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Edsel Ford Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS F75

Scope and Content Note

Correspondence, literary manuscripts, scrapbooks, photographs, printed material and other papers of the Arkansas prize winning poet and University of Arkansas Distinguished Alumnus Edsel Ford. Correspondents include Kenneth L. Beaudoin, Thomas Stuart Cleworth, Everett McKinley Dirksen, Beverly Githens Dresbach, Glenn Ward Dresbach, Orval Eugene Faubus, Walter John Lemke, Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni, Archibald MacLeish, Harriet Monroe, Thomas Moult, David Wiley Mullins, James Purdy, Otto Ernest Rayburn, Jeanette Rockefeller, Winthrop Rockefeller, Mark Van Doren, and Stanley Miller Williams.

Dates

  • 1928-1982
  • Majority of material found within circa 1950-1970

Creator

Language of Materials

Materials are in English.

Access Information

Please call (479) 575-8444 or email specoll@uark.edu at least two weeks in advance of your arrival to ensure availability of the materials.

Use Information

Restrictions on publication apply: consult reading room staff.

No Interlibrary Loan.

Standard Federal Copyright Laws Apply (U.S. Title 17).

Biographical Note

Edsel Ford was born December 30, 1928 in Eva, Alabama but moved to Avoca, Arkansas in 1939. During school he served as the editor to its paper, The Mountaineer, before graduating in 1948 and in the same year enrolled in journalism at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas. While attending college, Ford won a Poets Roundtable of Arkansas award; founded and edited a literary magazine called Avalaff, co-wrote a book of poetry titled Two Poets in 1951 with a friend and published his own book of poetry, The Stallions Nest, the following year. After graduating from college in 1952, he was drafted into the army but was stationed in Germany due to poor eyesight where he wrote several poems that appear in Stars and Stripes which was re-published as This Was My War in 1955. After being discharged from service in November of 1954, Ford was employed in New Mexico but quit in 1956 after his manuscript, The Manchild from Sunday Creek, won the Kaleidograph Book Competition. In 1958, Ford returned to his parents farm to edit a poetry column and in 1959, he published One Keg Short from Climbing Hills. A few years after in 1961, Ford and his friend, Hank Spruce, created Homestead Publishing and published Fords A Thicket of Sky. In 1962, Fords poem Return to Pea Ridge was read at the dedication of the Pea Ridge battleground. In 1965, he published Love Is the House It Lives In and was paid $750 by Boys Life for St. Nicholas Rides Again. In 1965, Ford was invited by the Library of Congress to record some of his poems. A year later, the University of Arkansas inducted Ford as a Distinguished Alumni, and he received the Alice Fay di Castagnola Award ($3,500) from the Poetry Society of America. Perhaps the most significant of Fords achievements during this decade was that his manuscript Looking for Shiloh was awarded the Devins Memorial Award in the 1968 Kansas City Poetry contest and was published by the University of Missouri Press. In February 1970, Edsel Ford passed away after an exploratory surgery that revealed a large brain tumor.

Extent

29.25 Linear Feet (56 boxes and 2 oversize items)

Arrangement of the Papers

Materials are arranged and described in seven series:

  1. Series 1. Correspondence
  2. Series 2. Literary Manuscripts
  3. Series 2. Subseries A. Individual Poems
  4. Series 2. Subseries B. Manuscripts of Collected Poems
  5. Series 2. Subseries C. Fictional Prose
  6. Series 2. Subseries D. Non-Fictional Prose
  7. Series 2. Subseries E. Drama
  8. Series 2. Subseries F. Readings and Lectures
  9. Series 2. Subseries G. Miscellaneous Notes
  10. Series 2. Subseries H. Manuscripts Written by Persons Other than Ford
  11. Series 3. Scrapbooks
  12. Series 4. Photographs
  13. Series 4. Subseries A. Edsel Ford
  14. Series 4. Subseries B. Edsel Ford's Dog
  15. Series 4. Subseries C. Miscellaneous Persons
  16. Series 4. Subseries D. Fairs, Exhibits, Shows, etc.
  17. Series 4. Subseries E. Crafts and Craftsmen
  18. Series 4. Subseries F. Buildings
  19. Series 4. Subseries G. Recreation Areas and Scenic Views
  20. Series 4. Subseries H. New Mexico Vacation
  21. Series 4. Subseries I. Miscellaneous
  22. Series 5. Printed Material
  23. Series 5. Subseries A. Periodicals Containing Prose by Edsel Ford
  24. Series 5. Subseries B. Periodicals Containing Reference to Edsel Ford or His Work
  25. Series 5. Subseries C. Anthologies Containing Poetry by Edsel Ford
  26. Series 5. Subseries D. Printed Materials Inscribed to Edsel Ford
  27. Series 5. Subseries E. Periodicals Containing Poetry by Edsel Ford
  28. Series 6. Periodical Clippings
  29. Series 6. Subseries A. Clippings of Poems or Prose by Edsel Ford
  30. Series 6. Subseries B. Clippings about Edsel Ford or His Work
  31. Series 6. Subseries C. Clippings of Poems or Prose by Edsel Ford
  32. Series 7. Miscellaneous

Acquisition Information

The Edsel Ford Papers were donated to the Special Collections Department by Henry M. Spruce of Fort Smith, Arkansas in May 1970, Elsa Vaught of Fayetteville, Arkansas in October 1972, and James Tildon Ford of Rogers, Arkansas, Imogene Ford Hinesly of Odessa, Texas, and Willadene Ford White of Bentonville, Arkansas in January-February 1973.

Processing Information

Processed by E.M. Lang; completed in July 1975. Updated by Katrina Windon in October 2021 to add in Item 2.

