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The Early Poems of Hart Crane

Hart Crane

Book Overview: 

A collection of Hart Crane poems published before 1923. These poems originally appeared in a variety of magazines (The Pagan, The Double Dealer, Bruno’s Weekly, Bruno’s Bohemia, Gargoyle, The Little Review, The Modernist, The Double Dealer, Dial, The Measure, and The Modern School).

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Community Reviews

Still one of the most heart-rending, haunting and baffling poets of the last 100 years. Someone who inspires almost despite his many quirks and obscurities. Beautiful to a point where it was definitely unhealthy, incurable and contagious.

Oddly, this is the poet Harold Bloom confessed was his own per

Just a staggering collection of poems. Bloom's Centenary Introduction is quite good.

Hart Crane's brilliant poetry continues in the tradition of Eliot's 'The Wasteland,' in that he is interested in exploring the modern American landscape. Crane's poetry pulsates with his passion and tragedy. Frequent themes are his own homosexuality and the coldness of contemporary existence. His wo

Man overboard! That must have been some-thing rascally deranged indeed. Was it prefigured or/and put in-to motion lead by years of reference? Séance says.. too/2 unpublished frags. for quoth ("aid (used only in first and third person singular before the subject):
"“Well, the tide is going out” quoth

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