In
"People," the
body preoccupies Creeley,
who often mentions
it, the
hands,
the
skin, the
eye,
the head, the
feet, etc.
These
Robert Creeley remains
one of
American
poetry's great syntacticians.
... seems
even
more
strange, the hands
II
one was
born with even
Robert
Creeley remains
one of American
poetry's great syntacticians.
... seems
even
more
strange, the hands
II one was
born with
even
... in a
line --
more
or
less --
but what feet
they
consisted of
> could vary.
...
Does Creeley ever
depart
from that?
Does > he
have a treatise
on meter
...
We normally say
"head to
feet"
when describing something
in its
totality.
But,
Creeley, is
calling
for us to
look at
this
...
only in
cases of >
syllable-stress
prosody (i.e.
meter), where we
count
feet.
... To
return to Creeley
for a
moment:
How
big my
feet seem, how
curiously
solid my
body. ... published
in 1996 by
Meow
Press, Buffalo, NY,
on the
occasion
of Robert Creeley?s
70th birthday.
...
400 square feet
of poetic
punch.
The
Grolier Poetry
Book Shop celebrates
75 years of
...
Decades after such
legends as
Robert
My first flyer
went to
a
teenage
blond with
mother straggling 20
feet behind.
...
?You
look
like you
knew Robert Creeley,?
I
said to
an older guy.
This observation in
Creeley's introduction
to
Words can be
taken two
...
No
amount
of counting,
be
it syllables,
words, stresses, feet,
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