Index to Correspondents, Series 1

(Names of recipients are in italics; names of senders are not. First number indicates box; second number, following dash, indicates folder; third and subsequent numbers, following second dash, indicate items. Examples:
"Abbott, Richard K. 9-5-170” indicates that Item 170 in Folder 5 in Box 9 is a letter from Abbott."
"Adams, Mary E. 12-4-147” indicates that Item 147 in Folder 4 in Box 12 is a letter to Adams."
A
Abbott, Richard K.
9-5-170
Abell, Bess
13-4-158; 13-1-11, 12, 13; 13-5-195; 14-3-122, 123; 14-5-211, 254; 14-6-262; 15-1-15, 16; 15-3-127; 15-6-287, 288; 16-2-86
Adair, Carolyn
7-3-96.
Adams, Ernestine
6-1-28.
Adams, Faye Carr
12-1-32; 13-1-11, 12, 13; 13-5-195; 14-3-122, 123; 14-5-211, 254; 14-6-262; 15-1-15, 16; 15-3-127; 15-6-287, 288; 16-2-86
Adams, Faye Carr
13-2-88; 14-5-217
Adams, Harry and Nellie
14-5-222; 16-3-109
Adams, Mary C.
13-3-132.
Adams, Mary E.
11-6-194; 12-2-87; 12-3-103; 12-4-157; 12-5-190; 14-2-85; 14-3-151; 15-3-127.
Adams, Mary E.
12-4-147.
Adams, Walter R.
14-5-234.
Adams, Walter R.
14-5-234.
Adlow, Dorothy
11-2-77; 11-4-127
Adlow, Dorothy
11-2-52.
Ahlgren, Frank Richard
1-5-99.
Alice
5-3-73.
Allard, Bessie Butler Newsom
7-2-35; 10-3-64, 67; 12-6-241
Allen, Christine (Mrs. Sam B.)
12-2-66.
Allsopp and Chapple, Little Rock
16-1-60.
Alper, Dorothy (Mrs. Louis)
14-5-229
Amberson, Darlene
10-1-12.
Amy
16-3-110.
Anderson, Clay
14-4-170, 174, 187; 14-6-294; 15-1-7; 15-3-127.
Anderson, Clay
14-4-171; 14-6-288, 297.
Anderson, Thomas E.
14-2-90, 91.
Anderson, Thomas E.
14-2-76, 97.
Andrews, Emilia Celeste Bujac (Mrs. Jessie)
8-4-102.
Angoff, Charles
15-3-127; 16-1-58
Applegate, Mauree
9-1-6, 11
Applegate. Mauree
9-1-7.
Arkansas Gazette
14-5-207
Arndt, Jessie Ash
9-2-72; 12-6-243; 13-1-2; 13-2-49, 62
Ashman, Richard
5-2-51; 5-4-91; 7-4-114; 16-3-111, 112
Austen, Miss
15-1-48
Avrett, Robert
7-1-5; 9-2-58
Ayer, Ethan
8-3-53; 9-2-55
Babson, Antoinette
13-4-177
Bacon, Martha
5-5-113; 6-1-14
Bain, Read
6-1-12.
Baird, Max
15-5-237, 256, 260; 15-6-319
Baird, Max
15-5-234, 247, 256, 269; 15-6-274
Baker, Jack
14-5-220
Baker, Ned
11-1-8; 11-3-120
Balding, Marvin P.
10-4-124; 11-6-195; 12-5-183; 13-1-10; 16-3-113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118
Ballowe, James
7-3-95.
Balogh, Erno
9-4-119, 128
Balogh, Erno
9-4-122, 124
Bard, William E.
16-3-119.
Barker, Elsa (Mrs. S. Omar)
13-1-9.
Barker, S. Omar
5-1-30; 9-5-148; 12-5-207; 13-1-9; 15-4-201.
Barksdale, Eloise (Mrs. William)
11-4-129.
Barnard, Patricia
15-6-325; 16-3-120.
Barnes, K. B.
6-1-34.
Barnsley, Shirley
9-3-103.
Barrett, Viola M.
15-4-170.
Barrett, Viola M.
15-4-182.
Barnes, Elfide
16-3-121.
Barron, Bob
10-5-165.
Barron, Bob
10-5-170.
Bartonek, Frank A.
16-1-54.
Barzel, Ann
16-2-83
Beadle, George W.
10-2-55.
Beasley, Kay
8-4-112.
Beaty, Al
16-3-122
Beaty, W. R.
11-2-53.
Beaudoin, Kenneth L.
13-3-117
Beaudoin, Kenneth L.
13-1-30; 13-3-129
Behrens, Ralph
13-5-225; 14-1-19
Bell, Mabel Goree (Mrs. Clifton)
5-4-88.
Bellows, Silence Buck
8-3-57; 9-2-49; 9-3-85; 10-3-83; 12-2-65, 82; 13-1-14; 13-2-79, 98; 13-5-207; 14-1-27, 45; 14-2-69, 84, 100; 14-3-143, 148; 14-4-180, 185, 190, 196; 14-5-224, 232, 249; 14-6-258, 268, 279, 280, 284; 15-1-36, 44, 52, 54; 15-2-77; 15-4-169, 181, 198; 15-5-219, 250, 253; 15-6-300; 16-3-123, 124, 125
Bellows, Silence Buck
14-6-274, 276, 283; 15-4-173, 180
Bennett, Thomas W. “Bill”.
14-4-202
Benton, Alice
5-1-19.
Bergiadis, Edwin Mae
5-1-31.
Besser, Marianne
4-3-71.
Beven, Beulah (Mrs. Marvel C.)
13-2-80; 13-3-127
Beyer, William
9-4-121
Bierman, Sam
5-2-50.
Bill
1-4-77.
Bill
15-1-49
Billingsley, Belmont (Mrs. C. B.)
10-3-89.
Birdsall, Ruth
11-6-206
Bob
6-3-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
Bobb, Michele
12-2-45.
Bois, Nicole
4-4-92.
Bolan, Loric [?]
8-4-99.
Bonner, Paul H., Jr.
15-3-127
Booker, Theodis
12-3-100.
Booth, Evan
5-3-69.
Boudreau, Ingeborg
14-3-147
Bourne, Joanne
7-2-41.
Bowers, Hazel
9-5-140
Bowes, Ruth
16-1-51
Bowman, Gene
13-2-59
Bowman, June
15-1-53
Bowman, Russell D.
14-6-281
Bowman, Russell D.
14-6-285
Boyd, Sue Abbott
10-3-68; 10-5-143, 158, 166; 11-6-198; 12-1-29; 13-4-150; 15-3-127
Boyd, Sue Abbott
12-2-59, 72; 13-3-138; 15-1-1
Boyd, Thelma
9-5-147
Brand, Millen
13-3-118; 13-5-193
Braunstein, John
12-5-191; 13-5-210
Braunstein, John
12-5-195; 13-5-211
Bridgeman, Lou
1-1-5.
Brinkley, Frances T.
13-5-223
Britton, Katharine
16-3-126
Brobeck, Florence
13-5-199
Brockunier, Elizabeth B.
14-2-66
Brooks, Gwenodlyn
10-1-18.
Brown, Peggy
8-5-130
Brown, Robert L.
9-2-63.
Brown, Robert L.
14-2-104
Brown, Walter Lee
8-3-58.
Brueckheimer, Julie
15-3-124, 129
Brueckheimer, Julie
15-3-126, 135, 137; 15-5-223, 233
Bryant, Clovis
15-6-302
Budd, Chester
12-4-153
Budd, David
13-2-56
Buggie, O. M.
5-1-27.
Burack, Nonny
14-14-199
Burden, Jean
8-1-7; 9-14-113
Burg, Gerald
13-5-194, 206
Burns, Jerry H.
9-3-99; 12-2-85
Bush, Burl K.
16-2-101
Bushko, Andrew A.
15-4-166, 175; 15-5-267
Bushko, Andrew A.
15-4-171, 185
Byrd, C. B. Jr.
12-4-133; 13-2-67
Byrd, C. B. Jr.
12-3-121.
C, Ruth
12-3-94.
Cabaniss, George W.
11-5-166
Caffyn, Lois P.
15-3-140
Caffyn, Lois P.
15-3-144
Calhoun, Crede H.
15-5-222, 225
Calhoun, Crede H.
15-4-212
The California Quarterly
16-3-127
Campanelli, Mary
10-4-137
Canham, Maudie
15-5-238
Cannaday, Frank W.
15-4-165
Cantrell, Oris
11-5-177
Cantrell, Oris
11-5-185
Cappon, Alexander Patterson
14-4-184; 15-3-127
Carey, Pete
13-2-52, 61
Carey, Pete
13-2-55
Carlson, Maurice I.
15-1-55
Carlson, Maurice I.
15-3-145
Carroll, Dudley D.
11-3-98.
Cassin, M.
16-3-128
Cauffmann, R. M.
4-2-50.
Chalmers, Harvey, 2nd
10-1-4; 10-2-57; 15-3-158; 15-4-177, 183; 15-5-241
Chamberlain, Pamela
11-2-60, 66
Chamberlain, Pamela
11-2-65.
Chametzky, Jules
15-3-127
Channing, C. Howard
11-2-75.
Charlie
16-3-129
Chase, C. Thurston
11-1-24; 11-2-8, 63
Chase, C. Thurston
11-2-42, 57, 67
Cherwinski, Joseph
14-2-75, 80
Cherwinski, Joseph
14-2-79
Chew, Byron
7-1-25, 28; 7-4-125; 9-3-99, 101; 12-3-124
Christian Science Monitor
7-5-147; 9-1-25; 9-5-162; 10-4-127; 11-3-94; 11-5-193; 16-3-130, 131, 132, 133
Christian Science Monitor
7-4-120; 9-2-49
Christy, R. Dale
10-3-88.
Clapham, Tom
10-3-71.
Clapp, David B.
3-3-57.
Clark, Montague Graham
15-2-108
Clay, Roberta
5-2-51; 14-2-94
Claybourn, Esther
14-2-74
Clemens, Cyril
15-6-284
Cleworth, Thomas Stuart
12-4-160; 13-3-143; 14-1-47
Cline, Mrs. Winfield Scott
11-2-71.
Cloos, Charles A.
13-3-131
Clough, Ruth Crary
5-1-6; 5-4-96.
Cobb, Adrian L.
11-2-48.
Coco, Marilyn
12-4-166
Coffey, Margaret
5-2-36.
Coker, Mary
11-3-110
Cole, Wilma
9-5-144; 14-2-92
Collie, James M., Jr.
11-6-221
Collie, James M., Jr.
11-5-190
The Colorado Quarterly
16-3-134
Colquitt, Betsy Feagan
9-3-94; 9-4-136; 9-5-166; 10-3-78; 10-5-174, 175; 11-1-15; 12-2-67; 15-4-195; 16-1-3
Colquitt, Betsy Feagan
12-2-69.
Conklin, Barbara Shook
6-2-56; 16-3-135. See also: Shook, Barbara.
Conkling, Alice
5-4-80; 8-3-70
Connery, Rozelle
16-2-79
Conwell, Edward L.
10-3-101
Cornelius, Roberta W.
12-5-206
Cornish, Dudley Taylor
10-3-92; 11-2-79, 165; 12-3-105; 13-2-75; 14-2-62; 14-4-203
Cornish, Dudley Taylor
11-5-172
Counts, Will
9-3-98.
Cousins, Margaret
4-4-85; 4-5-106; 5-5-111; 6-1-11, 27; 6-2-68; 6-3-95; 6-4-121; 7-1-12; 7-2-36, 48, 54; 7-3-90; 7-4-126, 130; 8-5-125; 9-2-100; 10-3-69; 16-3-136
Covington, Jess Baker
14-1-42; 14-2-81, 82, 89, 93
Crawford, Nelson Antrim
1-1-12.
Crossley, Robert P.
6-3-78; 7-1-11
Crowe, Lois Ray
12-5-169
Cruff, Mary Ellen
15-2-70, 82, 88, 96, 97, 113; 15-3-125; 15-4-193; 15-5-236, 239, 246, 248
Cruff, Mary Ellen
15-2-74, 76, 79, 89, 100; 15-5-244, 251, 266
Cummings, Julia F. (Mrs. John J.)
8-4-110
Darden, Chuck
14-5-247
Dark, Harris Edward
13-2-82
Daves, James Gordon
9-2-47; 10-1-15
Daves, Sallie
9-2-40; 15-6-304, 308
Davidson, Gustav
12-2-42; 12-3-101
Davidson, Gustav
12-2-47; 12-5-173
Davidson, Jordan
14-6-261
Davidson, Jordan
14-3-121
Davidson, William Wallace
10-5-160; 12-3-95; 15-3-127
Davis, Anna King
14-5-213
Davis, Charles T.
13-1-36; 15-1-10; 16-1-62
Davis, Charles T.
12-5-184; 13-1-36
Dayton, Patricia
5-5-106; 16-3-137, 138, 139, 140
Dean, Anna Gordon (Mrs. John L.)
9-1-32.
Deane, Ernest Cecil
11-6-212
Decker, Clarence Raymond
12-2-75; 14-1-26; 14-4-160; 14-5-251
Decker, Clarence Raymond
12-5-172; 14-3-157
Deering, Ferdie J.
11-2-54, 69; 11-6-223; 12-3-126; 12-5-200
Deering, Ferdie J.
11-2-40, 70
DeGruson, Gene
12-3-122
DeLello, Marjorie (Mrs. Alfred)
9-5-145, 146
Derman, Harry
15-6-327
Derleth, August William
9-4-116; 11-2-38; 13-4-159, 174
Derry, William C.
4-5-98.
De Santillana, Dorothy (Mrs. G. D.)
15-6-295
De Sola, Vincent
9-3-86.
De Stefano, John
6-1-36.
Detzer, Karl
15-1-13
Devins, Edward A.
15-2-84
Devins, George
15-2-85
De Wilton, R. L.
5-4-97.
Dickey, Roland
9-1-5; 9-5-141, 157; 10-5-154; 11-3-105, 112, 114; 12-4-142; 12-5-189; 13-4-153; 14-1-40
Dickey, Roland
11-5-187; 12-1-23; 12-2-86; 12-3-125; 12-4-164
Dicks, Judson R.
8-4-109
Dierkes, Margaret
4-1-31.
Dietrich, Vivian (Mrs. Harry L.)
16-1-49
Dillard, Caroline B.
15-2-68
Dillingham, Attie P.
14-6-270
Dirksen, Everett McKinley
14-1-3
Dobbie, Barbara
6-2-44.
Dockery, Faye
11-3-109
Docking, William R.
12-4-137
Dodie
13-1-37
Donahue, John
7-3-103
Dorn, Alfred
10-2-59; 14-5-240
Dorothy
15-1-51
Dougherty, Alma K.
8-1-23; 9-3-99
Douglas, Hal Cooper
8-5-147
Dowling, Grace
16-1-56
Draffen, Edythe
15-6-281; 16-1-38
Draffen, Edythe
15-6-297, 326; 16-1-35; 16-2-73
Drake, Walter & Sons, Ins.
16-2-70
Dresbach, Beverly Githens (Mrs. Glenn Ward.)
3-2-22; 4-1-29; 4-2-38; 4-5-122; 5-1-16; 5-2-40, 41; 6-1-6; 6-1-26; 6-3-70; 7-3-99; 7-4-135; 9-5-150, 155; 10-1-11, 29, 33; 10-2-39, 41, 52, 54, 55, 58, 60, 61; 10-3-65, 66, 85; 10-4-107, 109, 110, 115, 118, 122; 10-5-145, 172; 11-1-10, 17, 27, 32; 11-2-41, 68; 11-3-96; 11-4-133, 142, 143, 156; 11-5-158, 160, 161, 169, 170, 184, 186; 11-6-209; 12-1-5, 16; 12-2-70; 12-3-89, 91, 92, 93, 94; 12-4-138, 150, 151, 158, 159, 165, 168; 12-5-170, 171, 186, 187, 198, 199, 202, 205; 12-6-209, 223, 226, 227, 242; 13-1-7, 8, 43; 13-3-136, 137, 141, 144, 145, 146; 13-4-150, 152, 154, 156, 161, 180; 13-5-202; 14-2-87; 14-5-219; 15-1-46, 51; 15-2-81, 87, 94; 15-3-119, 122, 141, 149, 155, 159; 15-4-178, 189, 196, 200, 213; 15-5-218, 227, 229, 240, 242, 252, 263, 268; 15-6-272, 275, 278, 292; 16-1-16, 21, 27, 29, 36, 40, 45, 46, 59; 16-2-89, 97; 16-3-141, 142, 143, 144
Dresbach, Beverly Githens (Mrs. Glenn Ward.)
10-1-4, 26; 10-2-54, 55, 58; 11-5-161, 169; 12-3-94; 12-5-199; 13-1-17; 13-3-133, 143; 13-4-150, 152, 164, 178; 14-3-118; 15-1-51; 15-2-83, 91, 94; 15-3-153, 157, 158; 15-4-177, 183, 188, 194; 15-5-227, 241, 257, 270; 16-1-59
Dresbach, Glenn Ward
4-3-58; 4-5-122; 6-3-70; 7-4-135; 9-5-150; 10-1-11, 29, 33; 10-2-39, 41, 52, 54, 55, 58, 60, 61; 10-3-65, 66, 85; 10-2-39, 41, 52, 54, 55, 58, 60, 61; 10-3-65, 66, 85; 10-4-107, 109, 110, 116, 119, 122; 10-5-145, 172; 11-1-10, 29, 32; 11-2-41, 68; 11-3-96; 11-4-133, 142, 143, 156; 11-5-158, 160, 161, 169, 170, 184, 186; 11-6-209; 12-1-5, 16; 12-2-70; 12-3-89, 91, 93; 12-4-138, 150, 158, 159, 165, 168; 12-5-170, 171, 187, 198, 19, 202, 205; 12-6-209, 226, 227, 242; 13-1-7, 8, 43; 13-3-111, 136, 137, 141, 144, 146; 13-4-150, 152, 154, 156, 161, 180; 13-5-202; 14-2-86; 14-5-234; 15-2-94; 15-3-119, 122; 16-3142, 143, 144
Dresbach, Glenn Ward
1-1-1, 2; 10-1-26; 11-5-161, 169, 184; 12-6-220; 13-3-123, 133, 143; 13-4-164, 178; 14-3-118; 15-2-83, 99
Ducharme, Jacques
6-1-23.
Dudley, Adaline Kerr (Mrs. Morris Woodrow)
4-5-112
Duncan, Harry
12-2-55.
Duncan, Harry
12-1-35.
Duncan, John D.
15-5-232
Dygard, Tom
13-1-42.
Earnhart, Milt
15-6-299
Eason, Helga H.
11-1-28.
Eberhart, Richard
15-3-139
Edwards, David J.
14-2-99
Edwards, David J.
14-2-100
Ee
16-3-145
Einselen, Anne
7-2-40, 47; 7-3-81
Eisenstadt, Evelyn
13-4-185
Elliott, Blanche H.
10-3-82; 11-2-33, 61; 11-3-91, 115; 11-6-204, 207, 214; 12-1-11; 13-2-82; 14-2-107; 14-4-182; 14-6-265, 275, 298; 15-3-116; 15-4-205; 16-3-146, 147
Elliott, Blanche H.
11-2-53, 55; 12-1-19, 20; 12-5-194; 13-2-82; 13-4-162; 14-3-109; 14-5-255; 14-6-259, 266, 269; 15-3-116, 152; 15-6-318; 16-1-39, 53; 16-3-166; 16-4-168, 193
Encounter
16-3-148
Engler, Peter
11-3-88.
Episcopal Churchnews
4-3-70; 5-2-38
Erwin, Dorothie
12-4-161
Esquire
16-3-149
Estin, Mr.
16-3-150
The Evening Star – The Sunday Star, Washington, D.C.
5-2-42.
Evers, William M.
1-1-7.
Everts, Lillian
1-6-109
F, J T W
6-4-107
Faber, Ellen M.
14-6-304; 15-1-29; 15-2-56, 95; 15-4-174; 15-5-261
Faber, Susan
15-5-261
Faubus, Orval Eugene
11-5-181; 13-5-198, 214, 221; 15-1-18
Faubus, Orval Eugene
15-1-8
Fawcett, James Waldo
4-2-43.
Fawcett, James Waldo
5-2-39.
Feiock, Josephine
15-2-62; 15-4-209; 15-5-217, 228, 265; 15-6-283, 307, 315; 16-1-41, 42
Feiock, Josephine
15-5-216, 220, 230; 15-6-310
Ferguson, Mayme
15-1-17
Ferguson, Mayme
15-1-19
Finch, Jeannette
6-1-13.
Findley, John
11-5-164
Fishel, Martin D.
13-1-16
Fishel, Martin D.
13-1-20
Fitzgerald, H. T.
11-6-215
Fitzpatrick, George
1-1-13; 7-4-118; 8-1-12; 8-4-96
Flagler, Jack
14-2-60; 14-4-163
Fleishman, Alfred
12-6-244
Fletcher, Vera Blood
1-1-10.
Flowers, Paul
10-2-49.
Flowers, Paul
10-2-49.
Fly, Murry Henderson
8-4-119
Flynn, Andrea
13-5-204
Fojtik, Sonja
11-3-80.
Foland, H. L.
11-1-9.
Foley, J. J.
9-2-49.
Ford, Edsel
1-1-17; 1-5-97; 4-2-36; 5-2-39; 6-3-73, 74, 82, 89, 92; 6-4-104, 109, 111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91, 97, 99; 7-4-119’ 8-5-147; 9-1-7, 38; 9-2-45, 64; 9-3-93; 9-4-124; 9-5-158; 10-1-20, 23, 26, 27; 10-2-37, 40, 45, 46, 50; 10-3-81, 86, 88; 10-4-108, 133; 10-5-144, 171; 11-1-5, 6; 11-2-37, 39, 40, 45, 52, 57, 65, 67, 70; 11-3-83, 90, 118, 119; 11-4-134, 136, 152; 11-5-167, 171, 172, 185, 187, 190; 11-6-197, 208, 220; 12-1-1, 6, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 34, 35, 36; 12-2-39, 46, 47, 53, 59, 68, 69, 72, 73, 86; 12-3-96, 109, 110, 111, 112, 115, 119, 121, 125; 12-4-135, 136, 140, 145, 146, 147, 154, 162, 164, 167; 12-5-169, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 182, 184, 188, 195, 203; 12-6-219, 222, 228, 234, 246; 13-1-5, 19, 20, 21, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 36, 37, 41, 42; 13-2-50, 55, 56, 61, 66, 71, 76, 77, 84, 88, 92, 95, 103; 13-3-104, 110, 112, 113, 116, 128, 129, 133, 147; 13-4-164, 165, 169, 176, 178; 13-5-196, 208, 217, 222, 230; 14-1-5, 6, 14, 16, 18, 31, 35, 44, 53; 14-2-70,71, 72, 79, 96, 97, 98; 14-3-109, 110, 111, 113, 118, 121, 124, 125, 132, 133, 142, 144, 146, 156, 157; 14-4-159, 164, 171, 173, 176, 186, 188, 189; 14-5-216, 217, 218, 237, 243; 14-6-260, 272, 274, 276, 283, 285, 286, 288, 291, 292, 297, 305; 15-1-1, 4, 8, 11, 19, 25, 28, 33, 36, 37, 38, 41, 48, 49; 15-2-61, 64, 65, 67, 74, 76, 79, 80, 83, 84, 85, 89, 91, 93, 100, 102, 107; 15-3-114, 116, 120, 123, 126, 127, 133, 135, 137, 144, 145, 148, 150, 153, 154, 157; 15-4-161, 165, 168, 171, 172, 173, 180, 182, 182, 184, 185, 186, 188, 194, 207, 210, 212; 15-5-214, 215, 216, 220, 221, 223, 230, 231, 233, 235, 244, 247, 249, 251, 254, 256, 257, 259, 266, 269, 270; 15-6-274, 277, 291, 297, 301, 305, 309, 310, 318, 320, 326; 16-1-11, 13, 24, 26, 32, 33, 35, 43, 44, 53, 55, 56, 57, 63; 16-2-65, 66, 70, 73, 82, 87, 88, 95, 98, 99, 100; 16-3-110, 150; 16-4-215, 217, 218, 219, 220.
Ford, Mr. and Mrs. James Tildon
4-5-118; 5-1-8; 6-2-65
Ford, Mr. and Mrs. James Tildon
4-5-118
Ford, Majorie
5-1-20.
Ford, Pauline (Mrs. Edsall P.)
11-2-62; 11-3-100
Fortenberry, John
15-6-282
Fountain, Sarah M.
11-1-1.
Fountain, Sarah M.
11-1-5.
Frances
15-6-306
Frances
15-6-309
Franklin, Gene
7-1-29.
Fraser, Betty
5-4-91; 5-5-103
Freeman, C. Mitchell
14-1-37
Friedlander, Paul J. C.
13-3-113
Fuller, Beverly C.
5-5-114
Gabriel, Ralph
16-1-14
Gardner, Jeanne Le Monnier (Mrs. Richard B.)
11-1-14.
Gaugler, Joseph P.
10-1-24.
Gennee, Edythe Hope
8-5-135
Georgion, Shirley
12-4-139
Gideon, Russell A.
9-5-158
Gideon, Russell A.
9-5-158
Gilbert, Ruth
13-1-33
Gill, Brendan
12-5-181
Gill, Brendan
12-5-174
Gill, Katie
5-5-112, 117
Gilstrap, Robert
15-4-163
Gingles, Violet (Mrs. Henry Jackson.)
10-5-157
Ginsberg, Louis
12-5-197
Giuffre, Paul L.
14-2-58, 68, 76
Giuffre, Paul L.
14-2-72, 90, 97
Glauber, Robert H.
7-4-107; 8-4-90; 9-5-161
Goodwin, W. J.
12-3-118, 120; 12-5-180; 13-1-26
Goodwin, W. J.
12-4-167
Gormley, Jack
8-5-127
Govin, Albert R.
12-6-238
Govin, Albert R.
12-6-246; 13-1-28, 41
Grant, Lillian
14-3-139
Grasberger, Marie
15-2-106
Gravley, Ernestine Hudlow
1-1-21, 22, 23, 1-2-27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49; 1-3-51; 5-1-26
Gravley, Ernestine Hudlow
1-2-33.
Gray, Mary Ann
16-1-8.
Greene, A. C.
14-6-307
Greer, David
16-2-68
Gregg, Ida
1-5-98.
Grenelle, Lisa
14-5-208
Grey, Helen
11-3-104, 113
Gridley, Roy E.
15-5-249
Gridley, Roy E.
15-5-249
Groll, Edna Mary
11-5-174
Haberly, Loyd
16-2-91
Haberly, Loyd
16-2-88, 99
Hacker, David W.
15-4-203
Hackett, Wayland M. “Bill”
6-4-109
Hagg, Diana Sherwood
1-3-65.
Hagglund, Ben
8-1-17; 8-5-138
Hale, Edward A.
12-2-54.
Hambrick, Jackie
11-5-178
Hames, B. L.
14-6-290
Hanson, Dick
10-1-8.
Hanson, Gertrude
1-1-4.
Harchar, Harry A.
12-1-7.
Harchar, Harry A.
12-3-90.
Harper, Carol Ely
7-3-75.
Harper’s Magazine
4-1-23.
Harrington, Helen
6-4-105; 8-4-107
Harris, Mary Hazell
14-2-67, 88; 14-6-267, 302; 15-2-66, 96; 15-3-121
Harris, Mary Hazell
14-2-70; 14-3-136; 14-6-272, 305; 15-1-37; 15-2-65, 80, 102
Harris, Phil
14-2-98
Hart, M. Blair.
2-4-53.
Hartford Times, Hartford, Conneticut
1-1-3.
Hartley, Margaret L.
5-5-101; 6-1-18; 7-1-22; 7-3-83, 104; 13-2-51; 14-6-273; 15-1-24; 15-3-127
Harvey, Dorothy
12-1-15.
Harvey, Mrs. Odus
12-3-102
Harvey, Paul
13-3-116
Hatfield, Elwin
12-4-163
Hawke, Jane
16-3-151
Hawke, Roberta L.
15-3-127
Hawkins, Isabelle “Lee” (Mrs. James A.)
11-2-44.
Hays, Carl D. W.
15-2-110; 15-3-132
Hays, Carl D. W.
15-2-91
Hedden, Jay W.
16-1-39
Hedrick, Addie M.
5-2-52; 16-1-7
Hendrix, B. G.
15-6-298
Henniker-Heaton, Peter J.
8-5-129; 9-1-15, 22, 34; 9-5-153, 160; 10-4-114; 11-1-35; 11-3-81; 16-3-152
Henniker-Heaton, Peter J.
7-4-121; 11-3-81
Hensley, Violet
13-4-162
Herron, Ellis, Doyle
14-1-15; 14-2-101
Herschend, Mary R.
11-1-2; 11-2-47
Hetzler, Harvey A.
5-4-82.
Hickey, Mary E.
13-4-175
Hickey, Mary E.
13-4-176
Hicks, Gertrude
11-2-55.
Hicks, John
11-4-140
Hicks, Richard I.
15-5-254
Higginson, Fred H.
9-4-112; 11-3-101
Hight, Mrs. Clarence
16-3-153
Hill, Sallie
4-1-30; 8-4-105
Hilmur and Jeanne
16-3-154
Hinesly, Imogene
4-3-59; 11-1-26; 11-3-102
Hinesly, Vance
14-5-236
Hodgkin, Carlyle
7-4-106; 7-5-138; 8-3-68, 69; 8-4-84, 98, 113, 120; 9-1-2, 18, 27; 9-2-66, 74; 9-3-84, 92; 104; 9-4-132; 9-5-142, 154, 165; 10-1-2; 10-2-48, 62; 10-3-76, 100; 10-4-117, 139; 10-5-155; 11-2-56
Hoffman, Henry and Leona
15-6-285
Hogan, Rose
15-6-316; 16-1-5
Hogan, Rose
15-6-319; 16-1-13
Hogeman, Nancy
7-2-45.
Holden, Sarah
13-2-97
Holman, J. Munroe
13-3-119
Holt, Dennis
6-4-123
Holt, Kermit
15-3-160
Hopps, Mrs. Percy S.
5-1-23.
Horne, Josephine (Mrs. Allan W.)
14-4-204
Horry, Evelyn M.
14-1-21
Hough, Henry W.
8-4-103; 9-1-35; 9-3-79; 9-4-105; 9-5-138, 149; 10-3-93; 10-4-123; 10-5-173; 11-2-76; 12-2-84; 12-6-214; 13-2-54; 15-3-146
Howe, Tom
14-5-246
Hubbard, Nancy
11-3-90.
Hubman, Helen R.
16-1-18
Hubman, Helen R.
16-1-24
Huck, Kenneth L.
12-3-127
Huck, Kenneth L.
12-4-146
Hughes, William
15-4-172
Huhn, Huey G.
11-5-173
Hunt, Robert Lile
4-2-35; 12-3-104; 12-6-210
Huntley, Jane Kirk
11-1-23.
Hurley, Joe Boyd
5-1-5.
Hutsell, Joyce J.
14-6-289
Hutsell, Joyce J.
14-6-289
Ignatia, M.
1-1-15.
The Important Era
4-5-104
Ingalsbe, Gene
14-1-4; 15-2-90
Innes, Martha Mae
11-2-78.
Irwin, Clayton
12-1-12.
Jackson, Anne
11-4-141
Jacobs, Thornwell
1-1-19; 3-4-69; 4-2-41; 5-3-75
Jay, A. Blanche
8-5-143
Jeannette
3-3-49.
Jenkins, William A.
11-4-132
Jenkins, William A.
11-4-136
Jo
6-3-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
Jo Anne
13-2-63
John, Charles L.
14-5-232
Johnson, C. W.
16-2-77
Johnson, Jan
16-2-105
Johnson, Lyndon Baines
13-3-123
Johnson, Martha
12-3-90.
Johnson, Martha Sherwood
5-2-48; 11-4-128; 13-2-48; 13-3-109; 13-5-187; 16-3-155, 156, 157
Johnston, Amy Ball (Mrs. Thomas)
14-5-207, 225; 15-2-60
Johnston, Amy Ball (Mrs. Thomas)
16-1-60
Johnston, James R.
13-1-39
Johnston, James R.
13-1-24; 13-2-76
Jones, E. B.
9-1-10.
Jones, Eugene S.
12-2-41; 12-3-123
Jones, Eugene S.
12-1-36; 12-3-119
Jones, Myrtis
16-1-18
Jones, Myrtis
16-1-18
Kanh, Hannah
13-4-182; 15-6-293
Kaleidograph Press, Dallas, Texas
11-1-1.
Kappler, Frank J.
8-3-66.
Karl, Jean
13-1-15
Keithley, E.
5-3-65.
Keller, Sam T.
7-2-66.
Kellerman, Dana F.
12-6-231
Kellerman, Dana F.
12-6-234, 246
Kelley, Hyman
10-1-16.
Kelley, Hyman
10-1-20.
Kelley, Virginia
15-3-115
Kendall, Mel
11-4-122; 11-5-157
Kennan, Clara B.
13-2-69
Kennedy, Ralph C.
16-1-9
Kenseth, Arnold
15-2-78; 15-3-127; 16-2-85, 94
Kerr, Barbara
11-4-149
Kerr, Grayce (Mrs. Robert S.)
11-6-201
Key, Vera E.
5-4-79.
Keys, Mrs. Robert Williams
11-4-139
Kindred, Elpha M.
13-1-1
King, Nicholas
8-2-31, 43; 8-3-72; 8-4-93; 9-1-33; 11-1-30; 11-3-106; 16-3-164
King, Nicholas
11-1-6.
Kingman, M.
13-2-70
Kirk, H. Lildon
4-1-1.
Koen, John T.
12-4-144
Koen, John T.
12-4-135
Koester, Jane
10-3-94.
Kohler, Lucille T.
11-1-12.
Koll, Edda
13-5-199
Korn, Albert Ralph
5-3-61.
Korn, Albert Ralph
4-2-36.
Krakel, Dean
12-1-27.
Kubik, B. M.
7-1-30.
Kuykendall, Mabel M.
8-3-59.
Kuykendall, Ruth
10-5-167; 15-3-127
Ladies’ Home Journal
16-3-158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163
Lambert, C. C.
5-2-36.
Lampe, Theo H.
7-4-112
Langenberger, Barbara
15-3-127
Langland, Joseph
10-4-128
Lanza, Frances
14-1-11
Laschever, Barnett D.
13-2-45
Laschever, Barnett D.
13-1-32
Lask, Thomas
15-6-314
Lask, Thomas
8-3-66; 15-6-320
Lawrence, Seymour
12-2-62.
Lawrence, Seymour
12-2-68, 73
Leath, Marcella Chancellor
2-1-2, 6, 10; 2-2-17, 19, 25; 2-3-31, 37; 2-4-44, 48, 57; 2-5-64, 66, 69; 4-1-5; 5-2-43; 16-3-165
Lee, Belmina (Mrs. Charles)
16-1-59
Lee, Lacy J.
15-2-94, 99; 15-4-191, 206; 15-5-222, 243
