
100 Selected Poems
by cummings, e. e.Buy New
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Summary
Table of Contents
Tulips and Chimneys (1923) | |
Thy fingers make early flowers of | p. 1 |
All in green went my love riding | p. 2 |
When god lets my body be | p. 4 |
In Just-- | p. 5 |
O sweet spontaneous | p. 6 |
Buffalo Bill's | p. 7 |
The Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls | p. 8 |
It may not always be so; and i say | p. 9 |
& {And} (1925) | |
Suppose | p. 10 |
Raise the shade | p. 11 |
Here is little Effie's head | p. 12 |
Spring is like a perhaps hand | p. 14 |
Who knows if the moon's | p. 15 |
I like my body when it is with your | p. 16 |
XLI Poems (1925) | |
Little tree | p. 17 |
Humanity i love you | p. 18 |
Is 5 (1926) | |
Poem, or Beauty Hurts Mr. Vinal | p. 19 |
Nobody loses all the time | p. 21 |
Mr youse needn't be so spry | p. 23 |
She being Brand | p. 24 |
Memorabilia | p. 26 |
A man who had fallen among thieves | p. 28 |
Voices to voices, lip to lip | p. 29 |
"Next to of course god america i | p. 31 |
My sweet old etcetera | p. 32 |
Here's a little mouse) and | p. 33 |
In spite of everything | p. 34 |
Since feeling is first | p. 35 |
If i have made, my lady, intricate | p. 36 |
W {ViVa} (1931) | |
I sing of Olaf glad and big | p. 37 |
If there are any heavens my mother will (all by herself) have | p. 39 |
A light Out) | p. 40 |
A clown s smirk in the skull of a baboon | p. 41 |
If i love You | p. 43 |
Somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond | p. 44 |
But if a living dance upon dead minds | p. 45 |
No thanks (1935) | |
Sonnet entitled how to run the world) | p. 46 |
May i feel said he | p. 47 |
Little joe gould has lost his teeth and doesn't know where | p. 48 |
Kumrads die because they're told) | p. 49 |
Conceive a man, should he have anything | p. 50 |
Here's to opening and upward, to leaf and to sap | p. 51 |
What a proud dreamhorse pulling (smoothloomingly) through | p. 52 |
Jehovah buried. Satan dead | p. 53 |
This mind made war | p. 54 |
Love's function is to fabricate unknownness | p. 57 |
Death (having lost) put on his universe | p. 58 |
New Poems {from Collected Poems} (1938) | |
Kind) | p. 59 |
(Of Ever-Ever Land i speak | p. 61 |
This little bride & groom are | p. 62 |
My specialty is living said | p. 63 |
If i | p. 64 |
May my heart always be open to little | p. 65 |
You shall above all things be glad and young | p. 66 |
50 Poems (1940) | |
Flotsam and jetsam | p. 67 |
Spoke joe to jack | p. 68 |
Red-rag and pink-flag | p. 69 |
Proud of his scientific attitude | p. 70 |
A pretty a day | p. 71 |
As freedom is a breakfastfood | p. 72 |
Anyone lived in a pretty how town | p. 73 |
My father moved through dooms of love | p. 75 |
I say no world | p. 78 |
These children singing in stone a | p. 80 |
Love is the every only god | p. 81 |
Love is more thicker than forget | p. 82 |
Hate blows a bubble of despair into | p. 83 |
What freedom's not some under's mere above | p. 84 |
1 x 1 {One Times One} (1944) | |
Of all the blessings which to man | p. 85 |
A salesman is an it that stinks Excuse | p. 86 |
A politician is an arse upon | p. 87 |
Plato told | p. 88 |
Pity this busy monster, manunkind | p. 89 |
One's not half two. It's two are halves of one | p. 90 |
What if a much of a which of a wind | p. 91 |
No man, if men are gods; but if gods must | p. 92 |
When god decided to invent | p. 93 |
Rain or hail | p. 94 |
Let it go--the | p. 96 |
Nothing false and possible is love | p. 97 |
Except in your | p. 98 |
True lovers in each happening of their hearts | p. 100 |
Yes is a pleasant country | p. 101 |
All ignorance toboggans into know | p. 102 |
Darling! because my blood can sing | p. 103 |
"Sweet spring is your | p. 104 |
O by the by | p. 105 |
If everything happens that can't be done | p. 106 |
Xaipe (1950) | |
When serpents bargain for the right to squirm | p. 108 |
If a cheerfulest Elephantangelchild should sit | p. 109 |
O to be in finland | p. 110 |
No time ago | p. 111 |
To start, to hesitate; to stop | p. 112 |
If (touched by love's own secret) we, like homing | p. 113 |
I thank You God for most this amazing | p. 114 |
The great advantage of being alive | p. 115 |
When faces called flowers float out of the ground | p. 116 |
Love our so right | p. 117 |
Now all the fingers of this tree (darling) have | p. 118 |
Luminous tendril of celestial wish | p. 119 |
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