encyclopedia of the Self
by Mark Zimmerman
The Children of the Night
by Edwin Arlington Robinson [Maine Poet 1869-1935.] This text was first published in 1897. This text was transcribed
from a 1905 printing of the 1897 edition. The Children of the Night A Book of Poems by Edwin Arlington Robinson To the Memory of my Father and Mother Contents The Children of the Night
Three Quatrains
The World
An Old Story
Ballade of a Ship Ballade by the Fire Ballade of Broken Flutes Ballade of Dead Friends Her Eyes Two Men Villanelle of Change John Evereldown Luke Havergal The House on the Hill Richard Cory Two Octaves Calvary Dear Friends The Story of the Ashes and the Flame For Some Poems by Matthew Arnold Amaryllis Kosmos Zola The Pity of the Leaves Aaron Stark The Garden Cliff Klingenhagen Charles Carville's Eyes The Dead Village Boston Two Sonnets The Clerks Fleming Helphenstine For a Book by Thomas Hardy Thomas Hood The Miracle Horace to Leuconoe Reuben Bright The Altar The Tavern Sonnet George Crabbe Credo On the Night of a Friend's Wedding Sonnet Verlaine Sonnet Supremacy The Night Before Walt Whitman The Chorus of Old Men in "Aegeus" The Wilderness Octaves Two Quatrains Romance The Torrent L'Envoi The Children of the Night For those that never know the light

52. Robinson, Edwin Arlington
Robinson, Edwin Arlington. 18691935, American poet, b. Head Tide, Maine,attended Harvard Univ. (1891-93). At his death many critics
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    Robinson, Edwin Arlington The Torrent and the Night Before (1896), was revised and reissued as The Children of the Night (1897). In 1899 Robinson settled in New York City. Although his third volume of verse, Captain Craig (1902), was poorly received by critics, it attracted the attention of President Theodore Roosevelt, who secured Robinson a job in the New York customs house. He finally achieved critical recognition with The Man Against the Sky (1916). Thereafter he concentrated on long psychological narrative poems, such as Avon's Harvest The Man Who Died Twice (1924; Pulitzer Prize), Dionysus in Doubt (1925), and the Arthurian romances Merlin Lancelot (1920), and Tristram See his letters, ed. by Ridgely Torrence (1940, repr. 1980), Denham Sutcliffe (1947), and Richard Cary (1968); biographies by C. P. Smith (1965) and L. O. Coxe (1969); studies by Yvor Winters (1971) and David Burton (1986).
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  • 53. Selected American Authors - Edwin Arlington Robinson
    Edwin Arlington Robinson. Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935) wasa poet of transition. He lived at the time following the Civil
    http://www.usembassy.de/usa/etexts/literat/r2.htm
    Edwin Arlington Robinson
    Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935) was a poet of transition. He lived at the time following the Civil War when America was rebuilding and changing rapidly and when the dominant values of the country seemed to be growing increasingly materialistic. Robinson's poetry was transitional, evaluating the present by using traditional forms and by including elements of transcendentalism and Puritanism. Robinson spent his childhood in a small town in Maine, a town which furnished him a setting for many of his poems as well as models for his characters. His father was a prosperous merchant; his mother had been a schoolteacher. The parents were primarily interested in their two older sons and tended to ignore Edwin, though they recognized his exceptional intelligence. While fond of his family, Edwin felt himself an outsider among them, as he also felt alienated from the society of his town. Suddenly, with the poetic revival that preceded World War I, Robinson began to play a major role as a poet. After going his own way quietly for so many years, he became widely read and exerted a strong influence on other poets, notably Frost. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry three times in the 1920's, a record exceeded only by Frost, who received the prize four times in all. The core of Robinson's philosophy is the belief that man's highest duty is to develop his best attributes as fully as possible. Success is measured by the intensity and integrity of his struggle; failure consists only in a lack of effort. Robinson was most interested in people who had either failed spiritually, or who seemed failures to the world but had really succeeded in gaining spiritual wisdom. Despite his apparent pessimism he refused to subscribe to a naturalistic view of life. Being by nature introspective and conscious of psychological depths, he was acutely aware of the spiritual side of man and relatively uninterested in the surface aspects of man's life as a social creature.