Lee, Lacy J.
15-3-120; 15-5-222
Leeper, Lucy
10-3-98.
Leftwhich, Dorothy C.
12-3-93.
Le Master, Jimmie R.
12-6-248; 14-3-124
Le Master, Jimmie R.
13-1-5, 34; 14-3-124
Lemke, Walter John
1-5-96; 2-3-29, 33; 2-4-45; 4-4-86; 4-5-109, 112, 116, 121, 123; 5-1-5, 18, 28; 5-2-51; 5-4-77; 7-3-97; 8-5-144, 147; 13-2-58, 60; 13-4-167
Lemke, Walter John
4-5-112, 123; 5-1-5, 18; 5-2-51; 8-5-144, 147; 13-2-69
Lena [?]
11-3-97.
Lester, George
16-3-166
Leta
6-3-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
Levine, Max and Marjorie Ahrens
2-1-4.
Levine, Paul
10-3-74, 91
Linam, Wanda Rae
6-4-118
Lincoln Leader, Lincoln, Arkansas
11-4-135
Lindabury, Richard V.
6-4-116; 72-56; 7-2-56; 7-4-105
Linham, Helen L.
8-5-140
Lisa
15-6-280
Lord, Russell
3-4-82; 4-1-21; 4-2-42
Lorraine, Lilith
1-2-50; 8-5-144; 11-3-84
Lorraine, Lilith
1-1-14.
Love, George L.
11-1-4.
Lowell, Jim
6-4-100
Lucy
15-6-306
Lucy
15-6-309
Lubbe, John A.
14-2-108
LuVaile, Lyra
2-4-51, 63
Lynes, Russell
4-1-17.
M., C. C.
6-1-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
MaGirl, Mary Lou (Mrs. Willis T.)
5-4-95.
Magnusson, Clifford
14-5-209
Magnusson, Clifford
14-5-218
Maguire, Virginia
10-3-79; 10-5-163
Mainard, Allen G.
6-1-38.
Mallory, Aileen
16-4-167
Malone, Elizabeth
15-4-199; 15-6-311; 16-1-2, 10, 19
Malone, Elizabeth
15-4-204; 15-6-312; 16-1-10
Malone, Marvin
10-5-156; 15-3-127
Manchester, William
10-2-34.
Manchester, William
10-2-40.
Mankiller, Wilma
16-4-168
Marinoni, Marie Stella “Bobsi”
1-5-91; 2-1-1
Marinoni, Rosa Zagnoni
1-1-11, 14, 18, 24, 25, 26; 1-2-28; 1-3-52, 54, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 67; 1-4-68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80; 1-5-81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 100, 101; 1-6-102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118; 2-1-3, 4, 7, 9, 11, 12; 2-2-15, 18, 20, 21, 23, 24, 26; 2-3-30, 34, 35, 36, 39, 41, 42; 2-4-46, 51, 52, 54, 55, 58, 59, 62, 63; 2-5-65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90; 2-6-91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 104, 105, 107, 108, 109; 3-1-1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19; 3-2-20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43; 3-3-44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 56, 60; 3-4-62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 70, 72, 73, 74, 76, 78, 79, 80, 81; 4-1-2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 18, 19, 20, 26, 27, 28, 32, 33; 4-2-34, 39, 40, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 51, 52, 53, 54;4-3-55, 56, 57, 58, 62, 63, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77; 4-4-78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97; 4-5-99, 102, 103, 105, 107, 108, 110, 113, 114, 115, 117, 118, 119, 120, 124; 5-1-2, 3, 4, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 20, 22, 33; 5-2-34, 36, 41, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 50, 53, 55, 56, 56; 5-3-59, 60, 63, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 72, 74; 5-4-76, 78, 81 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 98; 5-5-99, 100, 102, 103, 104, 105, 107, 108, 109, 110, 115, 116, 118, 119; 6-1-1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 16,17, 19, 20, 21, 24, 29, 31, 32, 33, 35, 37; 6-2-39, 40, 41, 42, 3, 45, 46, 47, 49, 51, 53, 54, 55, 57, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 66; 6-3-69, 70, 72, 75, 76, 77, 81, 83, 84, 85, 87, 91, 93, 94, 97, 99; 6-4-102, 103, 106, 108, 110, 114, 115, 117, 119, 120, 122, 123, 124; 7-1-1, 3, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 26, 27, 31, 32; 7-2-33, 34, 37, 39, 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 57, 58, 59, 63, 64, 68; 7-3-72, 73, 74, 76, 78, 79, 80, 82, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 92, 93, 94, 98, 100, 101, 102; 7-4-109, 110, 111, 113, 116, 122, 123, 128, 129, 131, 132, 133, 134, 136, 137; 7-5-139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 148, 150, 151; 8-1-2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 20, 22, 26, 29, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49; 8-3-50, 51, 52, 56, 61, 62, 63, 67, 71, 73, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83; 8-4-85, 86, 87, 89, 91, 101, 104, 108, 111, 115, 118; 8-5-121, 122, 128, 131, 132, 134, 137, 145; 9-1-1, 3, 4, 8, 13, 16, 17, 23, 31, 39; 9-2-41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 48, 53, 54, 56, 57, 60, 65, 67, 70, 73, 75; 9-3-77, 78, 80, 82, 83, 88, 96, 99, 101, 102; 9-4-108, 110, 115, 120, 123, 126, 129, 133; 9-5-163, 164, 167, 168, 172, 173, 174; 10-1-1, 3, 6, 7, 10, 14, 19, 22, 25, 31; 10-2-35, 43, 51, 23, 56, 63, 64; 10-3-64, 73, 77, 80, 84, 87, 90, 97, 102; 10-4-110, 112, 113, 120, 121, 129, 130, 131, 132, 134, 135; 10-5-142, 146, 149, 150, 152, 153, 159, 162, 164; 11-1-7, 11, 16, 18, 19; 11-2-49, 64, 72, 74; 11-3-82, 86, 89, 96, 111, 117; 11-4-123, 125, 129, 130, 138, 144, 153, 155, 162, 176, 180, 189; 11-6-202, 205, 210, 216, 225, 227; 12-1-4, 10, 13, 17, 18, 21, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33; 12-2-38, 48, 51, 57, 60, 64, 71, 74, 80; 12-3-97, 98, 106, 107, 108, 113, 124; 12-4-134, 143, 152, 155; 12-5-192, 196, 201, 208; 12-6-217, 221, 224, 230, 232, 233, 237, 239, 240; 13-1-3, 4, 35, 44; 13-2-64, 65, 78; 13-3-105, 108, 114, 115, 121, 122, 124, 125, 131, 135, 138, 142; 13-4-155, 157, 160, 179, 186; 13-5-189, 190, 192, 209, 212, 218, 223, 226, 231; 14-1-2, 7, 23, 24, 34, 49, 57; 14-2-59, 65, 73, 77, 105; 14-3-128, 131, 138, 140, 149; 14-4-158, 161, 168, 172, 177, 183, 191, 193, 200; 14-5-215, 223, 238, 242, 248, 253; 14-6-257, 264, 282, 287, 299; 15-1-3, 20, 22, 32, 42, 47; 15-2-73, 75, 105; 15-3-131, 136, 156; 15-4-187, 197, 208; 15-5-258, 271; 15-6-289, 296, 313, 323; 16-1-1, 17, 23; 16-2-64, 75, 78, 80, 81, 84, 93; 16-4-169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181
Marinoni, Rosa Zagnoni
1-1-17; 1-3-55, 65; 1-4-75, 77; 1-5-95; 1-6-109; 2-1-4; 2-3-30, 36; 2-4-51, 54, 63; 2-5-67; 3-2-31, 22; 3-3-49, 57, 60, 61; 3-4-81; 4-1-4; 4-2-35, 38; 4-5-98, 102; 5-1-16, 20, 33; 5-2-41; 5-3-69; 5-4-83, 85, 91, 97; 5-5-103; 6-1-6, 36; 6-2-50, 65; 6-3-70; 6-4-101, 123, 124; 7-1-25, 27; 7-2-35, 60; 7-4-125; 8-1-8; 9-2-53; 9-3-89, 99, 101; 9-4-108; 10-3-64; 10-4-110, 111; 10-5-148; 11-2-74; 11-3-96; 11-4-129; 12-1-29; 12-3-124; 12-5-185; 13-5-223; 14-4-177
Marlin, Diana L.
15-3-127
Martin, Albro
9-5-156
Martin, Roberta
8-3-74; 8-4-97, 114, 117; 9-1-9; 13-1-40; 13-2-46; 13-4-165; 16-1-44, 55; 16-4-182
Martin, Roberta
13-4-165; 16-1-44, 55
Martindell, Jackson
14-3-120; 14-4-197; 14-5-221; 15-1-6
Martinez, Ramona Maher
8-1-8; 9-2-62
Marugg, Marjorie (Mrs. Alfred)
15-6-290
Marx, Anne
14-1-22
Mary
14-3-119
Mason, Mrs. Ezra
14-5-235
Masters, Marcia
16-1-43
Mathews, Johnye E.
16-1-52; 16-2-76
Mathews, Johnye E.
16-1-57
Mathews, Richard
14-5-206
May
16-4-183
May, James Boyer
12-2-245
Mayfield, Esther L.
14-4-178, 192, 194; 15-3-147; 16-2-72
Mayfield, Esther L.
14-4-188, 202; 14-5-230; 15-4-163
Mays, Joseph
16-1-47
McCalla, Gary E.
15-4-161
McCall’s Magazine
11-1-24.
McCandden, L.
1-5-95.
McCarthy, Alice E.
9-1-29.
McCarthy, Harold T.
11-3-107
McCormick, Edwin Haynes
5-1-32.
McCubbin, Bettye
15-3-133
McCubbin, Bettye
15-3-133
McCutcheafs, John R.
4-1-22.
MacDuff, Inez H.
1-1-20.
McFarland, Elizabeth
4-5-101; 5-1-25; 8-1-16; 8-4-88
McGaha, Janene
13-2-91
McGee, I. H.
6-3-86.
McGee, James D.
15-6-276
McGillicuddy, Maggie
11-5-168
MacKaye, Mary Anne
7-2-69.
McKean, Christina M.
1-3-53.
McKelvie, C. L.
10-2-42.
McKinney, Margery
15-3-117, 130, 143,151; 15-4-202, 211; 15-5-224; 16-1-28
McKinney, Margery
15-3-123, 150; 15-4-210; 15-5-221
MacLeish, Archibald
15-6-301
MacLeish, Archibald
15-6-301
McMillan, Mrs. J. C.
16-2-71
McPherson, Elizabeth P. (Mrs. H. A.)
14-2-104
McPherson, Elizabeth P. (Mrs. H. A.)
14-2-104
McVay, Dan
11-4-151
Meacham, Harry M.
8-1-1.
Melvin, Jean S. (Mrs. George J.)
12-6-216, 225, 229
Melvin, Jean S. (Mrs. George J.)
12-6-219, 228
Menn, Thorpe
9-3-76; 9-4-117, 135; 9-5-151; 10-1-5, 28; 10-2-44; 10-3-99; 10-4-125; 10-5-147, 176; 11-1-13; 11-2-73; 11-3-99; 11-5-161, 169, 192; 12-2-56, 79; 12-3-117; 12-6-218; 13-2-87; 14-1-28; 14-4-167; 14-5-256; 15-3-127, 142; 16-1-6, 15, 20; 16-4-184, 185, 186
Menn, Thorpe
9-2-64; 12-5-203; 16-1-11
Menor, C. E., Jr.
5-1-7.
Meyer, Inez Bartley
1-4-75.
Miceli, Frank
16-2-101
Millar, Howard
12-4-136
Millar, Louise M. (Mrs. Horace P.)
15-2-109
Miller, Marvin Alwin
5-2-51; 14-3-155; 14-4-181
Miller. Marvin Alwin
14-4-176
Miner, Virginia Scott (Mrs. Dewey H.)
8-5-141
Mitchell, Henry
14-6-306; 15-3-127
Modern Romances
16-4-187
Monroe, Harriet
1-1-1.
Montgomery, Eileen
16-1-4
Montgomery, Vaida Stewart
6-2-67; 6-3-71, 79, 88, 90, 98; 6-4-112; 7-1-4, 16; 8-1-24; 8-4-94
Montgomery, Vaida Stewart
6-3-73, 82, 89, 92; 6-4-104
Moore, Betty
5-3-70.
Moore, Charles F., Jr.
10-3-103
Moore, Kerman E.
11-3-103
Morgan, Doyle
13-3-130
Morris, Mrs. B. L.
11-5-188
Morris, Ernest
11-3-81.
Morris, Leavitt F.
8-2-28; 13-2-96
Morris, Leavitt F.
7-4-112
Morris, Marjorie
6-2-48.
Morris, Robert L.
15-2-86,104; 15-4-192
Morris, Robert L.
15-2-93; 15-3-114, 127; 15-4-186
Morse, Franklin M.
15-4-164, 179
Morse, Franklin M.
15-4-168, 184
Moses, William Robert
14-1-25
Moult, Thomas
15-5-227
Mount, Cecil F.
14-6-259
Mulder, William
9-4-111
Mullins, David Wiley
11-4-146; 12-1-26; 12-2-40; 12-3-114; 12-6-220; 13-4-152; 14-1-32, 46, 52; 14-3-137; 14-6-293
Mullins, David Wiley
11-4-145; 12-1-22; 12-2-39; 12-3-110; 13-3-145; 14-6-291
Murfey, Etta Josephean
9-3-89.
Murphy, Joseph Colin
12-5-193
Murphy, Paul
15-1-26, 30
Murry, George
13-2-102
National Geographic Society
15-1-11
Neal, Frances (Mrs. Karl)
15-6-294
Neal, Frances (Mrs. Karl)
12-5-175; 12-6-291
Nelson, Olive (Mrs. Eugene)
5-1-24.
New York Herald Tribune
16-4-188
New York Herald Tribune
9-3-86; 11-2-71; 13-5-199
New York Times
9-4-122
New York Times
9-1-28.
The New Yorker
16-4-189
The News, New York
7-2-67.
Newton, Pauline B.
11-6-213
Nicholas, Georgia C.
6-4-101
Nicholl, Louise Townsend
14-5-227, 239, 241, 244; 16-1-48
Nicholl, Louise Townsend
14-5-237, 243; 16-2-66
Nichols, Wade H.
12-6-236
Niemann, Karen
6-3-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
Niles, Faye Phillips
11-3-92.
Nims, William H.
8-1-19.
Nixon, John, Jr.
14-5-245; 14-6-300; 16-2-106
Nugget
16-4-190
O’Connell, James B.
7-4-115
O’Connell, James B.
7-4-119
Ogden, Warren C.
11-6-218
O’Keeffe, Maureen
13-5-229; 14-1-55; 14-6-271; 14-6-178; 15-4-176
Orr, Joan
14-6-266
Orth, Jan
10-5-169
Owen, Guy
14-3-116; 16-4-191
Owen, Guy
14-3-110
Ozarks Arts and Crafts Festival
16-1-4
Palmer, Bob, Jr.
12-5-204
Palmer, Marguerite Bowers
9-4-114; 11-1-20; 12-5-185, 199, 204; 12-6-215; 13-3-106; 14-1-54, 56; 14-6-227; 15-1-9, 14; 15-2-98; 15-5-245; 16-4-192
Parsons, Cynthia
11-5-182; 12-4-128; 13-1-38; 13-3-140
Patterson, Edna K.
12-2-76.
Patterson, Eva B.
10-2-38.
Patterson, Eva B.
10-2-46.
Patterson, Pearl L.
6-1-25; 7-2-20
Patterson, Rebecca
15-2-112; 15-3-127
Patton, Ward C., Jr.
12-4-148, 156; 13-2-72, 81, 89
Patton, Ward C., Jr.
12-4-154; 13-2-71
Paul, Harriet M.
15-6-279
Peeples, Laura S.
8-4-106
Pemberton, Ruth (Mrs. Hal)
16-4-193
Pennington, Dwight
9-2-64; 10-5-171
Pennington, Dwight
10-5-171
Peter, Lily
3-1—6; 12-1-8; 12-6-247; 13-1-6, 22; 13-2-47, 57, 73; 14-3-117, 130; 14-4-205
Pfeiffer, Eric
8-1-18; 8-4-95
Phelan, Edna A.
11-5-179
Phelan, Edna A.
11-5-171
Phelps, Harold W.
11-6-199; 13-2-83; 15-6-305; 16-4-194
Phelps, Harold W.
15-6-305
Phillabaum, Leslie E.
15-1-35
Phillabaum, Leslie E.
15-1-38
Philpot, Fred A.
1-5-93; 5-2-57
Picola, Henry
9-3-81.
Pilutik, Nina
8-1-15.
Pinzl, Elaine
13-2-53
Pinzl, Elaine
13-2-66
Pitts, Cynthia
13-4-181
Plimpton, George
14-2-102
Plugge, Betty
16-2-102
Poe, Jackie
11-3-93.
Polking, Kirk
16-1-50
Pollack, Merrill
4-5-100
Polley, Robert L.
10-1-30, 32; 11-3-116; 11-4-124, 147, 150; 11-5-159; 11-6-216, 222; 14-1-10
Polley, Robert L.
11-3-119; 11-6-220; 12-2-53; 12-3-96, 115; 12-5-182; 13-5-196; 14-1-6; 14-2-58
Pool, George Elrod
1-3-55.
Porter, W. H.
6-1-8.
Post, Mrs. Herbert Wilson
14-1-3
Post, Mrs. Herbert Wilson
14-1-3; 14-2-103
Powers, John R. Jr.
15-1-50
Powers, Virginia
16-4-195
Price, Donald H.
16-1-30
Prince, Clara Catherine
8-3-55, 60; 8-5-139; 9-1-30
Purdy, James
11-1-27.
Quemada, David V.
15-6-303
Rago, Henry
13-1-17
Ragon, Imogene
11-6-224
Rainey, Fred
8-2-45.
Ralph
9-3-91.
Randall, Katharine
7-2-62.
Raphael, Bette-Jane
14-1-33
Rauth, Mary
6-5-50, 64
Rayburn, Otto Ernest
1-5-97; 5-1-5; 9-4-125, 127
Read, Lessie Stringfellow
5-1-1.
Reed, David A.
7-1-27.
Reed, Jack, Jr.
14-4-177
Rhone, Kenneth D.
8-4-100; 8-5-142; 9-2-21; 9-5-143
Richard
5-1-33; 5-4-85
Richards, Benjamin
7-2-65.
Richardson, Jim and Maggie
16-4-196
Rill, Mrs. Clarence
13-5-191
Roberts, Juanita D.
13-5-203
Roberts, Ruby Altizer
13-5-205
Robinson, Selma
15-6-276
Rockefeller, Jeanette (Mrs. Winthrop)
12-3-111; 12-6-222
Rockefeller, Winthrop
14-4-195; 14-6-296; 15-2-57
Rockefeller, Winthrop
14-6-292; 15-2-57
Rohrer, David C.
12-4-141
Roots, Louise F.
9-4-131; 9-5-159; 10-3-95; 10-4-136; 12-1-15; 12-2-81; 13-3-120; 13-5-201; 14-1-20; 14-5-228; 15-2-71
Rosenblum, Morris
10-5-151
Rosenfield, Paul
14-6-303; 15-4-167
Rosenfield, Paul
15-3-148
Rosenthal, Richard
10-1-9, 21
Rosenthal, Robert
10-2-54.
Ross, Grace
8-3-59.
Rosso, John Martin
14-1-12, 29
Rosso, John Martin
14-1-16
Rozak, Alliene
14-5-255
Rubin, Larry
13-4-184; 13-5-220
Rule, Veta Turner
7-5-149
Rushing, Marie Morris
5-1-29.
Rushing, Parker
15-1-2
Rushing, Parker
15-1-4
Russell, Hollis
13-5-227; 14-1-9; 14-1-17; 16-1-10, 12
Russell, Hollis
14-1-51; 14-2-61, 78; 16-1-12, 22, 25
Ruvinsky, Aaron
13-3-139
S., E.
16-4-207
Sabin, Louis
11-6-196, 200, 203, 226
Sabin, Louis
11-6-197
Saleisnick, Jennie E.
9-1-28.
Sampley, Arthur M.
10-3-104
The Saturday Evening Post
4-1-24; 16-4-197, 198, 199, 200
Saunders, Katherine
7-4-121
Sayre, Lee B.
12-5-176
Schader, Freddy
11-4-148
Schay, Edith G.
13-5-204
Schay, Edith G.
13-5-204
Schermerhorn, J. H.
15-2-69
Schmid, Arthur J., Jr.
13-2-93; 13-3-149; 13-5-219
Schmid, Arthur J., Jr.
14-1-5
Schneider, Harold W.
15-3-127
Scholarship Committee, Northwest Arkansas Times
8-5-147
Schult, Elva
4-3-61.
Schuyler, Helen
15-3-127
Sclanders, Ian
6-1-4, 30
Scott, Burgess H.
8-5-146
Sell, Janalea
14-2-95
Selph, Carl
1-6-119, 120; 2-1-5, 8; 2-2-13, 14, 16, 22; 2-3-27, 28, 30, 32, 38, 40, 43; 2-4-47, 49, 50, 54, 56, 60, 61; 2-5-67, 71, 75; 3-2-21; 3-4-81; 4-1-3, 4; 4-3-60
Selph, Carl
3-2-23.
Shannon, Edith
1-2-33.
Shapiro, Harold Roland
10-3-105; 14-1-1; 14-3-112; 14-4-169; 15-2-57; 15-4-190
Shapiro, Harold Roland
10-3-103; 10-4-108; 14-4-173; 115-2-57, 61; 15-3-154; 15-4-207; 16-2-109
Sharpe, E.
13-2-68
Shaw, Blanche
15-2-94
Shaw, Clyta
5-1-13, 18
Sherwood, Diana
1-1-6.
Shields, Milford E.
9-4-130; 9-5-139
Shockley, Martin
14-3-114, 127, 141
Shockley, Martin
14-3-125, 142
Shoeberlein, Marian
4-5-102
Shook, Barbara
6-3-80, 96; 6-4-113; 7-1-2, 6, 21; 7-2-42, 44, 49; 16-4-201, 202. See also: Conklin, Barbara Shook
Shuford, Cecil Eugene
12-6-211; 14-5-212
Shuford, Cecil Eugene
13-1-29; 14-5-216
Shupin, Karl
16-4-203, 204
Sieg, Gerald Chan
9-2-69; 15-3-127
Sievewright, George
5-1-15.
Simpson, Ralph
14-2-82
Sizer, Samuel Augustus
16-2-107, 108
Slaven, Joe J.
15-3-134
Slaven, Joe J.
15-3-138
Slote, Bernice
6-1-22.
Smith, Dede
8-1-25; 8-2-27
Smith, Doris V.
4-1-25; 4-2-37
Smith, Eula Mae (Mrs. Sam W.)
16-1-61
Smith, Eula Mae (Mrs. Sam W.)
16-1-63
Smith, Jeanne
8-5-123
Smith, Kathleen
15-2-101
Smith, Rodney
14-4-166, 175, 198
Smith, Rodney
14-4-189
Snead, Helen O. (Mrs. George M.)
12-4-131
Snell, Dixie
15-3-152
Snelling, Lois
9-5-169
Spain, Richard L.
10-5-148
Spath, Nona D.
7-2-60.
Spencer, Lee B.
12-2-61.
Spruce [?], Alice
12-2-78.
Spruce, Everett
14-6-276
Spruce, Henry M. “Hank”
12-2-63; 14-1-51; 14-2-61, 78; 14-6-289; 15-3-138; 15-4-204; 15-5-234; 15-6-312; 16-1-12, 22
Spruce, Henry M. “Hank”.
11-1-10; 12-6-242; 14-1-30, 41, 44; 14-4-186; 14-5-214, 236; 15-6-317; 16-1-14
Spurgeoin, Alice
10-1-13.
Stanley, Herb
15-3-147
Stanton, Beryle
16-2-69; 16-4-205
Stanza
1-1-8.
The Star and Herald, Panama City
11-2-39.
Starr, John R. “Bob”
15-5-226
Starr, John R. “Bob”
15-5-231
Starr, Paul D.
14-2-103
Steele, Frank
15-1-12, 31, 43, 45
Steele, Frank
15-1-25, 34
Steele, William O.
11-3-85.
Stenerson, Grace Q.
12-2-49.
Stevens, Ellen
11-1-31.
Stewart, Roscoe
9-3-95; 13-1-23, 27; 13-3-148; 14-4-159, 162, 165
Stewart, Roscoe
13-1-19, 25, 31; 13-2-50; 14-4-159
Stewart, Sue
16-2-103
Steyn, Mary T.
15-1-23, 40; 15-2-72; 15-3-128; 15-5-262
Steyn, Mary T.
15-1-33; 15-2-67; 15-5-215
Stillman, Bradford
14-5-252
Stocking, Marion Kingston
7-4-108; 9-2-71; 15-3-127; 16-4-206
Stodghill, Pat
16-1-37
Stoianoff, Ellen A.
14-2-64; 15-2-63
Stoianoff, Ellen A.
14-2-71
Stone, Willard
11-2-34, 36, 46, 59; 11-3-108; 11-6-217; 12-1-9; 12-5-194; 12-6-212, 213; 13-4-168
Strong, Julia Hurd
14-1-3
Stuart, Dabney
12-4-132; 14-3-152; 14-5-226
Suczek, Alexander
13-2-86
Sullivan, Aloysius Michael
12-5-177
Sundbye, Ronald L.
15-6-273
Swan, Paul
9-1-14, 19, 20, 24, 26, 36, 37; 9-2-61
Swanee, Roger
11-6-211
Swartz, Sarah Jane
14-2-83
Symonds, Alan R.
12-1-23.
Talisman
16-4-208
Tatarian, Roger
15-5-235
Taylor, Millicent J.
8-4-116, 124; 8-5-136; 9-1-12; 9-2-50, 52, 68; 9-3-87; 9-4-118, 137; 10-2-36; 10-3-75
Taylor, William E.
12-2-58; 14-3-134; 14-5-230
Tempel, Earle
9-3-93, 97; 9-4-106; 16-4-209
Tempel, Earle
9-3-93.
Thomas, Fran
3-3-60.
Thomas, Georganne S.
15-6-317
Thomas, Vivian
16-4-210, 211
Thompson, Charles F.
10-2-47.
Thompson, Charles F.
10-2-45, 50; 10-3-106
Thompson, Mrs. Earl
10-2-49.
Thorne, Evelyn
1-1-9, 16; 16-4-212, 213
Thornton, Lalia Mitchell
2-3-36; 3-3-60, 61; 6-4-124
Thorson, Herbert E.
8-5-133; 9-2-59; 9-3-90; 11-1-22, 25; 11-5-183; 12-1-3; 16-4-214
Tidwell, Derk
6-4-118
Tomsych, Catherine H.
10-5-141
Tomsych, Catherine H.
10-5-144
Toppi, Jeanette
11-2-42, 43; 12-3-99
Traub, Jack
5-1-14.
Travet [?], Vincent [?]
1-5-94.
Travis, Ethel P.
5-3-64.
Trent, Lucia
5-2-44, 49
Tucker, Merle H.
9-5-175
Tullas, Will
2-4-54.
Turley, Helen (Mrs. Dean C.)
7-4-120
Turner, Decherd, Jr.
12-2-83.
Turner Mary. (Mrs. A. H.)
15-6-327
Turner, Mary (Mrs. A. H.)
15-6-327
Tyler, Isabel
11-4-126
Tyler, Ruth
14-5-210
Upton, Lucile Morris
4-1-16; 6-2-52
Urry, William
10-2-58.
Vajda, Jaroslav
15-2-58
Van Doren, Mark
15-3-118
Vartan, Vartanig G.
16-4-215
Vastine, Thomas J.
5-2-54; 5-3-62
Vaughan, John D.
16-2-92
Vaughan, John D.
16-2-95
Vaughan, Samuel S.
15-1-27, 39; 15-2-59, 111
Vaughan, Samuel S.
15-1-28, 41; 15-2-64
Vaught, Elsa (Mrs. Walter)
9-5-171; 10-3-88, 96; 10-4-111, 126, 138; 10-5-140; 11-2-50; 11-4-121, 122, 131, 135, 137, 145, 152, 154; 11-5-163, 175, 188, 191; 12-1-2, 14, 37; 12-2-43, 44, 50, 52, 77; 12-4-130; 12-5-179; 13-4-163, 166, 171, 173; 13-5-197; 14-1-30, 36, 38, 39, 41, 43, 48; 14-2-63, 89; 14-3-135, 154; 14-6-295; 15-1-5; 15-4-162; 15-6-321, 322; 16-2-74, 107, 108; 16-4-216
Vaught, Elsa (Mrs. Walter)
9-1-38; 9-2-45; 10-1-23, 27; 10-2-37; 10-3-81, 86, 88; 10-4-133; 11-2-45; 11-3-118; 11-4-122, 134, 146, 152; 11-5-167, 188; 11-6-208; 12-1-1, 6, 34; 12-2-46; 12-3-109, 112; 12-4-140, 162; 12-5-188; 13-2-84, 95; 13-4-269; 13-5-222; 14-1-14, 18, 35, 53; 14-2-81, 89, 96; 14-3-113, 137; 14-4-164; 16-4-217, 218, 219, 220
Veazey, Kathryn Laney
13-2-98
Veazey, Kathryn Laney
13-2-98
Victor, Terry (Mrs. Irving)
13-2-101
Victor, Terry (Mrs. Irving)
13-3-110
Vinal, Harold
4-1-15; 4-3-65; 4-5-111; 6-2-58; 7-1-10; 11-1-3
Vining, Peggy
13-3-126; 14-4-201; 14-5-214
Vining, Peggy
13-3-128, 134
Vrbovska, Anca
14-6-301; 15-1-21
W., M. B.
6-3-74; 6-4-111; 7-2-38, 61; 7-3-77, 91
Wagner, Charles Abraham
13-5-215; 14-3-126, 153; 14-4-179; 16-1-31
Wagner, Charles Abraham
14-3-144, 156; 15-6-277; 16-1-33; 16-2-98
Walker, Don D.
7-4-117
Walker, Ralph W.
12-3-116; 12-4-149
Walker, Ralph W.
12-4-145
Wallace, David
7-4-124
Walsh, Johanna
13-2-85
Wanslow, Pat Crawley
4-5-123
Ward, Marie Erwin
5-2-35; 9-4-108; 10-3-72; 16-4-221, 222
Ward, May Williams
13-4-170; 13-5-188; 16-4-223
Ward, P. J.
15-5-214
Warren, Hamilton
16-2-90, 96
Warren, Hamilton
16-2-87, 100
Waterhouse, Helen L.
5-1-21.
Weathers, Winston
16-4-224
Weaver, John Carrier
15-5-264
Webb, Rozana
11-2-74.
Weekes, Maude K.
8-3-65.
Weidner, H.
5-1-9.
Weinberg, Rose
14-3-145
Weinberg, Rose
14-3-146
Weinrod, Margaret
8-2-34.
Wells, Josephine V. (Mrs. Thad)
9-4-134
Weston, Elizabeth
11-5-168
Whisnant, Charleen
13-2-100; 13-3-107; 13-4-151; 13-5-224
Whisnant, Charleen
13-3-147
Whitman, Ruth
10-5-168; 11-3-87
Whitman, Ruth
11-2-37; 11-3-83
Whitney, Bethine Standart
14-2-106; 14-3-115
Whitney, Bethine Standart
14-3-111, 132
Whitsitt, Frank
16-1-34; 16-2-104
Whitsitt, Frank
16-1-32
Whitson, Mrs. R. L.
14-6-269
Whittemore, Reed
13-2-90, 94
Whittemore, Reed
13-2-92; 13-3-104
Wickham, Florence
8-3-54.
Wiggins, Florence Roe
15-6-324
Wilder, Eloise
5-2-37.
Wiles, Ray C.
7-4-127
Wille, Bess
8-1-10.
Williams, E. I. F.
6-1-15.
Williams, Gurney
8-1-21.
Williams, James Edward, Jr.
14-2-104
Williams, James Edward, Jr.
14-2-104
Williams, John B. F., Jr.
2-6-106; 3-3-54, 58, 59; 3-4-68, 71, 77, 83, 84
Williams, Loring
8-2-30; 8-5-126; 9-4-109; 9-5-152; 10-3-70; 10-5-161; 11-3-95; 14-1-50; 16-4-225
Williams, Stanley Miller
15-2-103; 15-3-127
Williamson, Margaret
1-1-2.
Wilson, Earl
11-2-51.
Winkler, Beatrice
14-1-8
Winsett, Marvin Davis
12-6-235; 13-4-183
Winsett, Marvin Davis
12-5-178
Winter, Alice
16-2-67
Winter, Mary Adams (Mrs. Milo Kendall)
8-4-92.
Wise, Ian Bruce D.
13-1-18
Wise, Ian Bruce D.
13-1-21
Wittig, Roland A.
13-2-74
Wittig, Roland A.
13-2-77
Women’s Circle, Lynn, Massachusetts
13-2-99
Women’s Circle, Lynn, Massachusetts
13-2-103
Wood, Clifford
8-2-32.
Wright, Lin H.
14-6-263
Wright, Lin H.
14-6-260
Wright, Mary Duncan
10-1-17.
Yarbrough, Anna Nash
13-5-200, 216, 228, 255
Yarbrough, Anna Nash
13-5-208, 217, 230; 15-5-259
Young, Lincoln B.
14-3-129
Young, Lincoln B.
14-3-133

