Nathalia Crane citáty

Nathalia Clara Ruth Crane was an American poet and novelist who became famous as a child prodigy after the publication of her first book of poetry, The Janitor's Boy, written at age 10 and published two years later. Her poetry was first published in The New York Sun when she was only 9 years old, the paper unaware that she was a child. She was elected into the British Society of Authors, Playwrights, and Composers in 1925, written up in The American Mercury and later became a professor of English at San Diego State University.After the publication of her second volume of poetry, Lava Lane, poet Edwin Markham implied that the publications were probably a hoax, stating "It seems impossible to me that a girl so immature could have written these poems. They are beyond the powers of a girl of twelve. The sophisticated viewpoint of sex, ...knowledge of history and archeology found in these pages place them beyond the reach of any juvenile mind."Crane was dubbed "The Brooklyn Bard" by the time she was 13 and became part of the Louis Untermeyer poetry circle during her late teens, with Untermeyer contributing an introduction to her 1936 volume Swear by the Night & Other Poems. He was an early promoter of her work, stating, "some of the critics explained the work by insisting that the child was some sort of medium, an instrument unaware of what was played upon it; others, considering the book a hoax, scorned the fact that any child could have written verses so smooth in execution and so remarkable in spiritual overtones" and that "the appeal of such lines is not that they have been written by a child but by a poet."She is supposedly related to Stephen Crane, author of The Red Badge of Courage, and the "well-known publicist," Dr. Frank Crane. Wikipedia  

✵ 11. august 1913 – 22. október 1998
Nathalia Crane fotka
Nathalia Crane: 37   citátov 2   Páči sa

Nathalia Crane: Citáty v angličtine

“Yielding to nothing — not even the rose,
The dust has its reasons wherever it goes.”

"The Dust" <!-- p. 23 -->
Venus Invisible and Other Poems (1928)
Kontext: Treating the sword blade the same as the staff,
Turning the chariot wheel into chaff.
Toppling a pillar and nudging a wall,
Building a sand pile to counter each fall.
Yielding to nothing — not even the rose,
The dust has its reasons wherever it goes.

“That instructed damsel
Donned a gown of green;”

"The Vestal"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>Finally she faltered;
Saw at last, forsooth,
Every gaudy color
Is a bit of truth.
Then the gates were opened;
Miracles were seen;
That instructed damsel
Donned a gown of green;Wore it in a churchyard,
All arrayed with care;
And a painted rainbow
Shone above her there.</p

“Every gaudy color
Is a bit of truth.”

"The Vestal"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>Finally she faltered;
Saw at last, forsooth,
Every gaudy color
Is a bit of truth.
Then the gates were opened;
Miracles were seen;
That instructed damsel
Donned a gown of green;Wore it in a churchyard,
All arrayed with care;
And a painted rainbow
Shone above her there.</p

“The sign work of the Orient it runneth up and down;
The Talmud stalks from right to left, a rabbi in a gown;”

"The Symbols"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>The sign work of the Orient it runneth up and down;
The Talmud stalks from right to left, a rabbi in a gown;The Roman rolls from left to right from Maytime unto May;
But the gods shake up their symbols in an absent-minded way.Their language runs to circles like the language of the eyes,
Emphasised by strange dilations with little panting sighs.</p

“Once a pallid Vestal
Doubted truth in blue;
Listed red in ruin,
Harried every hue;”

"The Vestal" <!-- p. 15 -->
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>Once a pallid Vestal
Doubted truth in blue;
Listed red in ruin,
Harried every hue;Barricaded vision,
Garbed herself in sighs;
Ridiculed the birthmarks
Of the butterflies.</p

“The starry brocade of the summer night
Is linked to us as part of our estate”

"Tomorrow"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: The starry brocade of the summer night
Is linked to us as part of our estate;
And every bee that wings its sidelong flight
Assurance of a sweeter, fairer fate.

“The Roman rolls from left to right from Maytime unto May;
But the gods shake up their symbols in an absent-minded way.”