    54. Edwin Arlington Robinson Miniver Cheevy
    Further Reading You can help keep DayPoems on the Web Click here tolearn how Miniver Cheevy. By Edwin Arlington Robinson. 18691935
    http://www.daypoems.net/poems/1262.html
    To link to this poem, put the URL below into your page:
    Plain for Printing
    The DayPoems Poetry Collection
    Timothy Bovee, editor

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    Click on the bonsai for the next poem.
    Further Reading:
    Miniver Cheevy
    By Edwin Arlington Robinson
    Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn,
    Grew lean while he assailed the seasons;
    He wept that he was ever born,
    And he had reasons.
    Miniver loved the days of old
    When swords were bright and steeds were prancing; The vision of a warrior bold Would set him dancing. Miniver sighed for what was not, And dreamed, and rested from his labors; He dreamed of Thebes and Camelot, And Priam's neighbors. Miniver mourned the ripe renown That made so many a name so fragrant; He mourned Romance, now on the town, And Art, a vagrant. Miniver loved the Medici, Albeit he had never seen one; He would have sinned incessantly Could he have been one. Miniver cursed the commonplace And eyed a khaki suit with loathing; He missed the mediaeval grace Of iron clothing. Miniver scorned the gold he sought, But sore annoyed was he without it;

    55. Edwin Arlington Robinson Calverly's
    Further Reading You can help keep DayPoems on the Web Click hereto learn how Calverly's. By Edwin Arlington Robinson. 18691935
    http://www.daypoems.net/poems/1243.html
    To link to this poem, put the URL below into your page:
    Plain for Printing
    The DayPoems Poetry Collection
    Timothy Bovee, editor

    www.daypoems.net

    Click on the bonsai for the next poem.
    Further Reading:
    Calverly's
    By Edwin Arlington Robinson
    We go no more to Calverly's,
    For there the lights are few and low;
    And who are there to see by them,
    Or what they see, we do not know.
    Poor strangers of another tongue
    May now creep in from anywhere, And we, forgotten, be no more Than twilight on a ruin there. We two, the remnant. All the rest Are cold and quiet. You nor I, Nor fiddle now, nor flagon-lid, May ring them back from where they lie. No fame delays oblivion For them, but something yet survives: A record written fair, could we But read the book of scattered lives. There'll be a page for Leffingwell, And one for Lingard, the Moon-calf; And who knows what for Clavering, Who died because he couldn't laugh? Who knows or cares? No sign is here, No face, no voice, no memory; No Lingard with his eerie joy, No Clavering, no Calverly. We cannot have them here with us To say where their light lives are gone

    56. Tomfolio.com: Literature: Authors Q-Z
    2. Robinson, Edwin Arlington, 18691935 Robinson, WR Edwin Arlington RobinsonA Poetry of the Act Publisher Western Reserve UP, 1967.. 183 p.; 23.5 cm.
    http://www.tomfolio.com/bookssub.asp?catid=26&subid=929

    57. Untitled
    Poetry Prose 2. Works about EA Robinson Series VIII Printed Ephemera 1. Advertisements2. Sheet Music 3. Programs Robinson, Edwin Arlington, 18691935.
    http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/library/watkinson/manuscripts/Robinson.htm
    EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON COLLECTION Watkinson Library, Trinity College Series I: Background 1. Bibliographies
    2. Catalogues
    3. Letters to and from others, concerning E.A. Robinson From BurnhamPye to others
    Correspondence between John Pye and Wallace Anderson 4. Manuscript works about E.A. Robinson
    5. Census: Three Poems
    6. Miscellaneous Series II: Correspondence 1. Letters from E.A. Robinson November 14, 1895-November 20, 1912
    December 29, 1913-March 13, 1916
    July 5, 1917-November 25, 1918
    March 22, 1919-July 26, 1908
    March 4, 1921-December 11, 1921
    February 12, 1922-July 14, 1922 July 17, 1922-February 15, 1925 February 19, 1926-September 6, 1928 October 3, 1928-January 2, 1931 April 29, 1931-January 6, 1932 2. Photocopies of letters 3. Typed copies of letters Series III: Manuscript Works 1. Poems 2. Prose Series IV: Proofs Series V: Photographs 1. Small photographs 2. Medium photographs 3. Large photographs Series VI: Newspaper clippings 1. Large 2. Small 3. Notebook of clippings Series VII: Publication in periodicals 1. Works by E.A. Robinson

    58. Edwin Arlington Robinson
    Robinson, Edwin Arlington; Edwin Arlington Robinson; The San Antonio CollegeLitWeb Edwin Arlington Robinson Page; Edwin Arlington Robinson 18691935.
    http://www.wwwriting.com/avc/authors/robinson.html

    59. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
    Robinson, Edwin Arlington (18691935) Works by this author Children Of The NightMan Against The Sky, The Three Taverns, The. Copyright 2001 Keith Ito.
    http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Robinson, Edwin

    60. Find A Poet: The All-poetry Encyclopedia. Submit A Site!: Poets : R : Edwin Arli
    Links Selected Poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson (18691935) (Added 5-Apr-2001Hits 289 Rating 7.00 Votes 1) Rate It. Search. Search for a poet or resource.
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    Find a Poet: the all-poetry encyclopedia. Submit a site!: Poets : R : Edwin Arlington Robinson
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