Index to poems by title

(Series Number—Sub-series Number—Box Number—Item Number)
A La Car(te)
2-A-1-1
Abandoned Schoolhouse
2-A-1-2, 3, 4; 5-E-7-115; 6-A-1-1, 2
"About Grampa, Who Died Poor"
2-A-1-5, 6, 7; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-167
"About Grampa, Who Died Poor"
5-E-12-269; 6-A-1-4, 5
About Heartbreak (And Defense)
2-A-1-8, 9; 6-A-1-6
About That Dance
2-A-3-365
About Women
2-A-1-10
Acceptance
2-A-1-11; 6-A-1-7
Acceptance
2-A-1-12
Acceptance
2-A-1-13; 6-A-1-8
Actor
2-A-1-14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-6-104
Additional Lines
2-A-1-24; 6-A-1-9
Adjusting The Barometer
2-A-1-25; 6-A-1-10
Adjustment
2-A-1-26
Affirmation
2-A-1-27
Affirmation
2-A-1-28; 5-E-10-195
After Every Battle
2-B-7-126
After The Office Party
2-A-1-29
After Winter
2-A-1-30; 6-A-1-11
Afternoon In The Suburbs
2-A-1-31
Aftersong
2-A-1-32; 2-B-7-125
Afterthought
6-A-1-12
Against the Night
6-A-1-13
Aging Comedian
2-A-1-33
The Ague of Chivalry
2-A-1-34; 2-A-4-337
"Air View, Post Bellum"
6-A-1-14
Alert!
2-B-7-126
All In…The Family
6-A-1-16
All Things Glum To Those Who Wait
2-A-1-35
All’s Well That Ends
6-A-1-17
Alternate
2-B-7-124; 6-A-1-19, 20
Alternate
2-A-1-36, 37; 6-A-1-18
A.M. Meditation
5-E-4-7
Ambuscade
2-A-1-38; 5-E-6-96
American Zone
2-A-1-39
And God Looked Down
2-A-1-40; 5-E-12-258
And the World Laughs With You?
6-A-1-21
And They Said He Wouldn’t Get To First Bass!
2-A-1-41; 6-A-1-22
Andy’s Place
2-A-1-42; 5-E-13-275
Angel With A Black Eye
2-A-1-43
Animal
2-A-1-44
Animals
2-A-1-45
Anniversary Song
2-A-1-46; 2-B-7-126
Announcement
6-A-1-23
Announcement
2-A-1-47; 2-B-7-105, 118; 6-A-1-24
Annual Report
2-A-1-48; 5-E-7-121
Anonymous Benefactor
2-A-1-49
The Answer
2-A-1-53
The Answer
2-A-1-54
Answer To A Letter
2-A-1-55; 6-A-1-26
Answer to a Summer Note
6-A-1-27
Antiquary
2-A-1-56, 57; 2-B-7-70
The Antiversery
2-A-1-58
Anyman
2-A-1-59
Apology
2-A-1-60, 61, 62
Apology After Departure
2-A-1-63; 5-E-4-34
Apology For A Guest’s Sudden Departure
2-A-1-64
Apology For Blushing In Front of the Postman
6-A-1-29
Apology For Not Filling Out A Genealogical Chart
2-A-1-65; 5-E-13-282
Apple Tree In Spring
2-A-1-66, 67, 68, 69; 2-B-7-1, 112, 118; 6-A-1-30
Apples In The Grass
2-A-1-70, 71; 6-A-1-31, 32
Appointment
2-A-1-72
Apprentice
2-A-1-73, 74, 75; 5-E-8-158
April in Eden
2-A-1-76; 5-E-6-86
The April League
2-A-1-77; 6-A-1-33
Aptitude
2-A-1-78
Argument
2-A-1-79
Argument
2-A-1-80
Armament
2-A-1-81, 82
Art Has Intrigued Me
2-A-1-83
Artisan
2-A-1-84
As The Poet Seeks His Metrics
2-A-1-85; 2-B-7-104, 118; 6-A-1-44
As Through Darkness
2-A-1-86, 87; 2-B-7-73
The Ascension
2-B-7-126
Ask And Receive
2-A-1-88; 6-A-1-45
Ask Not The Wind
2-A-1-89
Aspens
2-A-1-90; 6-A-1-46
Assessment
2-A-1-91, 92; 6-A-1-57
Assignment: Spring Poem
2-A-1-93; 6-A-1-48
At Christmas 1967
2-A-1-94, 95, 96
At Hobbs
2-A-97; 5-E-10-194
At The Clearing
2-A-1-98; 6-A-1-49
At The County Fair
2-A-1-99, 100, 101, 102, 103; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-11-241; 6-A-1-50
At The End Of The River
2-A-1-104, 105, 106; 5-E-11-217
"At The End, The Professor"
2-A-1-107; 5-E-5-56
At The Fair Again
2-A-1-108, 109; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-8-148
At The Gallery
2-A-1-110; 6-A-1-51
At The Museum Again
2-A-1-111, 112, 113; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-8-148
At The Park
2-A-1-114, 115
The Attic Heart
2-A-1-116
Auction
2-A-1-117; 6-A-1-53
Author
2-A-1-118
Authorized
2-A-1-119, 120; 5-E-6-76
Autograph Album
2-A-1-121; 6-A-1-54
Autographed Copy
2-A-1-122; 6-A-1-55
Autumn: Dusk
2-A-1-123; 6-A-1-56
Autumn Is A Bird
2-A-1-124; 6-A-1-58
Autumn Song
2-A-1-125; 6-A-1-60
Autumnal
2-A-1-126, 127; 2-B-7-2; 6-A-1-61
Autumnal Note
5-E-12-248
Awakening
2-A-1-128, 129
Awakening
2-A-1-130; 6-A-1-62
Awakening: American Sector
5-E-6-78
Bacchu’s Children
2-A-1-131
Bachelor’s Plaint
2-A-1-132
Balance
2-A-1-64, 133; 6-A-1-65
Balancing The Scales
2-A-1-134
A Ballad For John Prather
2-A-1-135, 136
Ballad of the Grave-Tenders
2-A-3-329
Ballad Of The Ploughman’s Horse
2-A-1-137
Ballade For A Dying Enemy
2-A-1-138, 139, 140, 141
Ballade Of Hungry Poets
2-A-1-142 143, 144
Balm
2-A-1-145; 6-A-1-66
A Balmy Day At Elba
2-A-1-146, 147
Barn Swallows
5-E-6-81
Bartlett Revisited: A Bird In The Hand Is Worth Two On An Antenna
2-A-1-148; 6-A-1-68
Battle Fatigue
6-A-1-70
Battle Report
2-A-1-149; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-215; 6-A-1-71, 72
Battlements
2-A-1-150; 2-A-6-251
(Bay) Window Shopping
2-A-1-151
Be my Guest
2-A-1-152; 6-A-1-73
A Beatnik’s Prayer
2-A-1-153
The Beauty Of Love
2-A-1-154, 155
Because He Turned His Back
2-A-1-156; 6-A-1-75
Because Of The Fire
2-A-1-157
Because Of You
6-A-1-76
Because You Are The Universe’s Center
2-A-1-158, 159; 2-B-7-96, 118; 5-E-8-161
Before Goodbye
6-A-1-77
Before The World Ends
2-A-1-160, 161, 162; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-11-218; 5-E-12-266; 6-A-1-78, 79, 80
Beginner’s Luck
2-A-1-163
Beginnings
6-A-1-81
Belling The Fox
2-A-1-164, 165, 166; 6-A-1-82
Bequest
6-A-1-83
Bequest
5-E-11-221
Bequest
2-A-1-167, 168; 2-B-7-3, 94, 118; 6-A-1-84
Berceuse
2-A-1-169, 170, 171
Better Late Than When?
2-A-1-172
Better This Silence
2-A-2-173; 2-B-7-110, 118; 6-A-1-85, 86
Better Times
2-A-1-174
Between Acts
2-A-1-175; 6-A-1-87
Beware!
2-A-1-176; 6-A-1-88
Beware: Loud Dog
2-A-5-6; 6-A-1-89
Beware Low Bird
6-A-1-90
Beyond the Age of Innocence
5-E-7-133
Beyond the Veil
2-A-1-177
The Big Fat Takeover
2-A-1-178
Big Spender
2-A-5-231; 6-A-1-91
"The Bigger They Are, The Harder We Fall"
2-A-1-179; 6-A-1-92
Bird Call
2-A-1-180, 181, 182
A Bird in the Pan
2-A-1-183
Birds Of A Feather
2-A-1-184; 5-E-7-115; 6-A-1-93
The Birds Were Talking At Night
2-A-1-185
The Bitter Years
2-A-1-186
Black Haw
2-A-1-187; 6-A-1-94
Black Hawthorn
2-A-1-188, 189, 190, 191, 192; 2-B-7-41
Blameless
2-A-1-193
The Blast Is Cold
2-A-1-194
Blessed With A Transient Heart
2-A-1-195; 6-A-1-95
Blind Girl In Seattle
2-A-1-196; 6-A-1-96
Bloom
2-A-1-197
Blue Bird Not Bluebird
2-A-1-198
The Blue Cat
2-A-1-199
Blueprint For A Bust
2-A-1-200
Blunder Bus
2-A-1-201; 6-A-1-98
Bonded
2-A-1-202; 6-A-1-99
Bound To Stay
2-A-1-203, 204, 205; 2-B-7-4; 6-A-1-100
A Bouquet Of Zinnias
2-A-1-206
Bowl
2-A-1-207, 208; 6-A-1-102
Boy
2-A-1-209; 5-E-7-112; 6-A-1-103
A Boy At Christmas
2-A-1-210; 6-A-1-104
The Boy In The Red Rubber Life Jacket
6-A-1-105
Boy In The Wind
2-A-1-211; 6-A-1-106
Boy On A Springboard
2-A-1-212
Boy Watching Bird
2-A-1-213; 6-A-1-107
The Boy Who Hung In The Sycamore
2-A-1-214
The Boy Who Loved You
2-A-1-215, 216, 217; 2-B-7-124, 125
Boy With Book
2-A-1-218; 6-A-1-108, 109, 110
Boy With Kite And Spectator
2-A-1-219, 220, 221, 222, 223; 5-E-6-88
A Boy’s Season
2-B-7-125, 126; 5-E-8-144
Boys Town Boy
2-A-1-224
The Bramble Patch
2-A-1-225, 226, 227; 2-B-7-5; 5-C-3-15; 6-A-1-111
Brave Journey
5-E-5-67
Break Down The Bars
2-A-1-228
The Breathless Amber Breaks
2-A-1-229
Brief Is The Bitter
5-E-11-240
Brightwater Revisited
2-A-1-230
Bring Me Autumn
2-A-1-231
Bringing In The Day
2-A-1-232; 6-A-1-112, 113
The Brownings
2-A-1-233, 234
Building A House
2-B-7-125
Bulletin
2-A-1-235
Burning the Horse
2-A-1-236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246; 2-B-7-6, 64
But Now When Autumn
2-A-1-247; 6-A-1-115, 116
Butchering Time
2-A-1-248
"Buying a Sports Car, Almost"
6-A-1-117
By Atom-Light the People Cry
5-E-11-232
Cafeteria Style
2-A-1-249
Call Quietly
6-A-1-118
A Call To Action
2-A-1-250, 251
A Call To Arms
2-A-1-252, 253, 254, 255; 6-A-1-119
Call To Arms
2-A-1-256
A Call To Greatness
2-A-1-257, 258, 259; 5-E-5-47; 5-E-10-201; 5-E-11-212
Calling The Cows
2-A-1-260; 6-A-1-120
Camp Meeting
2-A-1-261, 262, 263, 264; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-5-51; 5-E-12-270
"The Candidate At Lone Elm, Arkansas"
2-A-1-265; 5-E-10-202; 6-A-1-122, 123
Can-Power
6-A-1-124, 125
Cantata
2-A-1-266
Canto
6-A-1-126
Capitalist
5-E-5-62
Captain
2-A-1-267, 268, 269
Career
2-A-1-270, 271; 5-E-11-246
Carousel 70
2-A-1-272, 273
Carrying On
2-A-1-274, 275, 276
The Case For Love
2-A-1-277
Catharsis
2-A-1-278; 6-A-1-128
Caught With My Hair Down
2-A-1-279
Cave Man
2-A-1-280, 281
Censorship
2-A-1-282
Centaur
2-A-1-283
Certainty
2-A-1-284
Certainty
2-A-1-285
Challenge
2-A-1-286
Change of Latitude
2-A-1-287
A Change Of Mind
2-A-1-153
A Change of Season (And Nothing More)
2-A-1-288
A Changing Season
2-A-1-289; 6-A-1-129
Changing the Calendar
2-A-1-290; 6-A-1-130
Changing The Subject
2-A-1-291
Changing Viewpoint
2-A-1-292; 6-A-1-131
Chauffeu
2-A-1-293
(Cheeky) Haiku For Perilous Times
2-A-1-294
Cheering Section
2-A-1-295; 6-A-1-132
Child In A Dime Store
2-A-1-296
Child In A Window
2-A-1-297, 298
Child in Book Store
2-A-1-299; 5-E-4-13; 6-A-1-133
Child In Museum
2-A-1-300; 6-A-1-134, 135
A Child Is A Natural Warrior
2-A-1-301; 6-A-1-136
The Children Of Parents
2-A-1-302; 2-B-7-125
Children Of Space
2-A-1-303, 304, 305; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-1-137, 138, 139
Children’s Hour
2-A-1-306
Children’s Play
2-A-1-307, 308, 309
Cholla
2-A-1-310; 5-E-10-191
Choosing Acquaintances
2-A-1-311
Chores At Evening
2-A-1-312; 6-A-1-140
Chorus For Another Season
2-A-1-313; 5-E-7-122
Christening
2-A-1-314, 315; 5-E-12-262; 6-A-1-141
A Christmas Blessing
2-A-1-316; 2-B-7-117, 118
Christmas Eve In Frankfurt
2-A-1-317
Christmas Litter
2-A-1-318, 319, 320
Christmas-1967
6-A-1-142
Christmas: Old Main
2-A-1-321
Christmas Pageant
2-A-1-322; 6-A-1-143
A Christmas Prayer
2-A-1-323
The Church At Sunday Creek
2-A-1-324; 6-A-1-144
Class of ’52
2-A-1-325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-215; 6-A-1-148
A Class Of One
2-A-1-332; 6-A-1-149
Classmates Homecoming
6-A-1-150
Clear That Track!
6-A-1-151
A Climate of Hope
2-A-1-333, 334
Climax: A Slight Love Poem
5-E-4-18
Closed Market
2-A-1-335
Closing Night
2-A-1-336, 337; 2-B-7-7, 130, 131, 132
"Clothes Don’t Make, Etc."
2-A-1-338
Colorado Evening
6-A-1-152
Come the Resolution
6-A-1-154
Coming Of Age
2-A-1-339, 340, 341; 2-B-7-47; 5-E-10-211
Coming Of Age
2-A-1-342, 343; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-14
Coming To Water
2-A-1-344, 345; 6-A-1-155
Companions
2-A-1-346
Compensation
2-A-1-347
Confession
2-A-1-348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353
Conrad Silver 1929-1948
2-A-1-354
Consolation
6-A-1-156
Contemplation In Tranquillity
2-A-1-355
Contingent
2-A-1-356; 2-B-7-122,123; 5-C-3-14; 6-A-1-157, 158
Convocation
2-A-6-139; 6-A-1-159
Cookout
2-A-1-357, 358
Core
2-A-1-359
Cornelia Fed The Swans
2-A-1-360, 361, 362; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-197
Coronor’s Report: Mazatlan
2-A-1-363, 364, 365
Countdown
2-A-2-83
"Count-Down, 0800 Hours"
6-A-1-160
Counter-Attack
2-A-1-366
A Country Air
2-A-1-367, 368, 369; 2-B-7-100, 118; 6-A-1-161
Country Doctor
2-A-1-370
The Country Heart
2-A-1-371; 5-E-6-84, 85
Country Store
2-A-1-372, 373, 374, 375; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-245; 6-A-1-162
Countryman
2-A-1-376, 377, 378; 2-B-7-8
Couplet On Self (For Line Dinner)
2-A-5-105
Court Scene
2-A-1-379
Cover-Up
2-A-1-380, 381
Covered Bridge
2-A-1-382; 6-A-1-163
Crawdad Land
2-A-1-383
Critical Moment
2-A-6-139; 6-A-1-166
The Crossing
2-B-7-126
Crossing A Fence
2-A-1-384; 6-A-1-167
Crown Of Pennyroyal
2-A-1-385
A Crown Of Stars
2-A-1-386
Cum Laude ’48
6-A-1-168
Cured
6-A-1-169
Daisies
2-A-2-1; 6-A-1-170, 171
Dasal Twag
2-A-2-2
Dawn
2-A-3-323
A Day For Pears
2-A-2-3; 6-A-1-173
Days of Innocence
2-A-2-4, 5; 2-B-7-84, 118; 6-A-1-174
Dead Is Dead
2-A-2-6; 5-E-10-184
Dead Of Night
2-A-2-7
Dead Or Alive?
6-A-1-175
“Dear ___”
2-A-2-8
Dear Aunt Gladys and Uncle Roy
2-A-2-9
Death In A Garden
2-A-5-104
Death In The Springtime
2-A-2-10
Death On The Sea-Shore
2-A-2-11, 12; 5-E-4-5
Debig One Got Away
2-A-2-13
Debut
2-A-2-14
December Twenty-Four
2-A-2-15
A Deed To Earth
2-A-2-16, 17; 2-B-7-9; 6-A-1-177
Deer Crossing
5-E-10-190
Definition
2-A-2-18; 6-A-1-178
Degree
2-A-2-19, 20
Deliverance
2-A-2-21
Den Mother
2-A-2-22; 6-A-1-179
Denials
2-A-2-23, 24, 25; 2-B-7-55, 85, 118; 5-E-6-98
Denting A Fender
2-A-2-26
Department Store Santa
6-A-1-180
Departures
2-A-2-27; 5-E-5-57; 6-A-1-181
The Devious Bird
2-A-2-28; 6-A-1-182
Dilemma
2-A-2-29
Dimensions
2-A-2-30
dirge for one’s self
2-A-2-31
Dirge On A Spring Morning
5-E-6-102
Dirt Farmer
5-E-4-6
The Disbelievers
2-A-2-32
Disconcerting
6-A-1-184
Discoverers
2-A-2-33; 2-B-7-108, 118
Discovery
2-A-2-34
Disillusioned
2-A-2-35
Dispensable
2-A-2-36
Dispensable
2-A-2-37
Distilled Of Air
2-A-2-38, 39
Distilled Of Earth
2-A-2-40; 6-A-1-185, 186
Divine Appointment And The End Of Things
2-A-2-41, 42; 5-E-4-19
"Dog Canyon, New Mexico"
2-A-2-43
Dog Days
2-A-2-44
Dog Gone!
6-A-1-188, 189
Doggerel For Dog Days
2-A-2-45
"Don Quixote, Weary Of Winter"
2-A-2-46; 6-A-1-192
Don’t Bank On It
2-A-3-83; 5-E-7-114
Don’t Forget To Write!
2-A-2-47, 48
Don’t Rush Me!
2-A-2-49; 6-A-1-193
Don’t Turn Down Our Road
2-A-2-50; 5-E-7-131; 6-A-1-194, 195, 196
Doors Left Open
2-A-2-51; 5-E-4-15
Doors Will Swing Open
2-A-2-121; 5-E-6-101
Doubtful Attractions
2-A-5-110
Down In Tincup
2-A-2-52
Down This Road
2-A-2-53
Down To The Cove
2-A-2-54; 2-A-4-241
Dowry
2-A-2-55, 56
Draftee
2-A-2-57; 6-A-1-197
Drawing From Life
2-A-2-58, 59
A Dream of Meadows
2-A-2-60
Dreamers
2-A-2-61
Dresbach At Seventy
2-A-2-62; 2-B-7-102, 118; 5-E-12-265
The Driller From Dallas
2-A-2-63
A Drink Of Water
2-A-2-64; 2-B-7-107, 118; 6-A-1-198, 199
Drinking Song
2-A-2-65
Dry Spell
2-A-2-66; 2-B-7-125; 6-A-1-200
Dumb Blonde?
2-A-2-67
Dusk
2-A-2-68; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-5-39; 6-A-1-201
"Dust To Dust, If You Don’t Mind"
2-A-4-176
Eager Beaver
2-A-2-69; 6-A-1-202
Eager Ex-Beaver
2-A-2-70
"The Earth, If Man’s One Friend"
2-A-2-71; 6-A-1-203
Earth Man
2-A-2-134
The Earth Recedes
2-A-2-72
The Earth! the Earth!
2-A-2-73, 74
Earthbound
2-A-2-75
Eating Out
2-A-2-76
The Ecstasy And The Agony
2-A-2-77
Eddy
2-A-2-78; 5-E-4-28
An Eden Song
2-A-1-293
Edge of Change
2-A-2-79, 80, 81, 82; 2-B-7-10; 5-E-11-213
"Ego, Ego, On The Wall"
2-A-2-83; 6-A-1-204
Elbow Room
2-A-2-84
Elegy
2-B-7-125
Elegy From Afar
2-A-4-220
Elegy On A Dog Not Yet Dead
2-A-2-85; 2-A-6-66
Elegy On The First Day
2-A-2-86, 87, 88; 5-E-11-231
11 April 1954.
2-B-7-126
The Eleven O’Clock Report
2-A-2-89; 2-B-7-75; 5-E-11-256
Elliptic
2-A-2-90, 91, 92; 5-E-6-97
The Enchanted
2-A-2-93
The End Of The Search
2-A-2-94
End Of The Trail
2-A-2-95
The Enemy
2-A-5-204
Entries For An Unkept Journal
2-A-2-96, 97; 2-B-7-44; 6-A-1-206
Eons Follow Eons
2-A-2-98
Epitaph For An Unknown Soldier
2-A-2-99, 100, 101, 102, 103; 6-A-1-207, 208
Epitaph For An Unpublished Poet
2-A-2-104; 6-A-1-209
Epitaph For a Dog
5-E-5-65
Epitaph For A TV Copywriter
2-A-2-105
Epitaph For A TV Spectacular
2-A-2-19
Epitaphs For A Late Spring
6-A-1-210
Epithalamion
2-A-2-106; 2-B-7-122, 123, 124; 5-E-10-208
Epithalamium For Two Virgins
2-A-2-107
An Essay On Guineas
2-A-2-108
Estranged
2-A-2-109; 2-A-4-33
"Et Tu, Bird?"
2-A-2-110
Eternity
2-A-2-111
Eulogy
2-A-2-112; 2-B-7-126
Euthanasia
6-A-1-214
Evening Is A Quiet Place
2-A-2-113
Evenscape: Colorado
2-A-2-114
Evensong
2-A-2-115
Everyman
2-A-2-116, 117; 2-B-7-80, 118, 122, 123; 5-E-12-262; 6-A-1-215
Evil Beauty
5-E-10-181
Ex Libris
2-A-2-118
Ex Postal Facto
2-A-6-186
Exit Sesame!
2-A-2-119; 6-A-1-216
Exordium
2-A-2-120
Expectancy
2-A-2-121
Explaining August
2-A-2-122
Explaining His Absence
2-A-2-123; 6-A-1-217
Explaining Some Things
2-A-2-124
Explaining Why
2-A-2-125
Explorers
2-A-2-126
The Extent of Dominion
5-E-11-223
Eyes Right
2-A-2-127
Fable
2-A-2-128; 5-E-5-42; 6-A-1-219
Fair Warning
2-A-2-129; 5-E-9-166
Faithful As April
2-A-2-130; 6-A-1-220
The Fall
2-A-2-131, 132; 2-B-7-52
Fall Guy
6-A-1-222
Fallen Soldier’s Reverie
2-A-2-133, 134; 5-E-4-30; 5-E-9-170; 5-E-11-220
A Family Affair
2-A-2-135, 136, 137, 138
Family Legend
2-A-2-139
Family Trait
2-A-2-140; 6-A-1-223
Family Troubles
2-A-1-381; 2-A-2-141
"Famous, But Not Last, Words"
2-A-3-110
A Farmer Boy Meditates
2-A-2-142
Fashion Note: For the Birds
2-A-2-143; 6-A-1-225
The Father Of The Brood
2-A-2-144, 145; 6-A-1-226
The Feast With The Least
2-A-2-146
The Fence
2-A-2-147, 148, 149; 6-A-1-227
Fence Row
2-A-2-150-151; 2-B-7-11; 6-A-1-228
A Fiddle Of A Day
2-A-2-152, 153; 6-A-1-229
The Fields Of Summer
2-A-2-154
"Fiery The Fortress, Airy The Loom"
2-A-2-155, 156; 2-B-7-12; 6-A-1-230
Fifth Season
2-A-2-157, 158; 2-B-7-13; 6-A-1-231
Fight All Men
2-B-7-125; 2-B-7-126; 5-E-8-144
Figure In A Landscape
2-A-2-159; 2-B-7-43; 5-E-4-14; 6-A-1-233
The Film-Flam Man
2-A-2-160; 6-A-1-234
Finding The Way
2-A-2-161
Finger Counter
6-A-1-235
Fire and Light
2-A-2-162; 6-A-1-236
Fire Birds
2-A-2-163; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-1-237
A Fire For Winter
2-A-2-164; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-1-238
The Fire That Burned In David
2-A-2-165
Firedogs
2-A-2-166, 167; 5-E-12-267; 6-A-1-239, 240
Fireside Chat
2-A-2-168; 6-A-1-241
First Day At School
2-A-2-169; 6-A-1-242
First Day Of Summer
2-A-2-170
The First Day Out
2-A-2-171, 172; 6-A-1-243
First Encounter
2-A-2-173
First Gift
2-A-2-174
First Night
2-A-2-6
First Night In Camp
2-A-2-175
"First Place, Color Construction"
2-A-2-176, 177
First Sign
2-A-2-178; 5-E-7-123
First Snow In Arkansas
2-A-2-179; 6-A-1-244
"First The Bird, And Now The Cat"
2-A-2-180, 181, 182; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-244
First Things First
2-A-2-183; 6-A-1-245, 246
First Things First
2-A-2-184; 6-A-1-247
Fisherman’s Soliloquy
2-A-2-185
Fixation
2-A-2-186, 187
Flight
2-A-2-188, 189
Flight 70
2-A-2-190, 191, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-199
Flight 211
2-A-2-200, 201, 202, 203; 6-A-1-248
Flower Vendor
2-A-3-225
Flying Fish
2-A-2-204
Focal Point
2-A-2-205, 206
Fog Woman
5-E-6-80
Foothills Of The Rockies
2-A-2-207
For A Child Born On Christmas Day
2-A-2-208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214; 2-B-7-122, 123
"For A Child, Sick Abed At Christmas"
2-A-2-215; 6-A-1-254
For A Dry Season
6-A-1-255
For A First Heartbreak
5-E-4-11
For A First Night In The New Home
2-A-2-216
For A Returning Turncoat
2-A-2-217; 6-A-1-256
For A Typewriter Repairman
2-A-2-218; 5-E-8-149
For A Very Young Diner
2-A-2-219
For A Very Young Poet
2-A-2-220
For A Winter Night
2-A-2-221; 6-A-1-257
"For A Woman, My Aunt"
2-A-2-222; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-5-40
For Amy
2-A-2-223
For Camp
6-A-1-258
For Doretta: In My Dreams Ill
2-B-7-126
For Drum and Bugle
6-A-1-260
For Eloi: Frozen in Chosen
2-B-7-126
"For Father, Come June"
2-A-2-224
For Fools Only
5-E-5-69
"For Imogene, Paying Her Income Tax"
2-A-2-225
"For Irmgaard, In Memoriam"
2-A-2-226; 6-A-1-261
"For John, Who Woke Up Crying"
2-A-2-227; 2-B-7-54; 5-E-5-53; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-1-262
For M.W.: In Transit
2-A-2-228
"For My Dad, on Father’s Day 1955"
2-A-2-229
For One Bereaved At Christmas
2-A-2-231, 232
For One Who Died At Sea
2-B-7-126
For One Who Sent A Painting
2-A-2-230
For One Who Sent A Photograph
2-B-7-124; 5-E-6-109; 5-E-13-275
For Poetry Contestants
2-A-2-233
For R.
2-A-2-234
For Selma Bodley
2-A-2-235; 5-E-6-105
For The Abolition Of Monday
2-A-2-236; 6-A-1-263
For The Bringer Of Light
2-A-2-237, 238; 5-E-5-58
For The New Year
2-A-2-239. 240, 241
For the Politicians
5-E-4-1
For Those Who Died in the Hanau Train Crash
2-B-7-126
For You Who Laugh
2-A-2-242
Force of July
2-A-2-243
The Ford-Heard Limerick Department
2-A-2-244
Forearmed
2-A-2-245
Foreboding
2-A-5-30
Forecast
2-A-2-246; 6-A-1-264
Forecast and Hindsight
2-A-2-247
Forward For A Second Edition
2-A-2-248, 249; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-257
The Forty-Eighters
2-A-2-250
The Forty Hour Expert
2-A-2-251
Fossil
2-A-2-253; 5-E-8-162
The Fox
2-A-2-254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261; 6-A-1-265, 266
Fox And Goose
2-A-2-262
Foxes In Winter
2-A-2-263
Fragile
2-A-2-207; 2-A-2-264, 265
Fred Is Dead: Requiem
2-B-7-125; 2-B-7-126
Friday Knight
2-A-2-266; 6-A-1-267
The Frog And I
2-A-2-267
From a Bridal Chamber
6-A-1-268
Front Rank
2-A-2-268
Frostbite
2-A-2-269
Fugue
2-A-2-270; 5-E-12-260
Fugue And Fancy
2-A-2-271, 272; 2-B-7-49; 5-E-5-43; 6-A-1-270
Full of Days
5-E-13-291
Funeral Piece
2-A-2-273
Funeral Procession
5-E-13-289
The Further You Go
2-A-2-274, 275; 6-A-1-271
Futuristic Artist
2-A-6-66; 5-E-10-180
Gardener
2-A-2-276; 6-A-2-2
Gardener
2-A-2-277
Gathering Pears
2-A-2-278, 279
General Curtis To His Brother
2-A-2-280, 281, 282
Generation of Scholars
2-A-2-69; 6-A-2-3
The Gentle Beast At Night
2-A-2-283; 5-E-7-111; 6-A-2-4
Geometrics
2-A-2-284; 5-E-7-113; 6-A-2-5
Geophysical Love Note
2-A-2-285
Get Me A Glass Of Water While You’re Up
2-A-2-104; 2-A-2-286
Getting A Drink of Water
2-A-2-287; 6-A-2-6
Getting Ready
2-A-2-288, 289; 2-B-7-72; 6-A-2-7
Gift
2-A-2-290
A Girl Of Several Qualities
2-A-2-291, 292
Girls On The Road To Freedom
2-A-2-293, 294, 295, 296, 297; 2-B-7-46; 5-E-10-209
Give Me A Sign
2-A-2-298
Give Me Children
2-A-2-299
Go Down Singing
2-A-2-300, 301; 6-A-2-9
Goatsong
2-A-2-302
God Sits In Contemplation
2-A-2-303
Going And Staying
2-A-2-304, 305; 2-B-7-14; 5-E-9-163; 6-A-2-10
Going And Staying
2-A-2-306; 2-B-7-51; 6-A-2-11
Going Down?
2-A-2-307
Going My Way?
2-A-2-308
The Golden Cord
2-A-2-309, 110; 2-B-7-124
Golgotha Remembers
2-A-2-311; 5-E-9-169
Good Gleaning
2-A-2-312, 313
The Good Hill
2-A-2-314; 6-A-2-13
Good Night
2-A-2-315
Grace for Arbor Day
2-A-2-316; 6-A-2-15
Grace Notes
2-A-2-317
Grace Notes
2-A-2-318, 319
Grand Mal
2-B-7-40
The Grand Perfection
2-A-2-320; 6-A-2-16
The Grand Tour
2-A-2-321
Grandfather’s Fences
2-A-2-322, 323; 6-A-2-17
Grandmother
2-A-6-200
Grasshopper And Ant
2-A-2-324, 325
Grave-Digger
5-E-11-219
The Great Train Robbery
2-A-2-326; 6-A-2-18
Green Are The Pastures Where A Poet Lives
2-A-2-237; 5-E-6-89
Green Where Grey Grew
2-A-2-328; 6-A-2-19
Greeting Card
2-A-2-329
The Grey Goose: Words For A Rememberance
5-E-12-254
Grow Up
2-A-4-316
Growing Pains
2-A-2-330; 2-B-7-125
Guaranteed
2-A-3-231; 6-A-2-20
"Guardhouse, 0300 Hours"
2-B-7-126
The Guest of Honor
2-A-2-331, 332, 333
Guidance
2-A-2-334
A Guide To The High Country
2-A-2-335, 336, 337, 338; 2-B-7-66
Gum
2-A-2-339
Hanau am Main
6-A-2-21
Hand-Me-Down