"The Symbols"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>The sign work of the Orient it runneth up and down;
The Talmud stalks from right to left, a rabbi in a gown;The Roman rolls from left to right from Maytime unto May;
But the gods shake up their symbols in an absent-minded way.Their language runs to circles like the language of the eyes,
Emphasised by strange dilations with little panting sighs.</p

“Barricaded vision,
Garbed herself in sighs;
Ridiculed the birthmarks
Of the butterflies.”

"The Vestal" <!-- p. 15 -->
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>Once a pallid Vestal
Doubted truth in blue;
Listed red in ruin,
Harried every hue;Barricaded vision,
Garbed herself in sighs;
Ridiculed the birthmarks
Of the butterflies.</p

“They lower pails from heaven's walls to catch the milk-maids mirth.”

"Prescience" <!-- p. 18 -->
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>A precious place is Paradise and none may know its worth,
But Eden ever longeth for the knicknacks of the earth.The angels grow quite wistful over worldly things below;
They hear the hurdy-gurdies in the Candle Makers Row.They listen for the laughter from the antics of the earth;
They lower pails from heaven's walls to catch the milk-maids mirth.</p

“Their language runs to circles like the language of the eyes,
Emphasised by strange dilations with little panting sighs.”

"The Symbols"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>The sign work of the Orient it runneth up and down;
The Talmud stalks from right to left, a rabbi in a gown;The Roman rolls from left to right from Maytime unto May;
But the gods shake up their symbols in an absent-minded way.Their language runs to circles like the language of the eyes,
Emphasised by strange dilations with little panting sighs.</p

“Wore it in a churchyard,
All arrayed with care;
And a painted rainbow
Shone above her there.”

"The Vestal"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>Finally she faltered;
Saw at last, forsooth,
Every gaudy color
Is a bit of truth.
Then the gates were opened;
Miracles were seen;
That instructed damsel
Donned a gown of green;Wore it in a churchyard,
All arrayed with care;
And a painted rainbow
Shone above her there.</p

“The very serpents bite their tails; the bees forget to sting,
For a language so celestial setteth up a wondering.”

"The Symbols"
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>The very serpents bite their tails; the bees forget to sting,
For a language so celestial setteth up a wondering.And the touch of absent mindedness is more than any line,
Since direction counts for nothing when the gods set up a sign.</p

“Treating the sword blade the same as the staff,
Turning the chariot wheel into chaff.”

"The Dust" <!-- p. 23 -->
Venus Invisible and Other Poems (1928)
Kontext: Treating the sword blade the same as the staff,
Turning the chariot wheel into chaff.
Toppling a pillar and nudging a wall,
Building a sand pile to counter each fall.
Yielding to nothing — not even the rose,
The dust has its reasons wherever it goes.

“A precious place is Paradise and none may know its worth,
But Eden ever longeth for the knicknacks of the earth.”

"Prescience" <!-- p. 18 -->
The Janitor's Boy And Other Poems (1924)
Kontext: p>A precious place is Paradise and none may know its worth,
But Eden ever longeth for the knicknacks of the earth.The angels grow quite wistful over worldly things below;
They hear the hurdy-gurdies in the Candle Makers Row.They listen for the laughter from the antics of the earth;
They lower pails from heaven's walls to catch the milk-maids mirth.</p

“The gods released a vision on a world forespent and dull;
They sent it as a challenge by the sea hawk and the gull.”

Venus Invisible and Other Poems (1928), The Wings of Lead
Kontext: The gods released a vision on a world forespent and dull;
They sent it as a challenge by the sea hawk and the gull.It roused the Norman eagerness, the Albion cliffs turned red:
"You fly the wings of logic — can you fly the wings of lead?

“Great is the rose
Infected by the tomb,
Yet burgeoning
Indifferent to death.”

"Tadmore"
Venus Invisible and Other Poems (1928)

“Lo and behold! God made this
starry wold,
The maggot and the mold; lo and
behold!
He taught the grass contentment
blade by blade,
The sanctity of sameness in a shade.”

Impromptu poem, made at the request of reporters, printed in "Markham v. Prodigy" http://jcgi.pathfinder.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,928761,00.html TIME magazine (23 November 1925)

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