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John Berryman ( 1914 – 1972 ) and Robert Lowell ( 1917 – 1977 ) were the leading lights in what was to become known as the Confessional movement, which was to have a strong influence on later poets like Sylvia Plath ( 1932 – 1963 ) and Anne Sexton ( 1928 – 1974 ).
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John and Berryman
Crane biographer John Berryman wrote that the story was published in at least 200 small city dailies and approximately 550 weekly papers.
Among the most respected of the postwar American poets are John Ashbery, the key figure of the surrealistic New York School of poetry, and his celebrated Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror ( Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1976 ); Elizabeth Bishop and her North & South ( Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1956 ) and " Geography III " ( National Book Award, 1970 ); Richard Wilbur and his Things of This World, winner of both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for Poetry in 1957 ; John Berryman and his The Dream Songs, ( Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1964, National Book Award, 1968 ); A. R.
" Early issues included articles by such writers as Hardwick, Lowell, Jason Epstein, Hannah Arendt, W. H. Auden, Saul Bellow, John Berryman, Truman Capote, Paul Goodman, Lillian Hellman, Irving Howe, Alfred Kazin, Dwight Macdonald, Norman Mailer, Mary McCarthy, Norman Podhoretz, Philip Rahv, Susan Sontag, William Styron, Gore Vidal, Robert Penn Warren and Edmund Wilson.
" The Review also devotes space in most issues to poetry and has featured the work of such poets as Robert Lowell, John Berryman, Ted Hughes, John Ashbery and Richard Wilbur.
He founded the Creative Writing program at Princeton, and mentored Richard Blackmur, John Berryman, and others.
Notable authors who have been published in The Southern Review include Steve Almond, W. H. Auden, Julianna Baggott, James Baldwin, Amiri Baraka, Rick Bass, John Berryman,
Then, in 1968, Schwartz's friend and peer, fellow poet, John Berryman, dedicated his book His Toy, His Dream, His Rest " to the sacred memory of Delmore Schwartz ," including 12 elegiac poems about Schwartz in the book.
" Although the article gave a general overview of modern American poetry ( mentioning Lowell's contemporaries like John Berryman and Elizabeth Bishop ), Lowell's life, career, and place in the American literary canon remained the article's focus.
Delmore Schwartz's confessional long poem Genesis had been published in 1943, and John Berryman had written a sonnet sequence in 1947 about an adulterous affair he'd had with a woman named Chris while he was married to his first wife, Eileen ( however, since publishing the sonnets would have revealed the affair to his wife, Berryman didn't actually publish the sequenc, titled Berryman's Sonnets, until 1967, after he divorced from his first wife ).
Left to right: Commodore John Collins ; Lieutenant General Frank Berryman ; Captain Roy Dowling ; Air Commodore Raymond Brownell.
* " Recent Developments in Anton Piller Orders: John and Jane Doe, rolling along in Canada " Professor Jeff Berryman, University of Windsor, 2001.
Shapiro received the 1969 Bollingen Prize for Poetry, sharing the award that year with John Berryman.
He was the last known of a number of traditional Cornish speakers of the 19th Century including Jacob Care of St Ives ( d. 1892 ); Elizabeth Vingoe of Higher Boswarva, Madron ( d. 1903 and who taught at least some Cornish to her son ); John Davey junior ( d. 1891 ) and senior, of Boswednack ; Anne Berryman ( 1766-1854 ), also of Boswednack.
John and 1914
Dylan Thomas was born in Swansea, in Wales, on 27 October 1914, to David John Thomas ( 1876 – 1952 ), a teacher, and Florence Hannah ( née Williams ) ( 1882 – 1958 ), a seamstress.
Sir John Tenniel ( Bayswater, London, 28 February 1820 – 25 February 1914 ) was a British illustrator, graphic humourist and political cartoonist whose work was prominent during the second half of England ’ s 19th century.
Early tributes as to what Tenniel in his role as a national observer meant to the British nation around the time of his death came in as high praise ; in 1914 New York Tribune journalist George W. Smalley referred to John Tenniel as “ one of the greatest intellectual forces of his time, ( who ) understood social laws and political energies .”
The Keystone Cops serve as supporting players for Marie Dressler, Mabel Normand, and Chaplin in the first full-length Sennett comedy feature, Tillie's Punctured Romance ( 1914 ), as well as in Mabel's New Hero ( 1913 ) with Normand and Arbuckle, Making a Living ( 1914 ) with Chaplin in his first screen appearance ( pre-Tramp ), In the Clutches of the Gang ( 1914 ) with Normand, Arbuckle, and Al St. John, and Wished on Mabel ( 1915 ) with Arbuckle and Normand, among others.
The short, filmed in 1914, stars Ford Sterling, Mack Swain, Edgar Kennedy, and Al St. John and includes a previously unknown cameo with Charlie Chaplin as a Keystone Kop.
* 1858 – John L. Leal, American physician and water treatment expert who pioneered the use of chlorine disinfection ( d. 1914 )
< tr bgcolor ="# FFE8E8 ">< td > — < td > John Earle < td > Labor < td > 6 April 1914 < td > 15 April 1916
Thomas John Watson, Sr. ( February 17, 1874 – June 19, 1956 ) was the chairman and CEO of International Business Machines ( IBM ), who oversaw that company's growth into an international force from 1914 to 1956.
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