2-A-2-340; 2-B-7-113, 118; 5-E-6-110; 6-A-2-22
A Hard Row
2-A-2-341, 342
"Hark, Hark, That’s No Damned Lark!"
2-A-2-343
Harry The Ragman
2-A-2-344
Harvest
2-A-2-345; 6-A-2-24
Harvest Divided
5-E-6-100
The Harvester
2-A-2-346, 347, 348; 5-E-7-132
The Harvesters
2-A-2-349; 5-E-5-54; 6-A-2-54
The Harvesters
2-A-2-350, 351
Hattie
5-E-4-21
Haunted
2-A-2-352
"Have Joke, Will Fumble"
2-A-3-164; 6-A-2-25
Haven
5-E-5-59
The Haw Tree
2-A-2-353; 6-A-2-26
Hawk In Binoculars
2-A-2-354
Hazard Warning
2-A-2-355
He Could Hear Shelley Singing
2-A-2-134
He Who Waits
2-A-2-356
The Head Of The House
2-A-2-357; 2-B-7-45; 6-A-2-27, 28
The Heart In Love
2-A-2-359; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-9-164; 6-A-2-29
The Heart Is A Keeper
2-A-2-360; 6-A-2-30
The Heart Of A Keeper
6-A-2-30
The Heart of Laughter
2-A-1-197
The Heart of the Matter
5-E-4-32
Heartache
2-A-2-358; 6-A-2-31
Heavenly Birthday
2-A-2-361, 362
The Height Of Heaven
2-A-2-363
"Her Name Was May, Even In April"
2-A-2-364
Heritage
2-A-2-365
Hero
2-A-2-366
Hero’s Welcome
2-A-2-367
The Hidden Hunter
2-A-2-368; 2-B-7-125
Hitch-Hiker
2-A-2-369, 370, 371, 372; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-243
Hokku(m)
2-A-2-373; 6-A-2-34
The Home Accountant
2-A-2-374; 2-A-6-54; 6-A-2-35
"Home Again, Home Again"
2-A-2-375
Home By Night
2-A-2-376; 6-A-2-36
Home in October
2-A-2-377; 2-A-4-200; 6-A-2-37
Home Is The Hunter
2-A-2-378, 379; 6-A-2-37
Homecoming
2-A-3-1; 6-A-2-39, 40
Homer
2-A-3-2
Homestead
2-B-7-125
Homestead
2-A-3-3
Homestead
2-A-3-4; 6-A-2-41
Homeward I Turn
2-A-3-5
Honest Praise
2-A-3-6, 7; 2-B-7-124; 5-C-3-16; 5-E-7-130; 6-A-2-42
Honorable Mention To The Last Runner
2-A-3-8, 9, 10, 11; 6-A-2-43
Hope Springs Eternal
2-A-6-223; 5-E-11-229
Hoping
6-A-2-44
Horoscope
2-A-3-12
Horse And Rider
2-A-3-13; 5-E-10-204
Hosanna
2-A-3-14
Host
2-A-3-15; 5-E-12-251; 6-A-2-45
The Host
2-A-3-16, 17, 18
The Host
2-A-3-19; 6-A-2-46
Hot Roll Call
2-A-3-20
The Hound on the Hill
2-A-3-21
A House Has A Way
2-A-3-22; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-47, 48
The House-Keeper
2-A-3-23; 6-A-2-49
House Of Stone
2-A-3-24; 6-A-2-50
Houses
2-A-3-25
Housewarming
2-A-3-26; 6-A-2-51
How Do I Get A Haul?
2-A-3-27; 6-A-2-52
How Do You Turn This Thing Off?
2-A-3-28; 6-A-2-53
How I Live In A Drug Store
2-A-3-29; 5-E-5-54; 6-A-2-54
How Like Bob
2-A-3-30
How Long Shall One Endure
2-A-3-31
"“How Much Did It Cost, Dear?”"
2-A-3-32, 33
How To Cut A Mud Pie
2-A-3-34
How To Get Nowhere From An Even Start
2-A-3-35; 6-A-2-56
How To Milk An Ill Wind
2-A-3-36; 6-A-2-57, 58
How We Are All Poets
2-A-3-37, 38, 39, 40; 2-B-7-15
How We Trapped The Wolves
2-A-3-41, 42; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-13-300
Huckleberrying
2-A-3-43; 6-A-2-59
The Hungry Lions
2-A-3-44
Hunkering
2-A-3-45, 46, 47, 48
Hunter
2-A-3-49; 6-A-2-61
Hunting Fishing And Forest Scenes. By Currier and Ives
2-A-3-50, 51; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-4-27
Husbanding The Calendar
2-A-3-52, 53, 54
I Cannot Look Back
2-A-3-55, 56, 209
I Could Not Let Go
6-A-2-62
I Did Not Write A Poem This Spring
2-A-3-57
I Don’t Want Any Trouble
2-A-3-313; 6-A-2-64
I Don’t Want To Get Involved
2-A-3-58
I Dreamed Of Snow
2-A-3-59, 60; 5-E-7-119
I Find No Peace
5-E-5-61
I Have Not Let The Country Go
2-A-3-61; 6-A-2-65
I Knew This Place In Summer
6-A-2-66
I Knew When I Was A Vibrant Boy
2-A-3-62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67; 5-E-12-263; 5-E-13-275; 6-A-2-67
“I Know What I Like”
2-A-6-38
I Might Have Been Judas
2-A-3-68
I Never Owned A Thing
2-A-3-69, 70, 71; 2-B-7-16
I Remember A Star
2-A-3-72; 6-A-2-68
I Remember Grandma
2-A-3-73, 74, 75
I Sang Fire
2-A-3-76, 77, 78; 2-B-7-50; 5-E-13-281
I Sing of Gentle Death
2-A-3-79
I Walked With Ghandi
2-A-3-80
"I Was In Love, And Seventeen"
2-B-7-125
I-Witness
2-A-3-81
I Won’t Squeal If You Won’t
2-A-3-83; 5-E-7-114
I Would Run Backward
2-A-3-82
I Write Because I Have To
2-A-3-83
I Wrote You Once
2-A-3-84, 85, 86, 87; 6-A-2-71
Iconoclast
2-A-3-88, 89; 2-B-7-123
If I Had The Time--
2-A-3-90; 6-A-2-72
If I Just Had The Time
2-A-3-90; 6-A-2-72
If I Were A Horse
2-A-3-91
If I Were Running
2-A-3-92
"If Not Drowned, I Promise—"
2-A-3-140
If Winter Comes
2-A-3-93; 6-A-2-73
“If Winter Comes—“
2-A-3-94
If You Ever Wonder
2-A-3-95, 96; 5-E-12-250
I’ll Do It Myself—If You’ll Help
2-A-4-323
The Image Of Desire
2-A-3-97, 98, 99, 100; 2-B-7-122, 123
In A Motel Room
2-A-3-101; 6-A-2-76
In A Time For Setting Things In Order
2-A-3-102; 5-E-6-87
In A Time Of Change
2-A-3-103
In Chester Cemetary
2-A-3-104, 105
In Other Words
2-A-3-106
In Praise of Almost [sic] Anything
6-A-2-78
In Praise Of Anything
2-A-3-107; 2-B-7-17; 6-A-2-77
"In Prayer, Believing"
5-E-11-236; 6-A-2-79
In The Baptistry
2-A-3-108; 6-A-2-80
In The Desert
6-A-2-81
In The Walls The Eyes
5-E-13-276
Inaugural Song
2-A-3-109; 6-A-2-83
Indespensable
2-A-3-110; 6-A-2-84
Inquest For A Poet
2-A-2-181; 2-A-3-111
The Inquisition Swift
6-A-2-85
Inscription For A Book Mark
2-A-3-112; 6-A-2-86
Inseparable
2-A-3-113, 114; 5-E-8-142; 6-A-2-87
Inside Golgotha
2-A-3-115
Integer
2-A-3-116
Inter-Office Memo
2-A-3-117
Interview
2-A-3-118, 119; 2-B-7-53; 5-E-13-280
Interview With Geese
6-A-2-89
Intimations Of A Song
2-A-3-120
The Intruder
2-A-3-121, 122
Intruders
2-A-3-123; 6-A-2-90
An Investigator Reports
5-E-8-152
Investment
2-A-3-124
Invincible
2-A-3-125
Invitation
2-A-3-126
Invitation (sort of)
2-A-3-127, 128, 129
Invitation to Dinner
6-A-2-91
Invocation
2-A-3-130, 131, 132; 2-B-7-18, 106, 118; 5-E-12-264; 6-A-2-92
It Is Best That You Know
5-E-5-64
"It Isn’t Fancy, But It’s Filling"
2-A-3-133
It Was Heavenly
2-A-6-157
Item For Exchange
2-A-3-134, 135
Itinerary
2-A-3-136, 137; 2-B-7-19; 6-A-2-93
It’s A Breeze!
2-A-3-138; 6-A-2-94
It’s Later When You Think
2-A-3-139; 5-E-8-150; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-2-97
I’ve Pulled Out
2-A-5-178
Jail Bait
2-A-3-140; 6-A-2-98
"January 20, 1964."
2-A-3-141; 2-B-7-82, 118
JFK: An Anniversary
2-A-3-142
Jim Crow
2-A-3-143
John Horne
2-A-3-144
Joined In Death
2-A-3-145
Joseph
2-A-3-146
Journey By Night
2-A-3-147
Journey With Myself
2-A-3-148, 149; 5-E-10-196
Judas Pays
6-A-2-100
June 1958.
2-A-3-150; 6-A-2-101, 102
Junque
2-A-3-151
Katie
5-E-10-181
Katydid
2-A-3-152; 6-A-2-103
The Keepers
2-A-3-153, 154; 2-B-7-61; 5-E-5-55
Killed In Action
5-E-8-144; 6-A-2-104
Kingdom For A Horse
6-A-2-105
The Kingdom Of Summer
2-A-3-155; 6-A-2-106
Kings Came In Summer
2-A-3-156
Kite
2-A-3-157
Landscape
2-A-3-158
A Landscape For Christmas
2-A-3-159
A Landscape For Dante
2-B-7-79, 118, 119, 120, 121
"Landscape, With Ravens"
2-A-3-160; 5-E-13-294
Last Fire
2-A-3-161, 162
The Last Gold Star
2-A-3-163; 6-A-2-110
Last Laugh
2-A-3-164
The Last Passion To Go
2-A-3-165, 166
The Last Resort
2-A-3-167
The Last Storm
2-A-3-168, 169, 170; 2-B-7-63; 5-E-10-205
The Last Trap
2-A-3-171; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-111, 112
The Last Week Of October
2-A-3-172
Last Will
2-A-3-173, 174, 175; 5-E-4-23; 5-E-13-283
"Late, Late Love"
2-A-3-176
Late Sun and Swallows
2-A-3-177
The Latecomers
2-A-3-178; 6-A-2-113
Leap Year Shopper
2-A-3-140; 6-A-2-114
Leaving Camp
2-A-3-179; 6-A-2-115
Leftover In A Pear Tree
2-A-3-180
Lent Remover
2-A-2-108; 6-A-2-116
Lesson
2-A-3-181
The Lesson
2-A-6-291
Lest We Forget
2-A-3-182
Let Me Go Back
5-E-10-182
Let Me Take Note Of All Things Still
2-A-2-182
Let’s Finish The Sob!
2-A-3-183
Letter for One Long Absent
2-A-3-184
Letter From Arkansas
2-A-3-185; 5-E-10-193
Letter From Home
2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-228
Letter North
2-A-3-186
Letter of Recommendation
2-A-3-187, 188
Letter of Recommendation For a Friend
5-E-5-48; 6-A-2-118
Letter South
2-A3-189; 6-A-2-119
Letter To The Editor
2-A-3-190; 6-A-2-120
Letter West
2-A-3-191; 6-A-2-121
A Light For The Road
2-A-3-192; 2-B-7-90, 118; 6-A-2-123
A Light Too Rich
2-A-3-193, 194, 195, 196; 2-B-7-93, 118; 5-E-8-148
"Life Father, Like Crazy"
2-A-3-197
"Like Father, Like Son"
2-A-3-198
"Like Mudder, Like Son"
2-A-3-199
The Line Between Two Points
2-A-3-200, 201; 5-E-8-146
The Line Forms To The Right
2-A-3-202; 6-A-2-124
Line Of Duty
2-A-3-203, 204
Lines After
2-A-3-205; 5-E-13-279
Lines Before Battle
2-A-3-206; 5-E-8-155; 6-A-2-125
Lines Before Rain
2-A-3-207; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-8-155
Lines For A New Clinic
2-A-3-208; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-2-126
Lines For A New Season
2-A-3-209
Lines For A Time of Decision
2-A-3-210, 211; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-127, 128
Lines For A TV Announcer Whose Product Didn’t Work
2-A-3-212; 6-A-2-129
Lines For A Very New Nephew
2-A-3-213, 214
Lines For A Young Poet
5-E-4-13
Lines For February
2-A-3-215
Lines For Landing
2-A-3-216, 217, 218
"Lines For The Dead Of Pea Ridge, March 7-8, 1862"
2-A-3-219, 220
Lines For The Editor
6-A-2-130
Lines For The First Day
2-A-3-221, 222; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-274
Lines For Young Poets
2-A-3-223; 2-B-7-20; 6-A-2-131, 132
Lines From The Hippydrome
2-A-3-224
Lines From The Old North Church (Or South or East or West)
5-E-5-70
"Lines Full Of Cookie, Contemplating Breakfast"
2-A-3-225
Lines In Doghouse
2-A-3-231; 6-A-2-133
Lines of Leased Resistance
2-A-3-226; 6-A-2-134
Lines On Letting Well Enough Alone
2-A-3-227; 6-A-2-135
Lines To Encourage A Very Young Child On His Twenty-Fourth Birthday
6-A-2-136
Lines To Send With A Photograph
2-A-3-228, 229
Lines While Listening To The Neighbor’s Jazz
2-A-3-230; 6-A-2-137
Lines Written In A Dog House
2-A-3-231; 6-A-2-133
"Lines Written Now, In Case I’m Out of My Orbit After The Igy"
6-A-2-138
Lines Written On the Brink of War
2-A-3-232
"Lines Written Shortly After His 63rd Birthday, Who Was Always Quite Sure That He Would Die At The Age Of 64 . . ."
2-A-3-233
Lingering Guest
2-A-3-234
Lissie
2-A-3-235, 236; 6-A-2-139, 140
Listen—My Children!
2-A-3-237; 6-A-2-141
A Listening Time
2-A-3-238, 239; 2-B-7-21; 6-A-2-142, 143
Literary Men
2-B-7-56; 5-E-13-277
Littera E Italia
2-A-3-240
The Little Nation’s Prayer
2-A-3-241, 329; 5-E-7-126
Little Prayers
2-A-2-94
A Little Psalm
2-A-3-242; 6-A-2-146
A Little Something For My Psyche
2-A-4-176
"Live, From New York"
2-A-3-243; 5-E-9-175; 6-A-2-147
A Living Christmas
2-A-3-244
Local Sounds
2-A-3-245, 246; 6-A-2-148
Location
2-A-3-247
Lodging A Complaint
2-A-3-248; 6-A-2-149, 150
The Lonely Roads
2-A-3-249; 6-A-2-151
The Long And Lean
2-A-3-250, 251; 2-B-7-92, 118
The Long Wait
2-A-2-298
Longing
2-A-6-82
Look A Sea Horse
2-A-3-253; 5-E-12-257
Look Into March
2-A-3-254
Looking Ahead
2-A-3-255; 6-A-2-152
Looking At Old Mount Hood
2-A-6-157
Looking At One’s Self On A Cold Day
2-A-3-256, 257, 258; 6-A-2-153
Looking For Shiloh
2-B-7-122, 123
Loophole
2-A-2-325
Lost Bridge
2-A-3-259
Lost Bridge Road
2-A-3-260; 6-A-2-154
Love
2-A-3-261
"Love, If Love’s The Thing"
2-A-3-262, 263, 264, 265
Love Is A Beggar
2-A-3-266
Love Is A Weed
2-A-3-267; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-157
Love Is The House It Lives In
2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-158
Love Is Whole
2-A-3-268, 269; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-159
"Love Letter, With Postscript"
2-A-3-270; 2-A-5-251
Love On A Summer Day
2-A-3-271; 5-E-7-135
Love Song
2-A-3-272
Love Song
2-A-3-273
Love Song
2-A-3-274
"Love Song, After"
2-A-3-275; 5-E-10-207
Love Story
2-A-3-276
"Love, When You Go"
2-A-3-277, 278; 6-A-2-160
Low Clearance
2-A-3-279
Low Man At Oaklawn
2-A-3-280, 281
Low Mass For Hyannis
2-A-3-282, 283; 2-B-7-123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-9-174; 6-A-2-161
Low Tide
6-A-2-162
Low Tide At Fire Island
2-A-3-284; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-214
Lullaby before supper
2-A-3-285
The Lyric Touch
2-A-3-286
"Lytle Hilderbrand, Of this Son"
2-A-3-287
Mad Hatter
2-A-3-83
Maggie
2-A-3-288; 2-A-4-220
The Makers
5-E-10-188
Making Sorghum
2-A-3-289, 290, 291; 6-A-2-164, 165
Making Way
6-A-2-166
Maladjusted
2-A-3-292; 6-A-2-167, 168
The Man From Squaresville
2-A-3-293
A Man In A Shawl
2-A-3-294
Man Of Earth
2-A-6-151; 5-E-10-180
Man Of The Year
2-A-3-295
The Man On My Street
2-A-3-296
A Man With A Tin Ear
2-A-3-297; 5-E-12-252
Manchild
2-A-3-298
Mandate
2-A-3-299, 300, 301; 2-B-7-122, 123; 6-A-2-170
"Mannheim, Germany: 1954"
5-E-13-292
March Scene (With Applause)
5-E-8-141
Maria
2-A-3-302, 303; 6-A-2-171
Marketing Poetry: The Importance of Being Persistent
2-A-3-304
A Masque Of Witches
2-A-3-305, 306, 307
Matinee
2-A-3-308, 309
May Day Hayday
2-A-2-108
“May No One Record The Name Of This Man”
2-A-3-310, 311
May Song
2-A-3-312
"Meanwhile, Back At The Rock"
2-A-3-313
Meditation
2-A-3-314; 5-E-7-118
"Meek, As Inherited"
2-A-2-83
Meeting In August
2-A-3-315, 316; 6-A-2-172
A Meeting Of Minds
2-A-3-317, 318; 6-A-2-173
Melon
2-A-3-319; 6-A-2-174, 175
Memento Mori
2-B-7-126
Man Sleeping
2-B-7-126
The Message For Today
2-A-3-320, 321; 5-E-11-212
Microcosm
2-A-3-322; 6-A-2-180
The Middle Day
2-A-3-323
Midnighters
2-A-3-324
Midsummer
2-A-3-325, 326; 2-B-7-125
Midsummer Knight’s Rebellion
2-A-4-160
Migrational
2-A-3-327; 6-A-2-181
Milking Time
2-A-3-328; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-239; 6-A-2-182
Milton to Lilith
2-A-3-329
A Mind of Her Own
2-A-3-330; 6-A-2-183
Miniature: Tennessee
2-A-3-331, 332; 2-B-7-22
Minor Joys
2-A-3-333; 6-A-2-184
"Mirror, Mirror"
6-A-2-185, 186
"Mirror, Mirror On The Wall, Who’s The Farthest Gone Of All?"
2-A-3-334; 6-A-2-185, 186
Miser
2-A-6-86
Miss Amy’s Last Stand
2-A-3-335
Miss Ida’s Garden
2-A-3-335a
Miss Kettle And The Fine Arts
2-A-3-336; 6-A-2-187
Miss Markey’s First Summer
2-A-3-337; 6-A-2-189
Mission
2-A-3-338, 339
Mission
2-A-3-340
The Model
2-A-3-341
The Modernist
2-A-2-287; 2-A-3-342; 5-E-11-235
Monitors
2-A-3-343
Moonlight And Ruses
2-A-3-344
Moon-Lost
2-A-3-345
Moonrise
5-E-6-82
More Like These
6-A-2-192
More Poems On Youth
2-A-3-346
More Than These
5-E-6-72
Morning Chores
2-A-3-347
Morning In March
2-A-3-348
A Morning Prayer
2-A-3-349
Morning Song
2-A-3-350
Morning Song
2-A-3-351, 352; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-8-147
A Mother
2-A-3-323
The Mother
2-A-3-353; 2-B-7-127, 128, 129
Mothers
2-A-6-151
Mothers’ Tears
2-A-3-354
Motif: and storied variations
2-A-3-355
Motif: Six Variations on a Shop-Worn Theme
5-E-11-226
A Motivational Syndrome Explicated By Aesop
2-A-3-356; 6-A-2-194
Mourner
2-B-7-126
Mourning Is A Thief
2-A-3-357; 5-E-11-226
Mourning Song
2-B-7-125
Mourning Song
2-A-3-358, 359, 360, 361
Mourning Song
2-A-3-362; 5-E-13-286
Mouse Run
2-A-3-363; 6-A-2-195
Movers
2-A-3-364; 5-E-12-268; 6-A-2-196, 197
Mower Than You Know
2-A-3-365
Mr. Gideon Goes to Berchtesgaden
2-B-7-126
Mr. Gideon Goes To Gulfport
2-A-3-366
Muffle That Popcorn!
2-A-3-367
The Murderer
2-A-3-368, 369, 370
Museum In Spring
2-A-4-1, 2
Music Camp: Promotion
2-A-4-3
Music for Pacing
6-A-2-199
Music For Turning The “Off” Knob
2-A-5-110
Mute That Toot!
2-A-2-325
My Aunt Tells A Story
2-A-4-4; 5-E-4-25
My Father Was Fifty
2-A-4-5, 6
My Father With The Angels Spake
2-A-3-283; 2-A-4-7, 8; 5-E-13-280
My Heart Commutes
2-A-4-9, 10
My Kingdom for . . .
6-A-2-200
My Mother Built Me Cities
2-A-4-11, 12; 2-B-7-68
My Muse Came Down To Meet Me
2-A-4-13; 6-A-2-201
"My Son, Dear Child"
2-A-1-197; 6-A-2-202
A Native Longing
2-A-3-304
The Native Place
2-A-4-14, 15, 16; 6-A-2-204
Native Son
2-A-4-17; 6-A-2-205
Nativity
2-A-4-18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23; 5-E-4-16
Nativity
2-A-4-24
Nativity
2-A-4-25; 5-E-8-160
The Nature Of The Fox
2-A-4-26; 6-A-2-206
Nature Study
2-A-4-27, 28, 29
Neighbor
2-A-4-30; 6-A-2-208
Neighbors
2-A-4-31
Neighbors
2-A-4-32
Neighbors
2-A-4-33
Neither Softly Nor Secret
2-A-4-34; 6-A-2-209
Net Loss
2-A-4-35
Never An Elegy
2-A-4-36
Never Gone
2-A-4-37
Never Keep A Boy From Books
2-A-4-38, 39; 6-A-2-210
Never Satisfied
6-A-2-211
Never the Lost
5-E-10-186
A New Animal
2-A-4-40, 41, 42, 43, 44; 2-B-7-62, 101, 118; 5-E-12-265; 6-A-2-212, 213
A New Day
2-A-4-45, 45; 6-A-2-214, 215
New Dimension
6-A-2-216
New Winds Are Blowing
2-A-4-47
The News From Home
2-A-4-48; 6-A-2-217
The Night Ben Feathers Got Shoddown
2-A-4-49
Night Drowning
2-A-4-50, 51, 52, 53; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-177; 6-A-2-218
Night In An Old House
2-A-4-54; 6-A-2-219
The Night Of The Fox
2-A-4-55, 56, 57, 58, 59; 2-B-7-23, 5-E-5-50
Night Song
2-A-4-60; 6-A-2-220
Night Song
2-A-4-61; 2-B-7-125
Night Walk
2-A-4-62, 63; 2-B-7-24; 6-A-2-221
No Bird Has Flown
2-A-4-64
No Change of Season
6-A-2-223
No Dual Role
2-A-4-65; 5-E-4-4
"No Man Is An Island, But Who Gives A Continental At A Time Like This?"
2-A-4-66
No Man Wants A Journey
5-E-11-237; 6-A-2-224, 225
No Sooner Read Than Dunned
2-A-4-67
Nobody Can Do It For You
2-A-4-68, 69, 70; 6-A-2-226
Non-Resistant
2-A-2-121
Not Every Man
6-A-2-227
"Not Fancy, But Filling"
6-A-2-228
Note For A Party-Line Baby-Sitter
2-A-4-71
A Note For Historians
2-A-4-72, 73
Note From The Bridal Chamber
2-A-4-74, 75, 76; 6-A-2-229
A Note Instead Of An Elegy
2-A-4-77, 78, 79, 80; 2-B-7-122, 123
A Note To A Late Guest
2-A-4-81; 6-A-2-230
A Note to the Bureau of Missing Persons
2-A-3-83
A Note To The Teacher
2-A-4-82; 6-A-2-231
Notes For A Biography
2-A-4-85, 86, 87, 88; 5-E-11-216
Notes For a Biography
2-A-4-83, 84
Notes For A Later Letter
2-A-4-89; 6-A-2-232
Notes for a Letter
2-A-4-89; 6-A-2-232
Notes From My Mother
2-A-4-90; 5-E-4-27
Notes From Noah’s Logbook
2-A-4-91
Notes In A Journal: Hanau A/ Main
2-A-4-92
Nothing Was Ever Nakeder
2-A-4-93; 5-E-13-282
November Evening
2-A-4-94, 95
November Flight
5-E-6-74; 5-E-11-225
November In The Patio
2-A-4-96, 146; 5-E-11-222; 5-E-13-285
November Meeting
2-A-4-146; 2-B-7-125
Now Coming Back
2-A-4-97; 6-A-2-233
Now I Know This Day
2-A-4-98
Now In His Eightieth Year
2-A-4-99; 5-E-10-204
Now Is The Time
2-A-4-100
Nude At Table
5-E-13-278
O Father Of What Leaping Lad
2-A-4-101
O Miracle!
2-A-4-102
O Pioneers!
2-A-4-103; 6-A-2-235
O Write Me Quickly
2-A-4-104
Obit for An Oil Man
2-A-4-105
The Object of Whose Affection?
2-A-4-106
Of A Summer Child Abed
2-A-4-107
Of Heartbreak
2-B-7-125
Of Loves
5-E-10-183
Of Responsibilities
2-A-4-108, 109
Of Responsibility
2-A-4-110, 111
Of Tears
2-A-4-112
Of Walking Lonesome
2-A-4-113
Of Word And Stone
6-A-2-236
Off Limits
2-A-4-114; 6-A-2-237
Offering
2-A-4-115
Office Call
2-A-4-116; 6-A-3-1
"Oh, Hang It"
6-A-3-2
Olaf’s Travels
5-E-4-31
The Old And The New
5-E-11-233
An Old Barn
2-A-4-117, 118; 6-A-3-4
An Old Grey [sic] Barn
6-A-3-5
The Old Homeplace is Dreamland to Me
2-A-4-119
The Old Homestead
2-A-4-120, 121; 6-A-3-6
Old Man
2-A-6-181
Old Man In A Garden
5-E-4-17
Old Man Sleeping
2-A-4-122; 5-E-8-157
The Old Traveller
2-A-4-123, 124
"On A Warm Winter Day, On A Residential Street"
2-A-4-125, 126, 127; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-171
On Becoming A Father
2-B-7-126
"On Beholding The Peach Tree Blooming By Mr. Lemke’s Window-March 9, 1951"
6-A-3-8
On Being A Part Of Things
2-A-4-128; 6-A-3-9
On Being Prepared
2-A-4-129
On Being Someone Else
2-A-4-130; 6-A-3-10
On Calling A Can For The Premire Showing Of Next Year’s Automobiles
2-A-4-131, 132, 133
On Changing Courses
2-A-4-134; 6-A-3-11
On Christmas Once
2-A-4-135; 5-E-8-156; 6-A-3-12
On Dying
2-A-4-136
On Dying In The Country
2-A-4-137, 138, 139; 5-E-7-132
On Dying In The Country
2-A-4-140, 141, 142, 143
On Examining An Early Snapshot
2-A-4-144, 145
On Finding An Old Record Album
2-A-4-146; 5-E-4-36, 37
On Finding An Old School Picture
2-A-4-147
On Finding a Summer Note to Myself
2-A-4-148
On Finding Some Old Mash Notes
2-A-4-149; 6-A-3-13
On Frailties
2-A-4-150
On Freedoms
2-A-4-151
On Gaining His Majority
2-A-4-152, 153, 154
On Giving Things Names
2-A-4-155
On Learning That Ellen Faber Is A Twin
2-A-4-156
On Looking Around
2-A-4-157
On Not Buying A New Suit
2-A-4-158
On Occupying
2-A-4-159; 6-A-3-14
On Reporting To Work Late
2-A-4-160
On Returning From Up The River
2-A-4-161, 162
On Saying “No” To A Real Estate Man
2-A-4-163; 6-A-3-15, 16
On Second Thought
2-A-4-164
On Seeing A Luna Moth At The Window
2-A-4-165, 166; 6-A-3-17
On the Brink-But Not in the Drink
2-A-4-66
On the Death of a child
2-A-4-167; 6-A-3-18
On The Eve Of Departure
2-A-4-168; 2-B-7-99, 118; 6-A-3-19
On The Fortieth Day
2-A-4-169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174
On The Way
2-A-4-175; 6-A-3-21
On Turning Down An Invitation I Would Have Turned Down If You’d Asked In December
2-A-3-106
On Turning Down An Invitation To Go Into Orbit
2-A-4-176
On Turning Twenty-Seven
2-A-4-177, 178
"On Viewing The Sculpture, “Woman With Holes”, At The Fort Worth Art Center"
2-A-5-91
On Walking Lonesome
6-A-3-22
One Night On Scarbauer
2-A-4-179, 180
The Only Authorized Biography
2-A-4-181, 182; 2-B-7-77
Only Child
2-A-4-183; 6-A-3-23
Open-And-Shut Case
2-A-6-243
Open Letter
5-E-11-216
An Open Letter To El Dorado
2-A-4-184
Other Space
2-A-4-185; 6-A-3-24, 25
Ouachita Snapshot: Highway 28
2-A-4-186; 2-B-7-95, 118; 5-E-6-106
Out By A Doubt
2-A-4-187, 188; 6-A-3-27
Out On A Lark
2-A-4-189; 6-A-3-28
Ozarks-1967
2-A-4-190
Painter’s Death
2-A-4-191
The Panther
2-A-4-192, 193; 5-E-5-49
A Parable For Followers
5-E-6-73
Paradox
2-A-1-64
Parenthood Is A House Of Cards
6-A-3-40
Passing The Rendezvous
2-A-4-194, 195
The Passivist
2-A-1-58
Passport
2-A-4-196
Patterned Right of Way
6-A-3-43
Pause In Sadness
2-A-4-197
Pawn Shop
2-A-4-198; 5-E-7-117; 6-A-3-44, 45
Pay Dirt
2-A-1-338
Pay To The Odor Of
2-A-1-12
Pea Ridge: ’58
6-A-3-46
Pear Tree
6-A-3-47
Pears In August
2-A-4-199; 6-A-3-48
Pecos River
2-A-4-200; 2-B-7-122, 123
Pegasus In Orbit
2-A-4-201, 202, 203; 5-E-5-45
The People Watcher
2-A-4-204, 205, 206
Perspectives
2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-273
Pep Appeal
2-A-4-207
The Peregrin Path
2-A-4-208
Perspectives
2-A-4-209, 210
Phoenix
2-A-4-211
The Phoenix Makers
2-A-4-212, 213, 214, 215
“Photograph By A Stranger”
2-A-4-216
Piano Tuner
5-E-10-185
Picture Through A Sunlit Window
2-A-4-217
Pictures in an Album
2-A-4-218; 6-A-3-51
"Picturesque Speech, Etc . . . A Change of Season (And Nothing More)"
2-A-4-219
Pilgrimage
2-A-4-220
Pioneer
5-E-11-238
A Place Beyond
2-A-4-221, 222, 223; 5-E-4-26
A Place for Him
2-A-4-224; 6-A-3-52
A Place With Water
2-A-4-226; 6-A-3-54
Places
2-A-4-227; 5-E-8-153
Places Of Transit
2-A-4-228
Plagiarist
2-A-5-77; 5-E-13-302; 6-A-3-55
Plain Song
2-A-4-229
Plane And Fancy
2-A-4-230
Planning The Menu
6-A-3-56
Play’s The Thing
2-A-4-231
The Plow Had Wings
2-A-4-232; 6-A-3-57
Plunder
2-A-4-233; 6-A-3-58
Poem
2-A-2-32; 2-A-4-234; 2-E-13-287, 288; 6-A-3-59
A Poem Against The Night
2-A-4-235, 236; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-3-60
A Poem Is Not
2-A-4-237; 6-A-3-61
Poemette
6-A-3-62
Poet
2-A-4-238
A Poet Asks Forgiveness
2-A-4-239; 5-E-13-299
A Poet Must Persevere
2-A-4-240
Poetic Idealist
5-E-5-38
The Poets Know
2-A-4-241
Poor Relations
2-A-4-242
Postcard To A Tight Correspondent
2-A-2-83
postlude for old world
2-A-4-243
The Power Of A Woman
2-A-5-280; 2-B-7-124, 125; 5-E-7-130; 6-A-3-69
A Power Of Goodly Balance Swings This World
2-A-4-244; 2-B-7-67
Practically Prone
2-A-1-12
In Praise Of Almost Anything
2-A-4-245
Prayer
2-A-4-246; 5-E-12-259
Prayer
2-A-4-247, 248
Prayerless
2-A-4-249
Predilection
2-A-4-250
Prelude
2-A-4-251
Preparing The Way
2-A-4-252; 6-A-3-70
Prerequisite
2-A-4-253, 254; 6-A-3-71
Prescription
2-A-4-255, 256; 6-A-3-72
Press Release
2-A-4-257, 258, 259; 2-B-7-25; 6-A-3-74
Pride And Fall
2-A-4-260; 6-A-3-75, 76
Prisoners
2-A-4-261; 5-E-12-271
Prisoners Scrubbing The Courthouse Corridors
2-A-4-262
A Private Imagery
2-A-4-263, 264
Processional
2-A-4-265, 266, 267, 268; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-206; 5-E-12-272
Prodigal
5-E-4-9; 6-A-3-77
Prodigal And Poet
2-A-4-269; 5-E-6-90
Prodigal Poet
2-A-4-269; 5-E-6-90
The Prodigals
2-A-4-270, 271; 2-B-7-58; 6-A-3-78
Proem
2-A-4-272; 6-A-3-79
Program Notes For an Off Season
5-E-6-79
Progress Report
2-A-4-273; 6-A-3-80
Progress Report
6-A-3-81
Progress Report
2-A-4-274; 6-A-3-82
A Prologue to Dragnet
2-B-7-126
Promethean
2-A-4-275; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-3-83
The Promised Air
2-A-4-276
The Promised Year
2-A-4-277
Proof
2-A-4-278
The Proof of the Padding
2-A-4-279
Prospector
5-E-10-200
Protest
2-A-4-280
A Psalm for Survival
2-A-4-281; 5-E-5-44
Pseudo
2-A-4-282; 5-E-6-91
Puffball
2-A-4-283
Puppy Love
2-A-4-284, 285, 286, 287
A Question For The Laboratory
2-A-4-288; 6-A-3-84
The Quiet Rebel
2-A-4-289; 6-A-3-85
"Quoth The Raven, Evermore"
2-A-4-290; 6-A-2-8
Rain In Autumn
2-A-4-291; 6-A-3-86
The Rainmakers
2-A-4-292, 293, 294, 295; 2-B-7-26, 91, 118; 5-E-11-212; 5-E-12-266; 6-A-3-87
Rain Storm On The Desert
2-A-4-296; 6-A-3-88
Raspberries Run Deep
2-A-4-189, 297; 6-A-3-89
Reading The Score
2-A-4-298; 6-A-3-90
Receiving Guests
2-A-4-299, 300
Recess For Summer
2-A-4-301; 6-A-3-91
Recession Confession
2-A-4-302; 6-A-3-92
Reciprocal Trade
2-A-4-303; 6-A-3-94
Recompense
2-A-4-304
Reconciliation
6-A-3-95
Reconnaissance
2-A-4-305; 6-A-3-96
Red Star And The Wind
2-A-6-82
Reflection
5-E-11-227
Reflection Upon Facing A New Year
2-A-4-306
Reflections On Greatness
2-A-4-307
Refueling
2-A-4-308; 6-A-3-97
Refugees
2-A-4-309; 6-A-3-98
Relapse
2-A-4-310; 6-A-3-99
The Reluctant Apprentice
2-A-4-311, 312; 2-B-7-103, 118; 5-E-8-145
Reluctant Guest
6-A-3-100
Remedy
2-A-4-313
Remember Me With Verses
2-A-4-314; 6-A-3-101
Remembered Thirst
2-A-4-315, 316, 317; 5-E-11-220
Remembering
5-E-10-187
Remembering Aspens
2-A-3-185; 5-E-10-192
Remembering Cranes
2-A-4-318, 319, 320, 321
Remembering May
2-A-4-322; 6-A-3-102, 103
Remonstration
2-A-4-323
Renewal
2-A-4-324, 325; 2-B-7-109, 118; 6-A-3-104, 105
Renewing Acquaintances
2-A-4-326, 327; 6-A-3-106
Report Card
2-A-4-328; 6-A-3-107
Report Card On A One-Time Teacher
2-A-4-329
Report From Route 4
6-A-3-108
Report From Route 4
6-A-3-109
Report From Route 4
2-A-4-330
Report From Route 4
6-A-3-110
Report From Route 4
6-A-3-111
Reprise
2-A-4-331, 332, 333, 334
Requiem
2-A-4-335
Requiem Composed Outside the Fallen City
2-A-4-336; 5-E-13-284
Requiem for a Four-Year-Old
2-A-4-337
Requiem For An Old Year
2-A-4-338, 339
Requisition
2-A-4-340
Reservations For A Vacation
2-A-4-341
Reservoir
2-A-4-342
"Resort Scene, with Misgivings"
2-A-4-343; 6-A-3-112
Resound
2-B-7-125; 5-E-13-293
Resurgam
2-A-4-344, 345, 346; 2-B-7-27; 6-A-3-114
Resurgam
2-A-4-247
Retreat
2-A-4-67
Return
2-A-5-1; 5-E-6-94; 6-A-3-115
Return of the Prodigal
2-A-5-2
Return To Paradise
2-A-3-106
Return To Pea Ridge
2-A-5-3, 4; 5-E-7-114; 6-A-3-116, 117
Return To Sunday Creek
2-A-5-5; 6-A-3-118
Return To The City
2-A-5-6
Reunion
2-A-5-7, 8; 6-A-3-119
Review
2-B-7-133, 134, 135; 5-E-5-41
Reward For Valor
2-A-5-9
A Rhino Type Or Two
6-A-3-120
Right As Rain
2-A-5-10; 6-A-3-122
Right Of Way
2-A-5-11, 12
A Rite To Privacy
2-A-5-13, 14
The River At Hanau
2-A-5-15; 6-A-3-123
The River Road
2-A-5-16
Road Hog
5-E-4-2
Road-Runner
2-A-5-17, 18, 19
The Road To Hanoi
2-A-5-20, 21, 22, 23; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-247
Roast Host
2-A-5-231; 6-A-3-124
Robbins Mountain
2-A-5-24, 25; 6-A-3-125, 126
The Robot’s Mind
2-A-5-26, 27; 5-E-5-63; 6-A-3-127,128
Rooster On A Fence
2-A-5-28; 6-A-3-129
Rope
2-A-5-29
Rosary
2-A-5-30
Rounding A Poem
2-A-5-31, 32; 6-A-3-134
Rural Carrier
2-A-5-33; 6-A-3-136
S.R.O.
2-A-5-34
The Sailor
2-A-5-35
Sails
2-A-5-36
St Nicholas Rides Again
2-A-5-37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42; 5-E-4-29; 6-A-3-188
The Salesman Who Reads Greek
2-A-5-66
Salt
2-A-5-43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-243
"Same Song, Same End"
2-A-5-50; 6-A-3-138
"Same Song, Same Ending"
2-A-5-50; 6-A-3-138
The Same Tree
2-A-5-51, 52, 53, 54
Sanctuary
5-E-6-103
Sandpiper
2-A-5-55, 56
Sandpipers Nest In An Ozark Garden
2-A-5-57; 5-E-4-35
Satisfaction
5-E-7-124
Saturday’s Children
5-E-4-10
Scope Of Horror
2-A-5-58; 6-A-3-141
Scripture For A Penman
2-A-5-59
A Scrub Pine
2-A-2-317
Search For The Dream
2-A-5-60
The Searcher
2-A-5-60; 5-E-5-56
Seascape: An Interior
2-A-5-62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-257
Season’s Gratings
2-A-4-323
Second Summer
2-A-5-68; 6-A-3-143
Secret Longings
2-A-5-69
Secretary In A Chicken Plant
2-A-5-70
Seekers
2-A-5-71
Self Portrait
2-A-5-72; 6-A-3-145
Semester’s End
2-A-5-73
Sense Or Ship
2-A-5-74; 6-A-3-146, 147
Sequence
2-A-2-53
Serenade
5-E-7-137
The Sergeant
2-A-5-75, 76; 2-B-7-78
Series Business
2-A-5-77
Sermon
2-A-5-78
Sermon For A Night Patrol
2-A-5-79, 80; 5-E-13-295; 6-A-3-148
Sestina For A Familiar Lobster
2-A-5-81, 82; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-198
Sestina Of The Newly Dead
2-A-5-83, 84, 85; 2-B-7-71; 5-E-9-178
Setting The Clock
2-A-5-86
Seven Ducks in a Dark Wood
2-A-5-87, 88
Shadrach Was Fire
2-A-5-89, 90; 2-B-7-42; 5-E-7-138
Shall We Find Love
2-A-5-91; 6-A-3-149
The Shapes Of Protest
2-A-5-92; 2-B-7-87, 118; 6-A-3-150
She Was A Blackbird
2-A-4-327
She Was Not Known
2-A-5-93
A Ship Comes In
2-A-5-94
Show-And-Tell
2-A-5-95
Sick Call (Loud and Clear)
2-A-5-96; 6-A-3-152
Signposts
2-A-2-94
Silhouette
2-A-5-97, 98, 99
Sitting Bull Falls
5-E-10-189
Sitting For A Portrait (and other poems)
2-A-5-100
Skin Game
2-A-2-268
Skirmish In Summer
6-A-3-153, 154
A Slant Of Roof
2-A-5-101, 102, 103
Slide Show
2-A-5-77
Sling Me A Cucumber Milkshake: Tomorrow’s The Sixth Of June
2-A-5-104
A Sly Fox Waiting
2-A-5-105; 5-E-6-108; 6-A-3-156
Small Bird Music
2-A-5-106, 107
A Small Stranger
2-A-5-108, 109; 5-E-7-139
Small Stuff
2-A-5-110
Small World
2-A-5-111; 6-A-3-157
Snake
2-A-5-112
Snake
2-A-5-113, 114, 115, 116; 5-E-5-52
Snapshot: Kansas
2-A-5-117; 5-E-7-140; 5-E-11-221
Snow Job
2-A-5-118; 6-A-3-158
Social and Scientific Notes From Here And Afield
2-A-2-234
Soldier
2-A-5-119; 5-E-9-172; 6-A-3-159
Soldier’s Prayer
5-E-13-290
Soliloquy And Exit
2-A-5-120, 121
Soliloquy And Mandolin
2-A-5-122
Some Go Free
2-A-5-123
Some Men Are Turned To Cities
2-A-5-124; 6-A-3-160
Somehow You Know
2-A-5-125
Something For The Fourth
2-A-5-126
Something New For Me
2-A-4-33
Something Remains
6-A-3-162
Something Special
6-A-3-163
Sometimes I Touch A Christmas Star
2-A-5-127; 6-A-3-164
Sometimes Lost
5-E-6-83
Son and Heir
6-A-3-165
Son Net
2-A-5-128, 129
Song
2-A-5-130; 6-A-3-166
Song Before Port Call
6-A-3-167
A Song For Lovers
2-B-7-124; 5-E-10-203
A Song for My Sons
2-A-5-131; 6-A-3-168, 169
A Song For September
2-A-5-132, 133; 5-E-8-159
Song From A Small Country
2-A-5-134, 135, 136; 2-B-7-89, 118; 6-A-3-170
The Song In the Throat of the Lark
2-A-5-137; 2-B-7-124
The Song of the Farmer
6-A-3-171
Sonic Boom
2-A-5-138; 6-A-3-172
Sonnet
6-A-3-173
Sonnet For A Dark House
2-A-5-139; 6-A-3-174, 175
Sonnet For A Dry Season
2-A-5-140
Sonnet For A Salesman
2-A-5-141
Sonnet For Drum And Bugle
2-A-5-142, 143, 144; 2-B-7-86, 118
A Sonnet For The Night
2-A-5-145, 146; 2-B-7-97, 118; 5-E-4-20
Sonnet in Couplet
5-E-5-59
Sonnet in July
2-A-5-147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153; 2-B-7-28, 81, 118; 6-A-3-176
A Sort Of Spring Song
2-A-5-154
A Sort Of Spring Song
2-A-5-155
The Sounds Of May
2-B-7-126
South For The Winter
2-A-5-156; 6-A-3-177
Space Saver
2-A-6-86; 6-A-3-179
Spacemen Land In A National Cemetery
2-A-5-157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162
The Sparrow
2-A-5-163
A Sparrow Fallen
2-A-5-164
Sparrows in Late Snow
2-A-3-276
Spinster
2-A-5-165, 166, 167, 168; 6-A-3-180
Spokesman
2-A-5-169
The Sportsman
2-A-1-338
Spring Campaign
2-A-5-170; 6-A-3-181
Spring Is A Coming Thing
2-A-5-171; 6-A-3-182
Spring Shower
2-A-5-172
Spring Song
2-B-7-126
Spring Song
2-A-5-173; 6-A-3-183
Spring song
2-A-5-174
Spring Song: 1959
2-A-5-175
"Spring Song, with Reservations"
2-A-5-176; 5-E-13-298
Spring Stratagem
6-A-3-184
Square’s Confession
6-A-3-185
Squeeze Play
2-A-5-110; 6-A-3-186
Squeeze Play
2-A-5-177; 6-A-3-187
Staff-Written
2-A-5-178
Stalked
5-E-11-224
The Stallion’s Nest
5-E-6-99
Standing On The Promises
2-A-5-179
Starlings In August
2-A-5-180
Stars in the Daylight
2-A-5-181
State Of The Nation
2-A-5-182, 183
"State-Of-The-World-Message, 1956"
2-A-2-298
Steel-Plated Reactionary
2-A-5-184; 5-E-5-66
Still Life
2-A-5-185; 5-E-12-249; 6-A-3-190
"Still Life, Without Apples"
2-A-5-186
A Stir Is Born
2-A-5-187
Stopping For Flowers
2-A-5-188, 189, 190, 191, 192; 2-B-7-69
Storm Cellar
2-A-5-193, 194, 195, 196; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15
Storm Centre
2-A-5-197
A Story
2-A-5-198
Story Hour At The Library
2-A-5-199; 5-E-6-95
Strange Pattern
2-A-5-200
A Stranger In The Land
2-A-5-201
Strawberry Time
2-A-5-202, 203; 5-E-6-77; 6-A-3-191
A Streetful Of Little Houses
2-A-5-204
Substance
2-A-5-205
A Sudden Man
2-A-5-206, 207; 6-A-3-193
"Suddenly, Savagely"
2-A-5-208
Suddenly The Birds
2-A-5-209; 6-A-3-194
Suggestions For A Next Incarnation
2-A-5-210
Summer Harvest
2-A-5-211
The Summer Hush
2-B-7-125
Summer Is A Waiting
2-A-5-212
The Summer Merchants
2-A-5-213; 6-A-3-195
Summer Music
2-A-5-214, 215
The Summer People
2-A-5-245; 5-E-12-253
Summer Plums
2-A-5-216; 6-A-3-196
Summer Rain
2-A-5-217; 6-A-3-197
Summer School
2-A-5-218
Summer Stock
2-A-5-219, 220, 221; 6-A-3-198
Summing Up
2-A-5-222; 6-A-3-199
Sun Poem
2-A-5-223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228; 2-B-7-74; 5-E-9-168
Sunday Creek
2-A-5-212, 229, 230; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-12-261
Suppressed Fireworks
2-A-5-231; 6-A-3-200
Sure Sign
2-A-5-110
Surfeit
2-A-5-232; 5-E-4-33
"Surly To Bed, Surly To Rise"
2-A-5-233, 234
Surplus Commodity
2-A-5-235
Surrounded By Sky
2-A-5-236; 6-A-3-201
The Survivors
5-E-6-75; 6-A-3-202
Sustenance
2-A-5-237; 6-A-3-203
Swain Song
2-A-1-338
Swan Song
6-A-3-204
A Sweet Belief
2-A-5-238
A Sweet Perfection
2-A-5-239
A Sweet Profundity
2-A-5-240; 5-E-7-127
Swift
2-A-5-241
Tactic
2-A-5-242, 243; 2-B-7-48; 5-E-5-57; 6-A-4-1
Taking Stock
2-A-5-244; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-12-264
Taking the Bees
5-E-4-12
Taps
2-A-5-245
Taps
2-A-5-246, 247, 248; 6-A-4-3
Tardy Party
6-A-4-4
Tassel Gentle
2-A-5-249
Telethon
2-A-5-250; 6-A-4-5
Tell M
2-A-5-251
Telling The Bees
2-A-5-252; 5-E-13-296
Telling The Weather
2-A-5-253
Temptation
5-E-4-3
Ten
2-A-5-254; 2-B-7-59; 5-E-4-24
Tenanted
2-A-5-255, 256; 6-A-4-6
Tennis
2-A-4-33
Tenth Summer
2-A-5-257
Test
2-A-5-258
Testament
2-A-5-259, 260
Testament
2-A-5-261; 6-A-4-8
Testimony
2-A-5-262
"Thank You Note, Beforehand"
2-A-5-263
"Thanks, But"
6-A-4-9
That I Die Well
2-A-5-264; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-11-221; 6-A-4-10
That Time of Year
2-A-5-265
Thaw
2-A-5-266; 6-A-4-11
There Are Not Always Men Where Contests Are:
2-A-5-267, 268
There Are Some Fine Things Happening
2-A-5-269
There Is An Historian In Every Family
2-A-5-270, 271, 272, 273
There Never Was A Bird
2-A-5-274; 5-E-7-120
There Oughta Be A Law
2-A-5-275, 276, 277
There Was Always Music
2-A-5-278; 6-A-4-14
These Endearing Old Charms
2-A-2-83
They Could Always Depend On Jake To Keep His Trap Shut
2-A-5-279
They Do Not Ask Return
5-E-5-60
The Things I Own Are Things of Paper
6-A-4-17
The things not done
6-A-4-18
Things of Moment
2-A-5-280; 2-B-7-125
The Things She Loved
2-A-5-281, 282
Think Of The Child
2-A-5-283, 284, 285, 286
This Fear Of Death
2-A-5-287
This Invisible Shield
2-A-5-288, 289; 2-B-7-57; 5-E-7-128
This Is My World
2-A-5-290; 5-E-11-234
This Is The Way We Go To School
2-A-5-258
This Room Rejoices
2-A-5-291; 2-B-7-124
This Shore Unchanged
2-A-5-292
“This Was Our First Real War”
2-A-5-293
This You Must Know
5-E-6-71; 5-E-11-220
Those Who Know Love
2-A-5-294
Though Every Heart Has Roses
2-A-5-111; 6-A-4-19
Three
2-A-5-295
Three Candles For Luigi
2-A-5-296
Three Poems On Youth
2-A-5-297
Three Seasons
2-A-5-298, 299
Throwing Out Old Letters
2-A-5-300
"Tied, But Not Fit To Be"
2-A-5-301
Tiger
2-A-5-302, 303, 304; 5-E-8-151
Time Bomb
2-A-5-305; 6-A-4-20
Time Is Long
2-A-5-306; 5-E-5-68
A Time Of Fever
2-A-5-307, 308, 309, 310, 311; 2-B-7-60; 5-E-6-97
Time Of Winter
2-A-5-312, 313; 2-B-7-65; 5-E-5-52
Time Shags On
2-A-3-83
A Time To Remember
2-A-5-314, 315; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-21, 22, 23
Tip On A Dead Jockey
6-A-4-24
To A First-Grade Teacher
2-A-5-316
To A Fish In A Barrel
2-B-7-125; 6-A-4-25
To a Party-Line Baby Sitter
6-A-4-26
To a Typewriter Repairman
2-A-2-218; 5-E-8-149
To An Egg Without A Yoke
2-A-5-317
To Be A Book
2-A-5-318; 6-A-4-27
To Endure
2-A-6-1, 2, 3, 4
To Give a Child a Book
6-A-4-28, 29
To Give The World A Poem
2-A-6-5; 6-A-4-30
To Have And To Hold
2-A-6-6
“To Have Dominion—”
2-A-6-7
To Her It’s Human
2-A-2-234
To Love Is All
2-A-6-8, 9, 10, 11
To Make A Poem
2-A-6-12, 13; 6-A-4-31
To Motherness
2-A-3-313
To One Who Hurries Too Much
2-A-6-14
To One Who Sent A Dictionary
2-A-6-15
To One Who Touched My Heart
2-A-6-16
To Sing Another Home
2-A-6-17; 5-E-7-113; 6-A-4-33
To Test Our Clarity
2-A-6-18, 19, 20, 21; 2-B-7-29; 6-A-4-34, 35
To Wait A Summit
2-A-6-22, 23; 2-B-7-30; 6-A-4-36
Today You Planted Thyme
2-A-6-24
Torch Singer
2-A-6-25
Tornado
5-E-7-134
Touche
2-A-1-381; 2-A-6-26
Toward Harvest
2-A-6-27; 6-A-4-37, 38
Toward Spring
2-A-6-28, 29; 2-B-7-111, 118; 6-A-4-39, 40
Toward Spring
2-A-6-30; 6-A-4-41
Toward Spring
2-A-6-31; 6-A-4-42
Toward Summer’s End
2-A-6-32, 33; 6-A-4-43
Tragedian
2-A-6-34; 5-E-8-154; 6-A-4-44
Trail of Tears
2-B-7-125
Tramp Steamer
2-A-6-35
Transaction
2-A-6-36; 6-A-4-45, 46
Transition
2-A-6-37, 38; 6-A-4-47
The Tree-House
2-B-7-125; 5-E-6-107
Tree In Winter
2-A-6-39
Trees In The Wind
2-A-6-40, 41
The Trip
2-A-6-42, 43
A True Communion
2-A-6-44
True Power
2-A-6-45; 6-A-4-50, 51
True Vision
2-A-6-46; 5-E-13-303
The Tumbleweed House
2-A-6-47; 5-E-8-157
A Turn of Prayer
2-B-7-125; 5-E-7-125
A Turn Of Season
2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-227; 6-A-4-53
A Turn Of Season
2-B-7-31, 115, 118, 136, 137; 6-A-4-54
Turning Loose
2-A-6-48, 49, 50; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-210
Turning on the Year
2-A-6-51; 6-A-4-55
Turning The Calendar
2-A-6-52, 53, 54
The Turtle
2-A-6-55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-179
Twenty-One Civilizations
2-A-6-64, 65, 66; 5-E-11-220
Twin Sanctuaries
2-A-6-67; 6-A-4-56
Two
2-A-6-68; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-57
Two Birds Mate In An Unused Tree
5-E-11-242
Two-Faced
2-A-6-69
Two Late
2-A-6-70
Two Of A Kind
2-A-6-71; 6-A-4-58
Two Sisters
2-A-6-72
Two Views
2-A-6-73
"Two Virgins, Two Hotdogs, and Six Chocolate Sodas"
2-A-6-74
Typewritten On The Wind
5-E-13-294
"Unclimbed, This Tree"
2-A-6-75, 76; 6-A-4-59
Under A New Patchwork
2-A-6-151
Under The Auction
2-A-6-77; 5-E-13-297
Unhorticultured
2-A-6-78
“Uninsurable”
2-A-6-79, 80; 2-B-7-76
The United State
2-A-6-81
Unkept Rendezvous
2-A-6-82
"Unwept (?), Unhonored, And Unbought"
6-A-4-61
Unwritten Obituary
2-A-6-83
The Ups And Downs Of Life
2-A-6-84
Vacation Attraction
2-A-6-85
Vacation Departure
2-A-6-86; 6-A-4-62
Vantage
2-A-6-87
A Various Harvest
2-A-6-88; 5-E-4-26
"Verses For My Grandmother, Marianne Moore"
2-A-6-89
Vestige
2-A-6-90; 6-A-4-63, 64
Veto
5-E-4-8
The View From Town
2-A-6-91; 6-A-4-65, 66
The Village Square
2-A-6-92; 6-A-4-67
A Villanelle About Grandma But Not For Her
2-A-6-93, 94
Villanelle For An Unlikely Departure
2-A-6-95
Villanelle For Euterpe
2-A-6-96
Voice Of America
2-A-6-97; 6-A-4-68
Voices
2-A-2-53
Wages
2-A-6-98; 6-A-4-69
A Waist Of Words?
2-A-6-99
Waiting Days
2-A-6-100
Waiting For A Poem
2-A-6-101; 5-E-7-136; 6-A-4-70
Waiting For the Calf
2-A-6-102; 6-A-4-71
Waiting For The Child
2-A-6-103; 6-A-4-72
Waiting For The Mail
2-A-6-104; 6-A-4-73, 74
Waiting For Winter
2-A-6-105; 6-A-4-75
A Waiting Time
2-A-6-106; 6-A-4-76
Walk Here Unborn
2-A-6-107, 108
The Walk I Would
2-A-6-109
Walk In Autumn
6-A-4-77
Walk On Scarbauer (WPA 1941)
2-A-6-110; 5-E-11-230
Walking By Night
2-A-6-111; 6-A-4-78, 79
Walking In Winter
2-A-6-112, 113, 114; 5-E-11-216
Walking With Brahms
2-A-6-115; 6-A-4-80, 81
War
2-A-6-116
Warning
2-A-6-117
Warnings Of Glory
2-A-6-118
Watching The Cows
2-A-6-119; 6-A-4-87
Water Color
2-A-6-120
Water-Diggin’
2-A-6-121
Water Music
2-A-6-122
The Way Back
6-A-4-88, 89
The Way In
2-A-6-123, 124; 2-B-7-36; 6-A-4-90, 91
The Way It All Turned Out
2-A-6-125; 2-B-7-88, 118
We Came Up the Mountain
2-A-6-126
We Felled the Tree
6-A-4-92
We Learn to Live
2-A-6-127
Weather Warning (On His 33rd Birthday)
2-A-6-128
Weather-Wise
2-A-6-129, 130, 131, 132
Wedding
2-A-6-133, 134, 135
Weekend Chef
2-A-6-136
Weep Not
5-E-11-242
Welcome
2-A-6-137
Wet Season
2-A-6-138
What Do We Know?
2-A-6-139
What Is More Intimate Ever?
2-A-6-140, 141, 142, 143, 144; 6-A-4-94
What Will You Call These Years?
2-A-6-145
Whatever Ark
2-A-4-146, 147; 2-B-7-35
Whatever Voice
6-A-4-95
What’s New?
2-A-6-148; 6-A-4-96
What’s Up?
6-A-4-97, 98
When Does That Muse We Nursed
2-A-3-147; 5-E-12-255
When I Am Gone
2-A-6-149
When I Am Tired Of All That Life Implies
2-A-6-150, 151
When Summer Comes
2-A-6-152; 6-A-4-99, 100
When Voice Is Inadequate
2-A-6-153
Where Does A Poem Go When It Isn’t Written?
2-A-6-154
Where May Runs Into June
2-A-6-155; 2-B-7-32, 114, 118; 6-A-4-101, 102
Where Some Late Plough Has Turned
2-A-6-156
Where The Steep Trail Ends
2-A-6-157
Whereby The Would Will Heal
2-A-6-158, 159, 160; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-4-103, 104
While Gathering Wood For Winter
2-A-6-161, 162; 2-B-7-33
While Peter Grew Toward Manhood
2-A-6-163
Whippoorwills
2-A-6-164, 165, 166, 167; 2-B-7-125
White Cat
2-A-6-168
The White Cock
2-A-6-169, 170; 2-B-7-34; 6-A-4-105, 106
White On White
2-A-6-171
White River Float
2-A-6-172, 173, 174, 175, 176; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-173; 6-A-4-107
Whitmonday Revisited
2-A-6-177, 178, 179
Who Looks But Once
2-A-6-180
Who Loved The Hills Too Well
2-A-5-215; 2-A-6-181
Whodunnit
2-A-6-182
Who’s Getting Trimmed?
2-A-6-183
Who’s He?
2-A-6-184; 5-E-7-114; 6-A-4-110
Who’s Sorry Now?
5-E-13-301; 6-A-4-111
Whose Soiree Now?
2-A-6-185
Why Johnny Can’t Get Ahead In This World
2-A-6-186
"Why the Loon Laughs, Maybe"
2-A-6-187
Why There Is So Much Hankypanky Going On In This World
2-A-6-188, 189
"Wild Chives, 1966"
2-A-6-190, 191, 192, 193, 194; 6-A-4-112
"Wild Chives Christmas, 1966"
2-B-7-122, 123
Wild Grapes
2-A-6-195; 6-A-4-113
Wild Strawberries
2-A-6-196
Williamsburg
2-A-6-197
A Willow In His Hand
2-A-6-198
Winter Came Late
2-A-6-199; 6-A-4-115
Winter Comes Slowly
2-A-6-200
Winter Coming
6-A-4-116, 117
Winter Evening
2-A-5-248, 2-B-7-125
Winter Hay
2-A-6-201; 5-E-6-92
The Winter Heart
2-A-6-202; 6-A-4-118
Winter Is An Etching
2-A-6-203, 204; 2-B-7-37; 6-A-4-119
Winter Never Passes
2-A-6-205
Winter Reading
5-E-7-129; 6-A-4-120
Winter Set In (And So Do I!)
2-A-6-206, 207; 5-E-9-165; 6-A-4-121
Winter Song
2-A-6-208; 6-A-4-122
Winter Thaw
2-A-6-209; 6-A-4-123
Winter Was Space
2-A-6-210
The Winter Wolf
2-A-6-211; 6-A-4-124
Winterizing
2-A-6-212; 6-A-4-125
A Winter’s Tale
2-A-6-213; 6-A-4-127
A Winter’s Tale
2-A-6-214
Winterset
2-A-6-215, 216; 2-B-7-98, 118; 5-E-11-214; 6-A-4-126
"Winton Spring, With Fog"
2-A-6-217; 6-A-4-128
Wishes
2-A-6-218, 219, 220; 2-B-7-83, 118; 6-A-4-129
With Arms Open Wide
2-A-6-221
With Dubious Benefit Of Clergy
2-A-6-222
With No Harsh Censure Relegate My Love
2-A-6-223
With Upraised Arms
2-A-6-224
Woman Digging Potatoes
2-B-7-126
The Woman In The Poke Bonnet
2-A-6-225, 226
Woman’s Prerogative
2-A-6-227; 6-A-4-130
Woods Violets
2-A-6-228; 6-A-4-131
Woods Walk At Twilight
2-A-6-229; 6-A-4-132
Words
2-A-6-230, 231, 232, 233; 2-B-7-38
Words For An Old Midnight Refrain
2-A-6-234; 5-E-8-160
Words (On Hearing a Wordless Melody)
5-E-4-22
work song
2-A-6-235
Working Mother
2-A-6-236; 6-A-4-133
Write Something Special
2-A-6-237; 6-A-4-134
Writing A Poem
2-A-6-238; 6-A-4-135
Wrong Area Code
2-A-6-238; 6-A-4-137
Wrong Number
2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-179
Wrong Number
2-A-6-240, 241, 242
Wrong Number
2-A-6-243
The Yard Bird Makes a Temporary Nest
2-A-6-244
The Year Of The Great White Goose
2-A-6-245, 246, 247, 248; 2-B-7-39; 5-E-5-46
The Year We Put The Plow Away
2-B-7-125; 6-A-4-139
"Yes, Eloise, I Do Live in a Garret"
2-A-6-249
You Asked For It
2-A-6-250; 6-A-4-140
You Gotta Keep Up
2-A-6-251
You Must Go On
2-A-6-83, 252
You Are The Angels
2-A-6-253, 254
The Young Land
3-A-6-255; 6-A-4-141
Your Absence Does Not Grieve Me
2-A-6-256; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-142, 143
Zoe
2-A-6-257
Zouve
2-A-6-258

Index to poems by first line.

(Series Number—Sub-series Number—Box Number—Item Number)
"Across the face of God a nigger swings,"
5-E-11-236; 6-A-2-79
Across the front yard sweet with hay
2-A-6-244
The advertisement says that we
2-A-3-253; 5-E-12-257
After a cursory
2-A-6-78
After every
2-B-7-126
After long years of stress and strain
2-A-5-132, 133; 5-E-8-159
After the grain was cut and harvested
2-A-3-155; 6-A-2-106
After we felled the tree and let it lay
2-A-5-112
The aged American dies far too young
2-A-2-127
The air is full of germs and things
2-A-1-35
The air is strangely blue where field meets wood
2-A-2-79, 80, 81, 82; 2-B-7-10; 5-E-11-213
"Alas, alas, I never wrote a"
2-A-1-55; 6-A-1-26
Alas for Louise and her Grand Tour of 1958
2-A-2-321
"Alas, how often"
2-A-4-164
"Alas, I cannot read"
2-A-4-298; 6-A-3-90
Alas! the loon in flight (the book . . . )
2-A-6-187
"Alice Booker, bless her heart"
2-A-2-291, 292
All day the faint sweet hummings of old poems
2-A-6-161, 162; 2-B-7-33
All men are searchers. Few men rest
2-A-5-60
All summer long the drought has cracked the earth
2-A-5-140; 6-A-1-255
All that I favored
2-A-1-73, 74, 75; 5-E-8-158
All this green splash of spring I have walked in wonder
2-A-2-123; 6-A-1-217
All through the Indian summer days
2-A-3-93; 6-A-2-73
The aloes bloom in Naples once again
2-A-3-240
Aloha oi
2-A-4-66
Alone hangs Judas in a scented garden
6-A-2-100
"Along toward noon, we let the fire go out"
2-A-6-90; 6-A-3-63, 64
Altho you smiled
2-A-1-322; 6-A-1-143
Although I had not a thing to fear
2-A-5-113, 114, 115, 116; 5-E-5-52
"Although the answer is “No”, Cecilia"
2-A-3-140; 6-A-2-114
Although to alien eyes our fields are poor
2-A-5-134, 135, 136; 2-B-7-89, 118; 6-A-3-170
Although you smiled
2-A-1-322; 6-A-1-143
"America, forgive me for my silence"
2-A-4-239; 5-E-13-299
Among men’s dislikes
2-A-6-71; 6-A-4-58
". . .And God or devil, who knows which,"
5-E-7-134
And haply some may yet survive
2-A-2-366
"And now, you footloose Hermes"
2-A-3-212; 6-A-2-129
And o her breasts were sweet with milk
2-A-4-220
. . .and when
2-A-6-153
and when the spirit overtakes itself
2-A-6-259
And where are you when it is time to eat
2-A-3-20
The angels in the haw tree were so thick
2-A-2-353; 6-A-2-26
Anguish and anger
2-A-4-234
The answer is the answer. Brother
2-A-1-53
Any mother who has seen
2-A-5-258
Anything a starling has
2-A-4-189; 6-A-3-28
The Apollonian caterpillars are here
2-A-1-98; 6-A-1-49
The apples broke from the weighted bough
2-A-3-312
An April morning is a giant
2-A-6-120
“Are there taxis in heaven? does it rain. . .”
2-A-4-337
"Armed with some merciless notions, the high school band"
2-A-1-99, 101, 102, 103; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-11-241; 6-A-1-50
Art has intrigued me no more than it should
2-A-1-83
"As a rule, women were fiercer about their men"
2-A-1-10
As Christmas Eve did turn to Christmas Day
2-A-1-316; 2-B-7-117, 118
As green as gold the little apples fell
2-A-1-70, 71; 6-A-1-31, 32
As if to spread his reputation round
2-A-2-166, 167; 5-E-9-176; 5-E-12-267; 6-A-1-239, 240
"As now, they learned in times of old"
2-A-1-142, 143, 144
As perfect as a perfect strand of wheat
2-A-4-218; 6-A-3-51
"As the poet seeks his metrics, even thus"
2-A-1-85; 2-B-7-104, 118; 6-A-1-44
Ask not the wind
2-A-1-89
Aspens are not for poems: they defy
2-A-1-90; 6-A-1-46
"At four, among his Sunday aunts and uncles"
2-A-1-14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-6-104
"At night now, you can hear the chill"
2-A-1-346
"At night, they say, she shrouds herself in gray,"
5-E-6-80
At the end of the row he leaned on the plough
2-A-4-313
"At the noon low tide, discovering shell and stone,"
5-E-11-238
At the office he’s an expert
2-A-2-251
At thirty thousand feet the air
2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-199
At twenty-nine thousand feet the air
2-A-2-190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199
At twenty-one
2-A-4-209, 210; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-273
At twilight on the Wilsons’ roof
2-A-3-177
"August, be gentle to this child"
2-A-4-107
August comes
2-A-2-122
"August: that dazzling sunburst, that great dogstar"
2-A-5-307, 308, 309, 310, 311; 2-B-7-60; 5-E-6-97
The autumn air
2-A-4-233; 6-A-3-58
"Autumn is a bird turned golden, flying"
2-A-1-124; 6-A-1-58
Autumn is here.
6-A-3-108
The autumn leaves consume the pup
2-A-2-27; 6-A-1-181
The autumn sun slants through the window pane
2-A-5-199; 5-E-6-95
"Autumn, you wily strategist, turn back"
2-A-3-82
Aware of his passion
2-A-1-379
Babies are uncanny
2-A-6-6
The back yard was the ocean
2-A-5-35
Barch dribbles od
2-A-2-2
The barn has frost along the stable doors
2-A-3-347
The barn is a grey grandfather on whose knees
2-A-4-117, 118; 6-A-3-4, 5
The basket runs over with berries and plums
2-A-5-211
"Be careful, Critic, lest you note"
2-A-4-290; 6-A-2-8
"Be gentle, Lord, to those who take"
2-A-6-148; 6-A-4-96
"The beans came out of cans, it’s true"
2-A-1-357, 358
"Beast of the cloven foot, of wing, of mane"
2-A-3-13; 5-E-10-204
Beauty has been both reason and despair
2-A-3-1993, 194, 195, 196; 2-B-7-93, 118; 5-E-8-148
"Beauty is enough for me, love is more than plenty"
2-A-3-95, 96; 5-E-12-250
The beauty of love
2-A-1-154, 155
The beauty of the scorpion in the stone
2-A-2-252, 253; 5-E-8-162
Because at the instant of coition we are gods
2-A-6-188, 189
Because he loved the hills so much
2-A-2-60
Because he’d never looked on death
2-A-4-113; 6-A-3-22
"Because I have lined my creel with trout, and you"
2-A-3-50, 51; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-4-27
Because of my mother’s penchant for leaving notes
2-A-4-90; 5-E-4-27
Because of the 15th of March
6-A-1-17
Because of the fire in the top of his head
2-A-1-157
Because of the new hay
2-A-6-201; 5-E-6-92
Because Peter had been born in China
2-A-6-163
Because she had been thwarted in her love
2-A-5-1; 5-E-6-94
Because she used to live in this house
2-A-6-260
Because the expected response is not expected
2-A-4-100
Because you are the universe’s center
2-A-1-158, 159; 2-B-7-96, 118; 5-E-8-161
Because you gave to me on Christmas once
2-A-4-135; 5-E-8-156; 6-A-3-12
Because you know the vastness of the hill
2-A-3-130, 131, 132; 2-B-7-18, 106, 118; 5-E-12-264; 6-A-2-92
Because we knew we must die young
5-E-6-75; 6-A-3-202
Because your ear creates
2-B-7-40
A bed of straw
2-A-1-386
"Bedazzled by the fullness of the field, the height of wood"
2-A-3-283; 2-A-4-7, 8; 5-E-13-280
The bee takes any early alm
2-A-5-237; 6-A-3-203
"“The bees are gone”, my father said"
2-A-5-252; 5-E-13-296
Before goodbye
6-A-1-77
"Before the sun could rise, you left the sun"
2-A-1-206
Before these phrases have a chance to harden
2-A-5-31, 32; 6-A-3-134
Behold the child who lately has been given
2-A-1-218; 6-A-1-108, 109, 110
Behold the child who looks on art
2-A-1-110; 6-A-1-51
Being as handsome as the lies he told
2-A-5-87, 88
Being of little use to man or beast
6-A-1-214
Believe me (if you can): we have not died
2-A-2-223
Beloved of bird
2-A-1-360, 361, 362; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-197
Ben Hartwick died at eighty-two;
2-B-7-124; 5-E-10-203
Beneath the shadow of the monastery
2-A-3-288; 2-A-4-220
Beneath these splintered tropic fronds
5-E-13-290
Bent to the flintstone hill so low that we
2-A-3-43; 6-A-2-59
The best way to stay out of trouble
2-A-5-204
Between acts we spilled out into the street
2-A-3-308, 309
Between surgery
2-A-4-116; 6-A-3-1
Between the rosewood casket and McGuffey’s
2-A-1-56, 57; 2-B-7-70
Beware of sparking in the park
2-A-2-355
Beware the pox
2-A-2-160; 6-A-1-234
Bill Wordsworth was a writing man
2-A-1-355
"Bind not the madman’s hands, for he"
2-A-4-261; 5-E-12-271
A bird in the night
2-A-1-294
"The bird made a little bird noise on the tin roof,"
5-E-12-248
"Birds do not, as a general rule"
2-A-2-143; 6-A-1-225
Birds of a feather
2-A-1-29
The birds were talking at night on various themes
2-A-1-185
The blackbird tells
2-A-6-17; 5-E-7-113; 6-A-4-33
The blackbird tells what I knew first;
2-A-6-17; 5-E-7-113; 6-A-4-33
"Blast gently, sweet Afton"
2-A-5-231; 6-A-3-200
Bless the man who sells tacks and nails
2-A-4-323
"Blessed with a transient heart, I move from May"
2-A-1-195; 6-A-1-95
Blessing shake us
2-A-1-128, 129
"Blue bird not bluebird, you defy"
2-A-1-198
A blue infinity of order
2-A-2-230
"The bobolink, whose name’s a fountain"
2-A-6-122
The bones which bless my father’s fields
2-A-2-16, 17; 2-B-7-9; 6-A-1-177
"The book, just published at the author’s expense"
2-B-7-133, 134, 135; 5-E-5-41
Bored by his nudity
2-A-2-58, 59
Bound by a better magic than the saints
2-A-5-264; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-11-221; 6-A-4-10
A bowl is for holding something: fish or gravy
2-A-1-207, 208; 6-A-1-102
"A boy, being the thing he is"
2-A-2-84
The boy in the empty orchard
2-A-5-97, 98, 99
Boy of the leaping shadow
2-A-5-6
"A boy should be, if he can at all"
2-A-1-209; 5-E-7-112; 6-A-1-103
A boy should have a country place
2-A-2-334
A boy sometimes
2-A-3-237; 6-A-2-141
The boy who hung in the sycamore
2-A-1-214; 2-A-3-121, 122
The boy who loved you is more
2-A-1-215, 216, 217; 2-B-7-124, 125
The boy who made Beethoven shudder
2-A-1-41; 6-A-1-22
Boys are playing marbles
2-A-5-154
The boys from Itannicnic
2-A-3-117
Break down the bars of darkness
2-A-1-228; 2-A-6-261
Break my heart but touch my body
2-A-2-128; 5-E-5-42; 6-A-1-219
The breast gets savager
2-A-3-230; 6-A-2-137
The breathless amber breaks across the walk
2-A-1-229
Brief is the bitter
2-A-6-262; 5-E-11-240
Brief is the bitter; thankful it is brief
2-A-6-262; 5-E-11-240
A bright blue bird
2-A-3-350
Bright water in triumph remains
2-A-1-230
"Bring me silver, bring me gold"
2-A-1-231
"Bring your lamp over, Diogenes. I have found an honest man"
2-A-2-237, 238; 5-E-5-58
The bullbat in the pawpaw tree
2-A-1-183
The bullhead lay in the shallow rush
2-A-2-368; 2-B-7-125
"By all means, give Marcus T."
6-A-3-62
"By definition, the Elysian"
2-A-5-110
Byron my text tonight is not of use
2-A-5-78
Byron when I am dead and you are rich
2-A-5-259, 260
"Call me a fool, call me a coward and a liar"
2-A-6-221
"Call your son in, Mister"
2-A-3-325, 326; 2-B-7-125
Can I have a minute or
2-A-3-110
Carmen cavorts in 78 scratch
2-A-4-146; 5-E-4-36, 37
The carpenter from Mount Ida had read a lot
2-A-5-293
The catbird mews
2-A-2-178; 5-E-7-153
Caught between floors
2-A-1-58
A Caution hushed the stubble
2-A-6-229; 6-A-4-132
The chair you sat on
2-A-1-64
Chastened and chaliced by converted country
2-A-6-74
"Cheer up, honey"
2-A-3-140; 6-A-2-98
A child is a natural warrior
2-A-1-301; 6-A-1-136
"Child of a various universe, she hurls"
2-A-4-183; 6-A-3-23
"Child of my father’s mercy, I repent"
2-A-3-250, 251; 2-B-7-92, 118
The child you longed to have at home
6-A-1-70
The children next door have a wading pool
2-A-5-34
Cholla blooms
2-A-1-310; 5-E-10-191
"Circles, when spring lights the skies"
2-A-2-284; 5-E-7-113; 6-A-2-5
"Clem, you got to give me children"
2-A-2-299
A clever politician’s one
2-A-3-110; 6-A-2-84
The Coles maintained
2-A-1-199
Come now as one
2-A-2-262
Confined to bed
2-A-5-96; 6-A-3-152
"Consider this, when I have left the green"
2-A-4-201, 202, 203; 5-E-5-45
"The convoy moves, a caravan,"
2-B-7-126
The country schoolhouse where I learned to put
2-A-1, 2, 3, 4; 5-E-7-115; 6-A-1-1, 2
A covered bridge covers more than a stream
2-A-1-382; 6-A-1-163
Covertly behind the blue faille curtain
2-A-3-337; 6-A-2-189
Crawling back into the cool cave of time
2-A-3-115
Cribbed by the cold which scotched his ancient bones
6-A-1-5
"“The cuckoo bears the rain”, our father said"
2-A-4-292, 293, 294, 295; 2-B-7-91, 118; 5-E-11-212; 5-E-12-266; 6-A-3-87
The cuckoo sang the autumn in
2-A-6-208; 6-A-4-122
The dachshund is with child again.
2-B-7-126
Day after day Mrs. Noah
2-A-1-274, 275, 276
"The day he missed the bus, he spent the rest"
2-A-4-27, 28, 29
The day John Aiken’s number case
2-A-5-175
The day of dapping stones is done
2-A-4-152, 153, 154
The days are empty and the nights are long
2-A-3-5
"The days are hard, they do not give an inch"
2-A-3-256, 257, 258; 6-A-2-153
"Dead has turned the covers down,"
5-E-10-184
"Dear disremembered, love of my eighth year"
2-A-1-121; 6-A-1-54
Dear gentle boy from woods run wild with berry
2-A-2-19, 20
"Dear grief, the grief that nettles most"
2-A-3-357; 5-E-6-93
"Dear Lord, if there is still one star unknown"
2-A-1-323; 6-A-4-144
"Dear unknown friend, what circumstance of fate"
2-A-1-153
Death has turned the covers down
2-A-2-6
"Death, the anonymous benefactor, came"
2-A-1-49
December too can break the heart
2-B-7-125
Deep in the autumn grass two quails confer
2-A-4-146; 2-B-7-125
Deep in the crystal night the hounds
2-A-6-7
Defrauded of life in this too hurried season
2-A-5-317
"Deliver me, Lord, from dying in a small town"
2-A-5-13, 14
The depths of the robot’s mind have not been tapped
2-A-5-26, 27; 5-E-5-63; 6-A-3-127, 128
The desert cowers beneath a fist of cloud
2-A-4-296; 6-A-3-88
Desire was A GI walking alone
2-A-5-254; 2-B-7-59; 5-E-4-24
Dew-drops made a rosary
2-A-5-30
The dew is on the thorn again
2-A-5-50; 6-A-3-138
"Diana, sacred goddess of the moon"
2-A-3-323
"Did this boy, weeping at his mother’s knee"
2-A-4-144, 145
Disarmed by dirt
2-A-1-197; 6-A-2-202
Does the peach now dare to bud
2-A-6-209; 6-A-4-123
Dog in the echoing darkness
2-A-5-6; 6-A-1-89
The dog next door
2-A-2-343
Don’t turn down our road till you first prepare
2-A-2-50; 5-E-7-131; 6-A-1-194, 195, 196
The doors that kept the winter out
2-A-3-126
Doors will swing open and windows slide up
2-A-2-121; 5-E-6-101
Doretta may be dying in this hour;
2-B-7-126
The dove has visited the front yard
2-A-6-73
The dove you shot
2-A-6-146, 147; 2-B-7-35
Down in Tincup children grow
2-A-2-52
Down the cobbled street I remember the blood of Carlos
5-E-6-102
Down this road I used to live
2-A-2-53
Down to the polls the nation’s voters go
5-E-4-1
The dream that was summer is over
2-A-4-301; 6-A-3-91
Drivers who stop without a warning
2-A-6-263
Drunken with laughter and drunken with spring
2-A-1-131
Dry weather flows as surely as the rain
2-A-2-66; 2-B-7-125; 6-A-1-200
The duds one chooses do not make him bigger
2-A-1-338
Duned in the doom of his impeccable grave
2-A-2-248, 249; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-257
The dusts of August rise in swirls of sparrows
2-A-4-140, 141, 142, 143
Dwarfed by the robot brain in this hushed place
2-A-4-288; 6-A-3-84
"Each man has all his things to do, and I have mine"
2-A-6-264
Each time a market I have made
2-A-1-12
Each week a boy must clip the lawn
2-A-6-183
"The earth recedes now, in the face"
2-A-2-72
The earth takes what it knows belongs to it
2-A-2-71; 6-A-1-203
The earth! the earth! I love the earth
2-A-2-73, 74
"East is East, and West is West"
2-A-2-121
"The editors print my work seldom, if ever"
2-A-4-187, 188; 6-A-3-27
Editors who slice our scripts
2-A-5-275, 276, 277
"Edmund Tilly, wherever you are"
2-A-6-265
"The egg of an antiquated stallion is my hope lately,"
2-B-7-126
"English spelling, I have fownd"
2-A-2-29
"Entertaining, as it were, a new world of men"
2-A-5-316
"Eons follow eons, and men would know the skies"
2-A-2-98
"Evasive in oils, she comprehends"
2-A-3-341
Eve in her new frock
2-A-2-174
"Even before the space age, little boys"
2-A-1-211; 6-A-1-106
"Even early in the morning, when the sun"
2-A-4-229
Even in the dark
2-A-2-369, 370, 371, 372; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-243
Even the starlings must be kept alive
2-A-8-147, 148, 49, 150, 151, 152, 153; 2-B-7-28, 81, 118; 6-A-3-173, 176
The evening skies are lilac now
2-A-6-30; 6-A-4-41
"Evening will find them, hearts full of pain,"
5-E-6-81
Every day as summer turns
6-A-2-2
Every party has a pooper
2-A-2-19
Everybody says
2-A-2-44
Everyday as summer turns
2-A-2-276
Exact of life before you flee
2-A-5-204
"Faith, my child, all good is with you"
2-A-2-215; 6-A-1-254
Far down the lane the rose blows new and tender
2-A-3-271; 5-E-7-135
"Far from the sea, her country face"
2-A-6-225, 226
"Far from the sea, his country place"
2-A-1-338
The farmers came from miles around
2-A-1-117; 6-A-1-53
"The farmhouse, and the farm to boot,"
2-B-7-125
"Fashion be hanged, he said, the dinosaurs"
2-A-1-111, 112, 113; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-8-148
Father buys toys
2-A-2-326; 6-A-2-18
Father cardinals look harried
2-A-2-110
Fathers buy toys
2-A-2-326; 6-A-2-18
Fear cannot rive it
2-A-4-165, 166; 6-A-3-17
"The fence posts wear white caps of snow, through winter’s"
2-A-5-176; 5-E-13-298
Few beasts are lonely as a lonely man
2-A-2-269
A few fond fans endured (He often said)
2-A-1-33
A few inaccessible places
2-A-6-266
"The fields are silver frosted, and the sun"
2-A-2-182
The fields I love are empty plots this year
2-A-1-186
Fiery the fortress the hurried spider spins
2-A-2-155, 156; 2-B-7-12; 6-A-1-230
Fight all men your own wars:
2-B-7-125, 126; 5-E-8-144
"Fire draws fire, but picnics invite water"
2-A-5-89, 90; 2-B-7-42; 5-E-7-138
The fire that burned in David burns in me
2-A-2-165
The first
2-A-2-26
The first day out was big and bright
2-A-2-171, 172; 6-A-1-243
"The first day that we had the pup,"
6-A-1-188, 189
The first snow of the season came from Tulsa
2-A-2-179; 6-A-1-244
"First the bird, and now the cat"
2-A-2-180, 181, 182; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-244
The first time anybody heard
2-A-1-270, 271; 5-E-11-246
The five dear children of the sullen priest
2-A-1-307, 308, 309
Five-four-three-two-one and zero--
6-A-1-160
Five times at least today I have set pen
2-A-2-8
Folks who out on jeans of denim
2-A-5-110; 6-A-3-186
A fool and his money will not part
2-A-2-325
For every goon
2-A-2-83
For every Man who looks for life
2-A-3-79
"For John, who woke up crying"
2-A-2-227; 2-B-7-54; 5-E-5-53; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-1-262
For many years two families had waged
2-A-4-31
For some reason none of us ran away to sea
2-A-5-43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-243
"For two months now—day in, day out"
2-A-6-52, 53, 54
For two years in a row the chinquapins
2-A-2-312, 313
"For weeks I’ve weathered this quiz,"
6-A-2-35
For you who laugh because I dream
2-A-242
"Forgive me, love: your absence does not grieve me"
2-A-6-256; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-142, 143
Forgive us our genealogies
2-A-6-267
"Forgotten child, numbered 48"
2-A-4-147
Four bright Americans wearing just what bright
2-A-4-92
Four generations have lived here and died here
2-A-3-3
The fox is familiar on a winter’s night
2-A-2-263
"Fred is dead, they’ve killed him in the wars."
2-B-7-125, 126
"Friend, fallen now on evil times"
2-A-4-130; 6-A-3-10
From his outpost
2-A-3-203, 204
From howling heights of summer-shielding trees
2-A-1-339, 340, 341; 2-B-7-47; 5-E-10-211
From nine to five
6-A-1-180
From roof to rut to dog nor rifle intrudes
6-A-4-56
From their infrequent letters in startling English
2-A-5-62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-257
From these quick eyes and this round laughing mouth
2-A-4-11, 12; 2-B-7-68
From where I lie there is no sky
2-A-1-284
"Funny, how that bargain price"
6-A-1-222
"The further you go, the longer takes returning"
2-A-2-274, 275; 6-A-1-271
"Gardened in amber, cool and lush"
2-A-4-208
A garret is a frame of mind
2-A-6-249
The geese remind me
2-A-1-114, 115
The gentle action
2-A-4-289; 6-A-3-85
The gentle beast comes home at night to sleep
2-A-2-283; 5-E-7-111; 6-A-2-4
Gentle I would
2-A-3-275; 5-E-10-207
The gentleman who lived next door
2-A-2-216
The ghost of an April morning has returned
2-A-6-156
Gil Daniel knew that war is long
2-A-2-99, 100, 101, 102, 103; 6-A-1-207, 208
The girl a man puts a mink about
2-A-2-67
The girl who is
2-A-1-250, 251
Give a child a quiet time for thought
2-A-4-308; 6-A-3-97
"Give me a prairie, and I’ll plough it"
2-A-4-17; 6-A-2-205
Go find someone who speaks a word
2-A-6-268
Go forth
2-A-3-338, 339
"God pity the poets, the dreamers"
2-A-2-32
God sits beneath the trees in contemplation
2-A-2-303
Golgotha’s hill is vibrant with breath
2-A-2-311; 5-E-9-169
The gopher gambles with the traps
2-A-3-108; 6-A-2-80
"The gourd, the pumpkin, and the grape"
2-A-1-302; 2-B-7-125
Grace notes everything that’s wrong
2-A-2-317
"Grady, do you think of love"
2-B-7-125
Grandmother in her hotrod
2-A-3-73, 74, 75
"The grass is growing green around the crosses now, they say"
2-A-1-177
"The grass this year is not just green,"
6-A-2-216
Greatness is as greatness does
2-A-4-72, 73
Greedy grasping hands reach out
2-A-6-39
Green are the pastures where a poet lives
2-A-2-327; 5-E-6-89
The green grand world of childhood’s walled and wild
2-A-6-255; 6-A-4-141
Green where grey grew once high up the oak
2-A-2-328; 6-A-2-19
"Grief begets grief, as catacombs give way"
2-A-6-22, 23; 2-B-7-30; 6-A-4-36
Grief is a goose
2-A-3-358, 359, 360, 361
Grill-to-bumper cars refute
2-A-2-325
Grow old and reminisce
2-A-4-316
Guess what just happened
2-A-3-231; 6-A-2-20
Guys prefer
2-A-6-243
Ha-ha! I let Spring’s first day pass
2-A-3-57
The hand that rocks the cradle
2-A-3-313
"Hands, hands, slim white hands"
2-A-5-185; 5-E-12-249; 6-A-3-190
Happy the woman who can gloat
2-A-2-361, 362
"Have done, with weeping. Tears were meant"
5-E-4-11
"Have no fear of women, son"
6-A-1-90
"The hawk is prisoner to his sky,"
5-E-11-223
He asked me if I wouldn’t like to see
2-A-4-315, 316, 317; 5-E-11-220
He came each night and say beside her bed
2-A-2-352
He came into the parlor
2-A-1-43
He comes to the house
2-A-6-133, 134, 135
He could hear Shelley singing
2-A-2-134
He didn’t do so well in Math
2-A-4-273; 6-A-3-80
He drove too fast for an old man;
5-E-4-2
He gave her first his principal
2-A-3-124
He had five slugs
2-A-6-269
He has climbed higher mountains than ever existed
5-E-10-200
"He has come home now, bitter and full of days,"
5-E-13-291
He is not who he was
2-A-2-354
He lived in a world where Wm. Tell
2-A-4-336; 5-E-13-284
He lost his trout to a tree root
2-A-3-125
He loved the sunset and the evening air
2-A-2-134
He must have known a deep peculiar lack
2-A-3-146
He never quite could get immersed
2-A-1-295; 6-A-1-132
He oftentimes felt immortality
5-E-6-83
He ploughed his last row on a Saturday morn
2-A-1-137
He put the silkworm of love
2-A-2-256
He said his prayers in the dark at three
2-A-5-262
"He said, “There are some thing I need. . .”"
2-A-3-317, 318; 6-A-2-173
He sent two thousand strong before
2-A-3-14
He shot once
2-A-1-248
"He stumbled when he walked, his shoulders slumped,"
5-E-10-185
He toasted his failures in wines
2-A-6-268
"He was farmer, and by that I mean"
2-A-2-229
"He was a great, brawny bull of a boy who should have died"
2-A-3-168, 169, 170; 2-B-7-63; 5-E-10-205
He was a lanky boy whose chiseled face
2-A-2-57; 6-A-1-197
He was a soldier old and tired
2-A-2-112
He was gentle
2-A-5-295
"He was, last spring, if you recall,"
6-A-1-105
He was no man to be anthologized
2-A-4-177, 178
He was not moved by monumental things
2-B-7-125
He was so much at one with earth and sky
2-A-1-376, 377, 378; 2-B-7-8
He was with me when I needed love the most
2-A-3-366
The head of the house
2-A-2-357; 2-B-7-45; 6-A-2-27, 28
"The heart has its choices,"
2-B-7-124; 6-A-1-19, 20
The heart in April
2-A-3-157
The heart in love
2-A-2-359; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-9-164; 6-A-2-29
Heavens to Betsy! Who would’ve guessed
2-A-4-156
Help me that all my life and breath
2-A-4-246; 5-E-12-259
Her bank account is impeccable
2-A-1-64; 6-A-1-65
Her knight ride forth for forty hours each week
2-A-2-266; 6-A-1-267
Her mother played piano
6-A-1-16
Her name was May. We got to know her well
2-A-2-340; 2-B-7-113, 118; 5-E-6-110; 6-A-2-22
Her windmill flowed to cottonwoods
2-A-1-359
Here at least is no protest to purity
2-A-1-317
Here comes the man
2-A-5-177; 6-A-3-187
Here in the front yard where the aspen fell
2-A-2-139
Here in this pearl-gray morning I perceive
2-A-6-217; 6-A-4-128
Here is a bridge that you must cross
2-A-3-259
Here is no crystalline and chrome
2-A-1-327, 373, 374, 375; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-245; 6-A-1-162
Here is the child the law demands of me
2-A-4-82; 6-A-2-231
Here spread a feast of Christian grace
2-A-1-261, 262, 263, 264; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-5-51; 5-E-12-270
"Here where November was, December is"
2-A-6-190, 191, 192, 193, 194; 2-B-7-122, 123; 6-A-4-112
"Here, where the steep trail ends on the brink that leaps from Today to the Morrow"
2-A-6-157
Here where the world converges on itself
2-A-2-207
"The hero of a story, is important"
2-A-1-118
High up the pin-oak tree the bees had hived
5-E-4-12
His doddling days are over;
6-A-1-210
His greatest grievance
2-A-6-186
His heart a hearth for a hundred irons
2-A-6-199; 6-A-4-115
His life was a vasty volume
5-E-4-6
“His lightnings have enlightened all the world”
2-A-4-249
His mother watched each evening after school
2-A-6-198
His wife never knew where he’d be sent
2-A-2-63
The hollow all through winter hid
2-A-3-152; 6-A-2-103
Home in October is a place
2-A-2-377; 2-A-4-200; 6-A-2-37
"“Homework”, he said, “is for the birds."
6-A-4-4
The hounddog sings with sweet remorse
2-A-2-188, 189
"House, be not sad"
2-A-4-163; 6-A-3-15, 16
A house has a way of encouraging things
2-A-3-22; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-47, 48
How
2-A-1-249
How busy are the poets
2-A-3-255; 6-A-2-152
How come the volup--
2-A-5-95
How does a man with double chin
2-A-2-268
How doubt undoes a man is what the thing
2-A-5-20, 21, 22, 23; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-247
How good to walk in the fields of summer
2-A-2-154
how like Bob with his gargantuan canvases
2-A-3-30
How long shall one endure?—January
2-A-3-31
How many children when up to recite
2-A-2-234
How many poets’ unwitting trochees
2-A-5-74; 6-A-3-146, 147
How many times I died in dream
2-A-3-368, 369, 370
"How nice you look (for your age), my dear!"
6-A-1-150
"How often have I told you,"
5-E-4-21
"How shall the fields regard you, who denied"
2-A-2-217; 6-A-1-256
How well the sparrow knows that here he
2-A-6-67
A hundred men as strong as Saul
2-A-6-45; 6-A-4-50, 51
"Hurray, he gets to go to camp"
2-A-6-95
Hurray! I’ve finally begun
2-A-3-215
Hushed in their midnight stanchions the cows browse
2-A-1-108, 109; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-7-139
The hypocrites are on air again
2-A-2-250
I always met my kinfolk at the grave
2-A-4-212, 213, 214, 215
I am a man who learned speech haltingly.
6-A-2-148
I am not any kin to the Fords of Detroit
2-A-6-89
I am not hip
2-A-3-293; 6-A-3-185
I am not one of your gullible saps
2-A-5-178
I am one who has a need
2-A-6-270
"I am the chieftain of the soil,"
6-A-3-171
I am the hill that shoulders skies of stars
2-A-5-67; 5-E-5-56
I am the water
2-A-1-347
"I begged for light, and light received"
2-A-1-88; 6-A-1-45
I came across the dune of sand
2-A-6-271
I cannot look back into summer
2-A-3-55, 56, 209
I cannot love a city place
2-A-4-227; 5-E-8-153
I cannot remember who let out the first cry
2-A-6-272
I cannot tell what snake has traced
2-A-5-11, 12; 6-A-3-43
I can’t enjoy
2-A-6-38
"I come into this Christmas month with awe,"
6-A-3-164
I come so unexpectedly
2-A-2-11, 12; 5-E-4-5
I consider that I have lived long enough
5-E-4-23
I could not let you go before you know
6-A-2-62
"I cry for earth’s uncanny lost,"
6-A-1-126
"I didn’t know, but I should have known"
2-A-3-24
I died with the moons
2-A-3-145
I don’t care for folks who say
6-A-3-81
I don’t care if others write durable
2-A-3-83
"I don’t know, but I should have known"
6-A-2-50
"I dreamed-and God, I tremble just to think"
2-A-3-68
"I dreamed of snow, though it was still"
2-A-3-59, 60; 5-E-7-119
I dwelt one winter in a woman’s arms
2-A-6-273
I find my verses offer more
2-A-5-235
"I find Narcissus in a coffee cup,"
5-E-4-7
I find no peace or joy in heathen cries
5-E-5-61
I find that affairs
2-A-6-185
I find the laughter
6-A-1-21
I found her where the dawn haloed the dell
2-A-4-18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23; 5-E-4-16
I found Macgregor talking to the Lord
2-A-5-274; 5-E-7-120
I friend
2-A-5-173; 6-A-3-183
I fumble a joke
2-A-3-164
"I go, my love, and with me goes a mind"
2-A-3-330; 6-A-2-183
I grieve: my days of innocence are done
2-A-2-4, 5; 2-B-7-84, 118; 6-A-1-174
I had to shoot a fox today. If he
2-A-2-254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261; 6-A-1-265, 266
I hate magazines that aren’t
2-A-2-268
I have a basket for the boss
2-A-2-108
I have a fear
2-A-5-30
"I have a sudden yearning after death,"
5-E-6-72; 6-A-2-192
I have been away so long I cannot remember which way the river runs
6-A-2-21
I have been dreaming
2-A-2-131, 132; 2-B-7-52
I have been kissed by the fist of the Twist
2-A-6-251
"I have been thinking lately, if only a little:"
2-B-7-126
I have been thoroughly shot
2-A-2-31
I have been walking in the fields
2-A-4-157
I have a dug a deep grave at the edge of the woods
5-E-11-219
I have dwelt wholly
2-A-4-125, 126, 127; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-171
I have fished from Minnesota
2-A-6-81
I have lived a thousand lives (Were they all so aimless. . .)
2-A-2-142
I have loved mountains bleak with cold
2-A-3-159
I have no bones to pick with guys
2-A-3-313; 6-A-2-64
"I have not been my fiercest foe,"
5-E-4-34
"I have not been there, and I do not know"
2-A-6-274
I have not known such loneliness before
2-A-1-367, 368, 369; 2-B-7-100, 118; 6-A-1-161
"I have not let the country go from my poems, nor"
2-A-3-61; 6-A-2-65
I have not loved this world the less
2-A-3-333; 6-A-2-184
I have sat here for God knows how long
5-E-7-137
I have seen this poor potted lobster
2-A-5-81, 82; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-198
I have seen this same poor potted lobster
2-A-5-81, 82; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-198
I have two Achilles heels
2-A-2-140; 6-A-1-223
"I have waited for ten years, hoping for words"
2-A-1-354
I haven’t the heart to tell him
2-A-2-93
I hear the carols ring. The days are sad
2-A-1-321
I heard the shot at ten till ten
2-A-3-81
I heard the white-throats singing in the dark
2-A-1-285
"I hunker, looking for a four-leaf clover"
2-A-3-45, 46, 47, 48
I knew this place in summer when the stream
6-A-2-66
I know when I was a vibrant boy
2-A-3-62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67; 5-E-12-263; 5-E-13-275; 6-A-2-67
I know a man who ruined his sacro
2-A-3-365
I know some faces that would rock
2-A-1-184; 5-E-7-115; 6-A-1-93
I know that I shall rest
5-E-5-59
I know this craft will take me far away
2-A-5-94
I know this swift. I know the day
2-A-5-241; 6-A-2-85
I leave my bones to Mother Earth
6-A-1-83
I left the cabaret and crossed the square
2-A-6-82
I lie beside my Mary lamb
2-A-2-106; 2-B-7-122, 123, 124; 5-E-10-208
I like guineas because they catch
2-A-2-108
I liked words when I was young
2-A-3-286
I live for the day
2-A-3-94
I live in a drug store
2-A-3-29; 5-E-5-54; 6-A-2-54
"I lived after the fever,"
2-A-4-310; 6-A-3-99
I lived from the fever
2-A-4-310; 6-A-3-99
I lived in the South ‘till I was seven
2-A-4-119
I looked
2-A-2-109; 2-A-4-33
I looked for God in foreign lands
2-A-2-94
I love: I forget the reason
2-A-3-285
I love steeples gleaming white
2-A-2-94
I love the room your arms enclose
2-A-3-26; 6-A-2-51
I love the star-spangled rhythms that soft lights make
2-A-5-297
I love you with a passion grown so strong
2-A-1-44
I might have written earlier how
2-A-2-3; 6-A-1-173
I murder my mother’s people by my silence
2-A-1-65; 5-E-13-282
I must go down to the Cove today
2-A-2-54; 2-A-4-241
I must not blame him for my own lost youth
2-A-1-219, 220, 221, 222, 223; 5-E-6-88
I must pursue a course in French
2-A-1-200
I never flew a kite before
6-A-3-184
I never go to such big side-shows
2-A-5-110
I never knew the people well
2-A-1-324; 6-A-1-144
I never know what to do with it
2-A-2-339
I never owned
2-A-3-69, 70, 71; 2-B-7-16
I never saw your house and yet I guess
2-A-2-126
I never see the sea except I die
2-A-5-92; 2-B-7-87, 118; 6-A-3-150
I never wished upon a star before
2-A-4-33
I nominate me for Man of the Year
2-A-5-169
I once disliked the magazine that
6-A-2-228
I pity the guy whose girl is so fickle
2-A-6-186
I pity the young in modern houses
2-A-1-116
I play the fool
2-A-4-65; 5-E-4-4
I played with him in the back yard
2-A-3-2
I preach a sermon short and spare
2-A-3-223; 2-B-7-20; 5-E-4-13; 6-A-2-131, 132
I remember the first snow in that beautiful country
2-A-6-245, 246, 247, 248; 2-B-7-39; 5-E-5-46
"I remember you, old friend, faceless and formless"
2-A-4-326, 327; 6-A-3-106
"I said to Sigel, Sir, this here’s my creek"
2-A-6-275
"I saw a vision, and the vision said"
2-A-6-177, 178, 179
I send you this on a day when we are younger
2-A-2-239, 240, 241
I sent my congressman a wire
5-E-4-8
"“I shall be master of my pen,” he said."
5-E-5-38
"I shall go down the shadowed road to death,"
5-E-5-67
I shall not be a stranger to the tomb
2-A-3-272
I shall not leave this world alone
2-A-5-131; 6-A-3-168, 169
I sing an old sad song of requiem
2-A-4-243
"I sing of a troubled land, of wars and rumors"
2-A-6-116
I sing of a walk through familiar hills and villages
2-A-3-158
I sing of the beast of the field and the wild of the wood
2-A-1-45
I sing of the faces of love
2-A-3-261
I stay at home from noon till nine
2-A-5-305; 6-A-4-20
I suffer qualms
2-A-5-231; 6-A-1-91
I swing ‘em high
2-A-4-207
I think of you in Elsah’s wood
2-A-2-318, 319
I think somehow that she does not belong
2-A-5-70
I think sometimes about my special war
2-A-3-178; 6-A-2-113
I think this heartache cannot last so long
2-A-6-223
I thought on love. All through the night
2-A-6-276
I took my bearing on the grove of curled
2-A-2-38, 39
I took my learning from the land
2-A-1-332; 6-A-1-149
I took the wounded butterfly
2-A-1-278; 6-A-1-128
I used to hate a magazine that
2-A-3-113
I used to sing in dulcett tones
2-A-6-99
I vote for gold to hold the grey at bay
2-A-4-34; 6-A-2-209
I walk with genious puckered in my loins
2-A-5-128, 129
I walked about the peopled park
2-A-1-371; 5-E-6-84, 85
I walked before the fog had drawn away
2-A-2-7
I walked the milk-white spring road twice
2-A-4-62, 63; 2-B-7-24; 6-A-2-221
I walked those streets
2-A-5-124; 6-A-3-160
I walked with Ghandi down the halls of Time
2-A-3-80
"I walked with Kathy, nine, in June"
2-A-2-220
“I want something nice for my mother. . .”
2-A-1-296
I want to dip my pen into
2-A-4-342
I want to know you
2-A-1-160, 161, 162; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-11-218; 5-E-12-266; 6-A-1-78, 79, 80
I was a soldier whose name you will find
2-A-4-280
"I was, at the age of seven"
2-A-6-222
"I was in love, and seventeen,"
2-B-7-125
I was just playing
2-A-3-41, 42; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-13-300
I was legend
2-A-6-68; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-57
I was never around when the calves got born
2-A-2-124
I wear out a lot of shoe leather in a year
2-A-4-270, 271; 2-B-7-58; 6-A-3-78
I weary of this pace; the burdening years
2-A-4-250
I weep for those who loved the hills too well
2-A-5-215; 2-A-6-181
I welcome chives
2-A-3-234
I wish no suffering for my foe
2-A-1-138, 139, 140, 141
I wouldn’t mind
2-A-4-253, 254; 6-A-3-71
I wrote you once before; I said
2-A-3-84, 85, 86, 87; 6-A-2-71
Ice chips
2-A-1-145; 6-A-1-66
The ice on the pond runs thin now
2-A-1-30; 6-A-1-11
I’d drive my Stutz
2-A-4-131, 132, 133
Idling long
2-A-1-125; 6-A-1-60
"If a poet cannot die well, he should not die at all"
2-A-5-108, 109; 5-E-7-139
If his child were my child
2-A-3-197
If I am lost in outer space
2-A-3-83
If I could be
2-A-1-36, 37; 6-A-1-18
If I could know the nature of this fox
2-A-4-26; 6-A-2-206
If I could not remember how the sun
2-A-1-260; 6-A-1-120
"If I do not return, this you must know"
5-E-6-71; 5-E-11-220
If I had turned from singing sooner
2-A-4-322; 6-A-3-102, 103
If I lie down in this good hill
2-A-2-314; 6-A-2-13
"If I must die, then let me die"
2-A-3-49; 6-A-2-61
If I must go from this beloved land
2-A-5-142, 143, 144; 2-B-7-86, 118; 6-A-1-260
If I were a horse
2-A-3-91
"If I were guessing, I would say"
2-A-3-331, 332; 2-B-7-22
"If I were not a man, I think"
2-A-2-267
"If I were running, I would run"
2-A-3-92
If I were the serpent in Eden
2-A-1-193; 6-A-1-12
If in anger
2-A-3-12
If it be with corpses that you seek communion
2-A-3-273
“If it rings twice. . .”
2-A-4-71; 6-A-4-26
If looks could kill
2-A-3-224
"If love believes itself, and is believed,"
2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-158
"If, on the strength of this"
2-A-4-196
"If one son die, though we go free"
2-A-6-277
"If one would kill well, he should have"
2-A-2-280, 281, 282
If our minds had guessed
2-A-6-291
"If the foot had its own heart, that heart would break"
2-A-1-385
If the road up the hill should be covered with chill
2-A-2-364
"If there is a path less crimson, let me walk it"
2-A-5-69
If this paunch and if these chins
2-A-1-134
If this should prove to be my final hour
2-A-3-314; 5-E-7-118
"If we two meet, and you are girt"
2-A-5-91; 6-A-3-149
"If, when the summer comes, a boy forsakes"
2-A-6-152; 6-A-4-99, 100
If winter calls
2-A-1-366
"If you don’t mind, I have a thing"
2-A-2-104; 6-A-1-209
If you get there before I do
2-A-4-160
If you must gift me
2-A-5-263
If you were I and I were you
2-A-2-83; 6-A-1-204
"If you would speak of peace, remember this"
2-A-2-302
"I’m afraid I got drunk, and I skied all night."
2-B-7-126
Immersed in good wishes
2-A-6-86; 6-A-4-62
Impatient master of the race
2-A-1-197
Impenitant I stand before the court
2-A-3-143
In a street where history hushes the hardest heart
2-A-6-197
In arcs I cannot comprehend
2-A-6-66; 5-E-10-180
In August briefly Ivan came home
2-A-2-271, 272; 2-B-7-49; 5-E-5-43; 6-A-1-270
In foreign ports it never fails
2-A-3-113, 114; 5-E-8-142; 6-A-2-87
In her old night of delirium
5-E-11-233
In his heart he heard symphonies
2-A-2-270; 5-E-12-260
In June the springs swelled up and overflowed
2-A-6-138
"In my surrealistic childhood, many a faint age past,"
5-E-12-254
In my travails (a tried intent. . . )
2-A-5-122
In school he made a greeting card for me
2-A-2-329
In sundry ways the heart delights
2-A-6-327; 6-A-2-181
"In the beginning of time, fathers pitched horseshoes"
2-A-2-90, 91, 92; 5-E-6-97
In the bright sweet rush of that most incredible Autumn
2-A-4-123, 124
"In the dark wood of death,"
6-A-4-88, 89
In the dream my dearest enemy
2-A-5-242, 243; 2-B-7-48; 5-E-5-57; 6-A-4-1
In the garden of the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Kansas City
2-A-6-278
In the hill country
2-A-4-318, 319, 320, 321
In the low branches
5-E-11-242
"In the ring, under the lights"
2-A-3-88, 89; 2-B-7-123
In the tempestuous earth my tempestuous father lies
6-A-3-165
"In the terrible May, in the springtime"
2-A-5-164
In the walls the eyes of monks and nuns
5-E-13-276
In water as in wind we shape
2-A-1-356; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-14; 5-A-1-157, 158
"Incredible bird, take back your song"
2-A-2-86, 87, 88; 5-E-11-231
"An independent survey shows,"
5-E-8-152
Independent to the last
2-A-1-318, 319, 320
Instead of a silver quill to make a poem
2-A-6-12, 13; 6-A-4-31
Instead of banners spread across my way
2-A-4-307
Inter me not in any place
2-A-4-176
Into the hills in wining season we escaped
2-A-6-279
Intrigued to look
2-A-4-103; 6-A-2-235
Irises bloom at the end of Heartbreak Alley
2-A-5-104; 5-E-4-17
is a man
2-A-2-331, 332, 333
Is it altogether true that you
2-A-3-118, 119; 2-B-7-53; 5-E-13-280
Is the man of your house
2-A-5-72; 6-A-3-145
It got Miss Lucy Landers’ goat
2-A-5-179
It has been autumn now a while
2-A-4-305; 6-A-3-96
"It is a cruel charge, which smacks of truth"
2-A-2-225
It is a fiddle of a day whose strings
2-A-2-152, 153; 6-A-1-229
It is a gaunt grey day of slim promise
2-A-5-244; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-12-264
"It is a lovely house, my child. The street"
2-A-1-24; 6-A-1-9
It is a meeting always of fire and ice
2-B-7-126
It is an exceedingly difficult matter to say very much
2-A-5-105
"It is dark, but the children still play ball"
2-A-1-123; 6-A-1-56
If is finch-time here in the Ozark country
2-A-3-186
It is hard to be angry in the afternoon
2-A-1-31
It is my prayer that all goes well with you
2-A-2-9
It is ourselves we mourn when tides recede
2-A-3-284; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-214; 6-A-2-162
It is the deed undone which graphs
2-A-3-107; 2-B-7-17; 6-A-2-77, 78
It is turning cold again
2-A-1-312; 6-A-1-140
"It is twelve above zero, and the sunlight splinters"
2-A-2-46; 6-A-1-192
"It matters not, my Lord, that we must eat"
2-A-3-241, 329; 5-E-7-126
"It may, if it keeps on trying, rain"
2-A-3-207; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-8-155
"It may not rain, although we need"
2-A-6-280
It rained in August. On the day
2-A-6-77; 5-E-13-297
It seems to me most pitiful to find
5-E-10-186
It was a beautiful day when she went
2-A-6-281
It was a day like this when we took the house
2-A-3-206; 5-E-8-155; 6-A-2-125
It was a dear and lovely day
2-A-5-58; 6-A-3-141
It was decided to leave the ‘copter at Clarksville
2-A-1-265; 5-E-10-202; 6-A-1-122-12
It was his first command that we should leave
2-A-1-267, 268, 269
It was in August when the letter came.
5-E-8-144; 6-A-2-104
It was somebody’s birthday
2-A-3-16, 17, 18
It was the thing which told us in the fields
2-A-5-24, 25; 6-A-3-125, 126
It was tragic to my lover when I died
2-A-2-273
It’s all right
2-A-3-299, 300, 301; 2-B-7-122, 123; 6-A-2-170
It’s an absolute miracle
2-A-2-298
It’s April here
2-A-1-77; 6-A-1-33
"“It’s crawdad land”, the farmer said"
2-A-1-383
It’s easier to be mad about
2-A-2-186, 187
It’s funny how
2-A-3-365
"I’ve let my shape, so it appears"
2-A-3-292; 6-A-2-167, 168
I’ve nothing bad to say in the cause
6-A-1-154
I’ve seated and cussed and dug all day
2-A-6-121
"Jake Smith, he saw the devil"
2-A-3-310, 311
A January day is lace
2-A-2-207, 264, 265
The jet goes up the sky and should my name
2-A-5-55, 56
A jockey must be
6-A-4-24
"John, I leave my bones to you"
2-A-3-173, 174, 175; 5-E-13-283
"John William Armor, twenty-three"
2-A-4-105
Juliet the eternal
2-A-6-42, 43
July was hot
2-A-5-245
"June, and my innocence dies"
2-A-1-342, 343; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-14
Just when I’ve got my thoughts arranged
2-A-3-139; 5-E-8-150; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-2-97
"The killdee calls, and I am not the same"
6-A-1-118
"“The King of France, with twenty thousand men. . .”"
2-A-1-194
Kings came in summer to our town
2-A-3-156, 167
"Knee-deep in summer now, the copper boy"
2-A-5-257
"la-lu perez, dementing for"
2-A-3-355
The land drowses under the heat of the day
2-A-2-170
The lark in the sweet gum tree declines
2-A-3-104, 105
The last few lines are not so much for you
2-A-4-311, 312
"The last of the presents are opened,"
6-A-3-100
The last passion to go is the passion to live
2-A-3-165, 166
The last time I went down the Lost Bridge Road
2-A-3-260; 6-A-2-154
The late sun slants to the meadow
2-A-2-114; 6-A-1-152
Lately I find the ruins do not matter
2-B-7-126; 5-E-13-292
Lay a head of hair upon me
2-A-4-49; 2-A-5-210
"Lazy, among lazy fellows and brothers"
2-A-6-282
The leaf is sister to the bud
2-A-4-128; 6-A-3-9
The leaf that knew the branch has found the earth.
2-B-7-126
Lean as a star honed white by winter winds
2-A-2-33; 2-B-7-108, 118
Lean lane of elm and oak
6-A-4-77
The least you can do
2-A-2-169; 6-A-1-242
Leave nothing out
2-A-6-35
"Lee laughs at a joke, and he says, “You’re a card!”"
2-A-1-381; 2-A-6-26
"“Lest we forget”, the anthem goes"
2-A-3-182
Let man and beast be thankful now
2-A-5-217; 6-A-3-197
"Let me assure you, first, this picture looks exactly like me"
2-A-3-228, 229
Let me be known as a prodigal son
5-E-4-9
"Let me drink wine, or let me drink water"
2-A-2-65
Let someone less enchanted seek
2-A-4-134; 6-A-3-11
Let the dog lie
2-A-2-168; 6-A-1-241
Let the poems come down
2-A-2-235; 5-E-6-105
Let the pot simmer
2-A-2-367
Let us go down to the ocean
2-A-6-283
"Let us, when Winter flings her cloak"
2-A-6-171
"Life goes somewhere, fast and fleet"
2-A-2-111
Life is like a trip through mountains
2-A-6-84
Life was a pup tent
6-A-1-175
"Life was less complex, you know,"
6-A-2-138
Life with her bright whirligig
2-A-2-6
"Life worth living? Oh, how many times"
5-E-7-124
"Like hives the bees have left, the buildings stand"
6-A-1-14
like once when trying hard
2-A-3-233
Like pigeons they settled in their flip-top armada
2-A-5-157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162
Like two candles fused together
2-A-1-233, 234
Lincoln and Douglas went fishing
2-A-2-13
Listen my children and you can hear
5-E-5-70
"Listen, you shad"
2-A-2-185
Literary men play literary games
2-B-7-56; 5-E-13-277
Little by little
2-A-3-58; 2-A-6-36, 202; 6-A-4-45, 46, 118
A little fire a little flame
2-A-5-130; 6-A-3-166
The little girl
2-A-2-14; 6-A-4-130
A little girl who shrieks in rain
2-A-6-227
Little girls in gingham frocks
2-A-2-345; 6-A-2-24
"The little men must never, never know"
5-E-5-62
Live there a man with head so sore
2-A-4-323
"The lonely roads to Pottersville, to Tucker’s Store and Allen’s Landing"
2-A-3-249; 6-A-2-151
"Look, child, I will to you this pebbled path,"
5-E-11-221
Look for a man in a shawl by the Muehlbach Hotel
2-A-3-294
"Look, I said, as we came up the mountain"
2-A-6-126
Look into March where deep you’ll find
2-A-3-254
Look now- the compact auto band’s
2-A-1-201; 6-A-1-98
"Looking at old Mount Hood, I realize"
2-A-6-157
Looking for Shiloh on a country road
2-B-7-122, 123
"Lord, how Mondays do keep creeping up the shinbone of the week."
2-A-2-236; 6-A-1-263
"Lord, I confess to having indulged in nothing"
2-A-4-338, 339
"Lord, if I be thy servant"
2-A-2-94
"Lord of the Universe, known of old,"
5-E-10-182
"Lord, who was Lord before the Tree"
2-A-2-316; 6-A-2-15
Lost is the dreamer
2-A-2-61
Louisa labored on the high-poster bed
2-A-2-21
"Love, if love’s the thing we need"
2-A-3-262, 263, 264, 265
Love is a beggar
2-A-3-266
Love is a case
2-A-1-277
Love is a castle the poorest among us may dwell in
2-A-2-224
Love is a fool’s game; love is a prize
2-A-5-105; 5-E-6-108; 6-A-3-156
Love is a lion whose longing is leashed
2-A-3-44
Love is a nugget
2-A-3-268, 269; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-159
Love is a small gray animal that hovers
2-A-2-376; 6-A-2-36
"Love is a trap, which"
2-A-2-70
Love is a weapon
2-A-1-256
Love is disturbing
2-A-4-67
Love is the drummer
2-A-5-165, 166, 167, 168; 6-A-3-180
"Love is the fire within, the light without"
2-A-5-294
Love is young laughter in a lonely house
2-A-5-139; 6-A-3-174, 175
Love rides a stallion
2-A-3-210, 211; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-127, 128
Love to the heart
2-A-3-171; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-111, 112
"Love, trust me not beyond the first rhymed line"
5-E-9-166
Love was my fool a passion real as ice
2-A-1-293
Love was my love by the amber bush in April
2-A-1-76; 5-E-6-86
"Love, when you go (and you seem always going. . . )"
2-A-3-277, 278; 6-A-2-160
The magic fingers are a private scribe
2-A-3-101; 6-A-2-76
A man can turn his back upon a farm
2-A-1-156; 6-A-1-75
A man I know (and you know him. . . )
2-A-3-344
A man is free or is not free
2-A-4-151
Man lives in terms of strange extremes
2-A-2-378, 379; 6-A-2-38
Man sees the incongruities of life
2-A-5-201
A man walks into Spring almost without
2-A-6-28, 29; 2-B-7-111, 118; 6-A-4-39, 40
The man who always thought that he
2-A-3-334; 6-A-2-185, 186
"The man who loves the apple tree,"
5-E-11-237; 6-A-2-224, 225
The man who read my mother’s rites is dead
2-A-5-83, 84, 85; 2-B-7-71; 5-E-9-178
A man with a tin ear dreams at night
2-A-3-297; 5-E-12-252
A man’s salvation is his wife
2-A-1-132
Many a man who seeks the wide world over
2-A-3-304
Many a politician
2-A-3-140
"Many an artist, when the month is gone"
2-A-3-83; 5-E-7-114
Many’s the silvered night I hung
2-A-3-298
Mark well the wisdom of this page
2-A-3-112; 6-A-2-86
May I trouble you
2-A-2-218; 5-E-8-149
May never a Christmas morning rise
2-A-3-244
May your 1960
6-A-3-109
Maybe when Spring comes and we can get out of the office
2-A-3-120
The meadowlark
2-A-5-266; 6-A-4-11
"The meadows were amber,"
6-A-4-116, 117
The melon in its truest form
2-A-3-319; 6-A-2-174, 175
The men who long ago proclaimed
2-A-5-231; 6-A-3-124
The men who made New Mexico
5-E-10-188
The mind is quick to wonder
2-A-6-284
"Mine hour is come, and I must not hold back"
2-A-4-136
Miss Amy’s kin were buried on a ridge above the river
2-A-3-335
"Miss Daphne Gregg, like a bloom of laurel"
2-A-3-160; 2-E-13-294
"Miss Daphne Gregg, like a blossom of laurel,"
2-A-3-160; 2-E-13-294
Miss Lottie took a little sherry
2-A-6-285
"Miss Mary, when Miss Mary died"
2-A-6-286
Miss Maudie took a little toddy
2-A-6-287
Miss Millicent forsook her brood
2-A-4-329
Miss Murfey’s farm was Real Estate’s despair
2-A-3-4; 6-A-2-41
Mister Obermann reported—after two quick amarillos
2-A-1-363, 364, 365
Monday rained like nobody’s business
2-A-5-197
The moon may well be cheese or dust
2-A-4-199; 6-A-3-48.
More off than not His gladdened ear
2-A-6-288
The morning baked
6-A-3-153, 154
A morning prayer
2-A-3-349
Morning trails her elegance through the window
5-E-6-78
"Mornings come softly across the desert,"
6-A-2-81
Mothers love naturally; their agony is simple
2-A-6-289
Mrs. O’Mallory
2-A-2-234
My aunt (about the only one I haven’t written of)
2-A-2-78; 5-E-4-28
My aunt in her forties walked on my grandfather’s grave
2-A-2-222; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-5-40
"My Aunt Rebecca, stiff as a Baptist poker"
2-A-5-193, 194, 195, 196; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-C-3-15
My aunt tells a story word of mouth; therefore
2-A-4-4; 5-E-4-25
My aunt was gentle as a cabbage moth
2-A-2-159; 2-B-7-43; 5-E-4-14; 6-A-1-233
My brother never knew her love
2-A-4-149; 6-A-3-13
"My child, tomorrow is a place of dreams"
2-A-5-111; 6-A-3-157
My cousin Benny Bangs
2-A-3-35; 6-A-2-56
My day begins with ringing of alarms
2-A-5-141
"My dear friends, met and unmet"
2-A-4-184; 5-E-11-216
My father cried me up from night’s dark doorway
2-A-4-55, 56, 57, 58, 59; 2-B-7-23; 5-E-5-50
My father has no isms in his speech
2-A-3-245, 246
My father is a man of earth
2-A-6-151; 5-E-10-180
My father picked tomatoes
2-A-1-32; 2-B-7-125
My father said the season was a skin
2-A-5-298, 299
"My father was fifty, and they have been years"
2-A-4-5, 6
My favorite Charade
2-A-3-138; 6-A-2-94
My first witch was a midwife witch
2-A-3-305, 306, 307
"My friend, your gift is ta’en"
2-A-6-15
My gentle mother was alarmed
2-A-2-363
My grandfather did not take to death
2-A-5-302, 303, 304; 5-E-8-151
My grandfather in his once-Spenserian hand
2-A-1-5, 6, 7; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-167; 5-E-12-269; 6-A-1-4
My grandfather prided himself on his crooked fences
2-A-2-322, 323; 6-A-2-17
My grandfather prided himself on his crooked fences—
2-A-2-322, 323; 6-A-2-17
My heart commutes between two loves
2-A-4-9, 10.
My heart is rift
2-A-2-358; 6-A-2-31
"My heart, like the wisp of silver smoke"
2-A-6-105; 6-A-4-75
My heart remembers that about
2-A-1-187; 6-A-1-94
"My horse was slow, I confess,"
6-A-1-151
"My love, I have the photographs you sent"
2-A-2-205, 206
"My love is like an orphan child,"
2-B-7-126
My mind is a veritable whiz
2-A-1-172
"“My mind is made up”, she declares"
2-A-1-176; 6-A-1-88
My mother in her later years
2-A-4-68, 69, 70; 6-A-2-226
My mother loved the morning more than most
2-A-4-45, 46; 6-A-2-214, 215
My mother never spoke of Spock
2-A-4-255, 256; 6-A-3-72
My neighbor’s front door opens east
2-A-6-87
My neighbor’s grass is greener
2-A-2-324, 325
My neighbors’ houses gleam within
2-A-3-25; 6-A-1-76
My oars dip water forty feet above
2-A-1-104, 105, 106; 5-E-11-217
My only grace
2-A-3-76, 77, 78; 2-B-7-50; 5-E-13-281
My principal diversion
2-A-6-85
My problem has too great a sum
2-A-3-270; 2-A-5-251
My reaction to foxhounds
6-A-4-97, 98
My spirit was a falcon on your wrist
2-A-5-294
"My Uncle Buster, robed in fire"
2-A-2-341, 342
"My uncle Jeff, who lives with us"
2-A-6-290
"The name of John Prather, when John Prather’s gone"
2-A-1-135, 136
Named for the ghost
2-A-4-161, 162
"Nameless, as children are when distant seen"
2-A-5-7, 8; 6-A-3-119
Napoleon brooding at Elba
2-A-1-146, 147
Native to hill
2-A-2-34
Necks curved away from driving April rain
2-A-6-119; 6-A-4-87
"Neighbor, neighbor, dark and deep"
2-A-3-324
"Neighbor, shrieking as you shovel"
2-A-5-118; 6-A-3-158
Never keep a boy from books
2-A-4-38, 39; 6-A-2-210
Never let the heart become
2-A-5-283, 284, 285, 286
Never was I for a moment the conqueror
2-A-4-195; 6-A-3-14
"New Mexico, you call me back,"
5-E-10-187
The night creates a sweet belief
2-A-5-238
Night has fallen here
2-A-5-205
The night I put the poem to bed
2-A-6-101; 5-E-7-136; 6-A-4-70
The night is not the mate of day
2-A-3-232
"Night, like a sudden swallow"
2-A-2-115
The night my brother died I lay
2-B-7-125; 5-E-7-125
Nine out of ten Mew York doctors will attend this dying cowboy
2-A-3-243; 5-E-9-175; 6-A-2-147
No adjective or noun or verb
2-A-1-213; 6-A-1-107
No bird has flown from this warm nest
2-A-4-64
No day is lost in which is heard
2-A-4-304
No human being ever spoke his name
2-A-1-280, 281
No man comes through a war unscratched
2-A-5-246, 247, 248; 6-A-4-3
No man may go to battle filled
2-A-1-81, 82
No matter how long
2-A-2-375
No matter how much an editor regrets
2-A-6-291; 5-E-13-301; 6-A-4-111
No one belongs to us to keep
2-A-4-167; 6-A-3-18
No place is ever every place
2-A-3-185; 5-E-10-193
"No wedding should go unannounced, unsung"
2-A-2-107
Nobody needs assassins any more
2-A-6-292
None is more blessed
6-A-1-124, 125
Not by this false barometer do I tell
2-A-1-79
Not every man is as proud as the man who wears boots.
6-A-2-227
Nothing consumes a man like loneliness
5-E-5-69
Nothing is up like a bird
2-A-3-364; 5-E-12-268; 6-A-2-196, 197
Nothing makes me more devout
2-A-2-307
Nothing prepares a woman to be hurt
2-A-1-8, 9; 6-A-1-6
Nothing says ‘dove’ the way those rising wings do
2-A-6-293
Nothing so boring
2-A-3-367
"“Nothing ventured, nothing gained”"
2-A-1-338
Notice how carefully the state
2-A-6-196
Now am I loath to leave the windy hill
2-A-5-265
Now as the late light falls
2-A-3-328; 6-A-2-182
Now as the winter waxes wild with weather
2-A-6-18, 19, 20, 21; 2-B-7-29; 6-A-4-34, 35
Now comes that time of year when I predict
2-A-1-48; 5-E-7-121
Now comes the difficult translation
2-A-3-205; 5-E-13-279
Now comes the time or changing calendars
2-A-1-290; 6-A-1-130
"Now coming back, I touch the plow"
2-A-4-97; 6-A-2-233
Now does the summer’s stranglehold release
2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-227; 6-A-4-53
"Now, excellent child, that light anoints your head"
2-A-4-314; 6-A-3-101
Now gaunt November tells on the clicking bones
2-B-7-31, 115, 118, 136, 137; 6-A-4-54
Now I know this day has only hurt you
2-A-4-98
Now I lay me down to sleep
2-A-1-153
"Now I, now ancient grief, now lately you"
2-A-3-362; 5-E-13-286
Now in his eightieth year my Greatuncle Morris
2-A-4-99; 5-E-10-204
Now in the deepening throat of summer sings
2-A-4-251
Now in the quiet rooms
6-A-2-166
"Now in this hill where January lies,"
2-B-7-125
"Now is the poem Truth, which was before"
2-A-6-137
Now is the season of the earth’s enchantment
2-A-5-174
Now is the time
2-A-5-155
Now is the time for singing amiable songs
2-A-1-126, 127; 2-B-7-2; 6-A-1-61
Now is the time when his pursuit of math
2-A-6-37, 38; 6-A-4-47
Now let me classify within my mind
5-E-6-87
Now let us all take our accustomed places
2-A-6-103; 6-A-4-72
“Now name the seven seas. . .”
2-A-3-181
Now rioters across the land
2-A-5-182, 183
Now shall I envy the October bird
2-A-2-304, 305; 2-B-7-14; 5-E-9-163; 6-A-2-10
"Now, taken less with seeing things (the growing green. . .)"
2-A-5-312, 313; 2-B-7-65; 5-E-5-52
"Now that her fame is great, her figure fable"
2-A-5-187
Now that his skin’s through peeling off
2-A-6-294
Now that it’s time
2-A-2-49; 6-A-1-193
Now that I’ve finally ceased to spiel
2-A-1-291
Now that Lent is over
2-A-2-108; 6-A-2-116
Now that the summer meadow is mowed
2-A-4-299, 300
Now that the sun’s clock points its accusing hands
2-A-3-142
Now that these hills provoke divine appointments
2-A-2-41, 42; 5-E-4-19
Now that this leaf-laced country swells with summer
2-A-5-232; 5-E-4-35
Now that your frost-starred bones hard back asphodel
2-B-7-126
Now we are one with wounded things
2-A-6-295
Now while the lilacs bloom and roses blow
2-A-3-189; 6-A-2-119
Nude at table in the sweltering summer
5-E-13-278
"O gentle cow, I prithee"
2-A-1-1
O for the days of Rodin and Phideas
2-A-5-91
O Look! cried the child of perfect ecstasy.
5-E-10-190
"O love, the winter has brought nothing more"
2-A-6-215, 216; 2-B-7-98, 118; 5-E-11-214; 6-A-4-126
O my undone biography
6-A-4-95
"O sell, me, please"
2-A-3-226; 6-A-2-134
"O spare me, please"
2-A-2-146
O to lead a life of leisure
2-A-3-106
O write me quickly an historic letter
2-A-4-104
Of all involvements of the horse with art
2-A-4-77, 78, 79, 80; 2-B-7-122, 123
Of sheltering grass and filtered sun
2-A-3-363; 6-A-2-195
Official mother
2-A-2-22; 6-A-1-179
"Oh, for a digital computer,"
6-A-1-235
"Oh, for a scandal"
2-A-3-27; 6-A-2-52
"“Oh, he ain’t heavy, Father. . .he’s my brother,” said the lad"
2-A-1-224
"Oh, I cannot the Twist support"
2-A-4-176
"Oh my sad-eyed children, dance tonight"
2-A-2-365
"Oh my very dear, if my eloquence has not broken you"
2-A-6-296
"Oh sell me, please"
2-A-3-226; 6-A-2-134
Oh write me now
2-A-2-83
Olaf on the night train
5-E-4-33
Old Andy was the object of folks’ pity
2-A-1-42; 5-E-13-275
The old black tree’s a living thing again
2-A-1-66, 67, 68, 69; 2-B-7-1, 112, 118; 6-A-1-30
"The old Cal Johnson place, you say? – why, stranger, it ain’t standing"
2-A-4-32
Old Charlie sat beneath the pawpaw tree
2-A-4-283
Old countrymen have barometers in their bones
2-A-1-25; 6-A-1-10
Old Lillie died the night they hanged her son
2-A-5-29
Old Marcus watched the shivering bully calf
2-A-4-24
The old pear tree we used to climb
6-A-3-47
The old rail fence trips over itself
2-A-2-147, 148, 149; 6-A-1-227
On a day in late September
2-A-3-187, 188; 5-E-5-48; 6-A-2-118
"On a Spring day, in a wine-shop"
6-A-3-95
On Monday morning the telephone rang
2-A-1-72
On Mondays and Wednesdays and Fridays
2-A-3-90; 6-A-2-72
On porches papered with morning glory leaves
2-A-6-118
On summer days
2-A-2-45
On Sunday afternoon
2-A-6-297
On the first day he said to us “You will learn to hate me”
2-A-5-75; 76; 2-B-7-78
On the 42nd day of Christmas
2-A-3-180
Once as I clung
2-A-6-48, 49, 50; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-210
Once each week—on Sunday
2-A-3-329
Once from the window of a train
2-A-4-101
"Once in Chicago, a moment I treasure"
2-A-6-298
Once the shell is broken
2-A-6-238; 6-A-4-135
"Once we have been away, the native place"
2-A-4-14, 15, 16; 6-A-2-204
One day the whole thing comes apart
2-A-6-79, 80; 2-B-7-76
One doesn’t need a buttered knife
2-A-3-34
One night on Scarbauer when the stars
2-A-4-179, 180
One of the greatest
6-A-3-2
One played a trumpet solo
2-A-6-139; 6-A-1-159
One thing about an elephant
2-A-4-91
One thing I know
6-A-1-156
One thing you can say for rhinoes:
6-A-3-120
"Only the body is confined, the spirit"
2-A-2-62; 2-B-7-102, 118; 5-E-12-265
only the pigeons strutting on the roof
2-A-5-73
The only thing in all this world
2-A-3-183
The only thing wrong
2-A-4-225
An ordered garden is the soul’s delight
2-A-4-186; 2-B-7-95, 118; 5-E-6-106
The organist has tuned her instrument
2-A-6-83
Oriental verse forms
2-A-2-373; 6-A-2-34
The other night a satirist
2-A-3-83
Our dreams were wild enough but not too wild;
2-B-7-125; 5-E-13-293
Our family netter
2-A-4-35
Our first day out the sea was still
2-B-7-126
Our first night went without a kiss
2-A-3-276
Our kinfolks who are in attendance
2-A-2-243
Our nameless dead return again tonight
2-A-2-10
"Our themes, when we have put on weight"
2-A-6-128
Out of the ark of
2-A-4-169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174
"Out of the darkness the voice of my mother, dead"
2-A-6-240, 241, 242; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-179
"Out of the ether the voice of my mother, dead"
2-A-6-240, 241, 242; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-179
Out of the love and comfort of their homes
5-E-6-100
Out of the mouths of babes no gem
2-A-2-104, 286
Out of the night bayou
5-E-6-82
Out of the spring the summer hush was born.
2-B-7-125
Out of this fierce night I promise you
2-A-1-84
"Out of your sad south driven, O Cherokee"
2-B-7-125
Outside my window little children play
2-A-4-217
Outside the snow
2-A-2-164; 2-B-7-124; 5-E-8-143; 6-A-1-238
Outside the window of his room
2-A-6-100; 6-A-1-258
Over the city and in the high places
2-A-5-212
Over the graveyard
2-A-4-331, 332, 333, 334
Over the great white stretch of Dog eternity
5-E-5-65
"Over salt the soup, my love"
2-A-4-114; 6-A-2-237
The owls have claimed the rafters
2-A-4-120, 121; 6-A-3-6
A pail of stars has spilled across the world
2-A-2-64; 2-B-7-107, 118; 6-A-1-198, 199
Pain and fear will always drive
2-A-1-293
The painted horse goes up Columbus wise
2-A-1-272, 273
"A painter died, the paper said"
2-A-4-191
“Party lines are wonderful things”
2-A-1-282
Passion and fire subside; the adorable bitch
2-A-4-284, 285, 286, 287
"Pay, you say? I wasn’t ‘spectin’ none"
2-A-1-370
Peace is a little steam which flows unmuddied
2-A-4-281; 5-E-5-44
"The pears in August, sure as bells"
2-A-3-315, 316; 6-A-2-172
Perhaps he wonders what I do all day
2-A-1-297, 298
Phooey on summer
2-A-6-206, 207; 5-E-9-165; 6-A-4-121
"The pigeons feed on the campus green,"
5-E-4-18
The pinball machine is charitable on Sunday
2-A-6-299
The pin tailed duck pursues the fly
2-A-5-71
A place with water has a special look
2-A-4-226; 6-A-3-54
Places of transit drew him like a star
2-A-2-23, 24, 25; 2-A-4-228; 2-B-7-55, 85, 118; 5-E-6-98
"The plane stands still, and all the earth turns below"
2-A-6-300
"“Play like it’s April”, you said when we were small"
2-A-6-47; 5-E-8-157
"Please, God, if it be in Your power"
2-A-4-247, 248
Please return the torrid
2-A-4-67
The plow had wings the year I sat
2-A-4-232; 6-A-3-57
A poem is not what you think
2-A-4-237; 6-A-3-61
The poet hangs out his socks and the day begins
2-A-3-351, 352; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-8-147
A poet is a precious fool
2-A-4-238
"A poet should die in the country, where the trees"
2-A-4-137, 138, 139; 5-E-7-132; 6-A-4-145
The poet who writes love-songs
2-A-4-106
The poet who writes sonnets
2-A-2-233
The poets know the time is here
2-A-4-241
The poets met on Sunday at Miss Kettle’s
2-A-3-336; 6-A-2-187
Poised between worlds and times on reedy legs
2-A-1-212
Polonius had his dreams come true
2-A-6-218, 219, 220; 2-B-7-83, 118; 6-A-4-129
The pool we started digging
2-A-4-66
Poor Miss Amie never knew
2-A-6-301
A portly carriage is your dynasty
2-A-2-228
"The possum, never quite in fashion"
2-A-3-8, 9, 10, 11; 6-A-2-43
The postman toots
2-A-1-11; 6-A-1-7
A power of goodly balance swings this world
2-A-4-244; 2-B-7-67
The power that makes the river flow
2-A-3-227; 6-A-2-135
"Praise autumn, she bears treasures"
2-A-1-122; 6-A-1-55
"Preceding Van Gogh, as it were,"
2-B-7-126
Pride is a boy’s first cowboy boots
2-A-4-260; 6-A-3-75, 76
The prophets died when millennium
5-E-6-73
"Purged by sun, the Christian butterfly"
2-A-5-145, 146; 2-B-7-97, 118; 5-E-4-20
A purple swallow
2-A-5-106, 107
Put your lasagna
2-A-2-219
The rabbit writes upon the snow
2-A-3-136, 137; 2-B-7-19; 6-A-2-93
The race for space
2-A-6-86; 6-A-3-179
The rain-gauge filled
2-A-4-291; 6-A-3-86
The rain runs in the hill like a good wine
2-A-2-40; 6-A-1-185, 186
"Raspberries run red here, but they run deep"
2-A-4-189, 297; 6-A-3-89
Read with mercy
2-A-4-74, 75, 76; 6-A-1-268; 6-A-2-229
"Reared in captivity, the whipporwills"
2-A-6-164, 165, 166, 167
Red star and the wind
2-A-6-82
The redbirds came back to the arbor
2-A-6-214
Regret! thy name is poverty
2-A-6-302
Reluctant to admit our faults
2-A-1-179; 6-A-1-92
Reluctantly he bade the last bright bird
2-A-5-156; 6-A-3-177
Reluctantly he bid the last bright bird
2-A-5-156; 6-A-3-177
Remember the window that was stuck
6-A-1-269
Remembering Christmases gone by
2-A-2-231, 232
"Remembering summer now, I know"
2-A-4-148; 6-A-1-27
Remembering you is the balm whereby
2-A-6-158, 159, 160; 5-E-12-263; 6-A-4-103, 104
Rescue the steaks
2-A-6-136
Returning home in the chilling afternoon
6-A-3-77
"Richard, I song a sea-song for you now"
6-A-3-167
"Rising in darkness, I seek the time of night"
2-A-1-232; 6-A-1-112, 113
"The ritual of goodbye, where children are"
2-A-2-144, 145; 6-A-1-226
The river at Hanau lay flat among the reeds
2-A-5-15; 6-A-3-123
The river road looks down upon itself
2-A-5-16
The river winters
2-A-6-180
The road
2-A-2-47, 48
"The road ends at the Gulf, but we engulfed"
2-A-2-200, 201, 202, 203; 6-A-1-248
The roads are thick with tourists
2-A-5-245; 5-E-12-253
"Roast, if you will, my duckling;"
6-A-3-56
The robins change our latitude of mind
2-A-1-287
"The rooster wonders, rising still"
2-A-3-209
The roses now explode like stars
2-A-3-150; 6-A-2-101, 102
A round half-dozen marvels happened today
2-A-4-257, 158, 259; 2-B-7-25; 6-A-3-74
"Row slowly now, The muscadines"
2-A-6-195; 6-A-4-113
Run to the telephone
2-A-6-243
The sadest words of tongue or pen
2-A-1-338
"The salary suggests—nay, it declares"
2-A-2-247
Salesmen surely ought to ponder
2-A-3-106
"The salesman who reads Greek, bewildered, vain"
2-A-5-66
"Sarda, sarda, brown bonito"
2-A-2-204
The saw slid crisply through the solid heart
6-A-4-92
"Say what you will, and (if you must) tease"
2-A-2-234
The sea kissed Shelley after Mary did
2-A-4-150
A sea-surgeon’s daughter my brother took to wed
2-A-6-257
The sea that stops the river marks his grave
2-B-7-126
The season hurries the cottonwide
2-B-7-125, 126; 5-E-8-144
The season is open
2-A-3-280, 281; 6-A-2-105, 200
The season of the Capricorn’s at close
2-A-3-141; 2-B-7-82, 118
The seasons never lose their charms
2-A-2-320; 6-A-2-16
Send me no bouquets
2-A-1-12
Shame on the guest
2-A-6-213; 6-A-4-127
She came one night while he was sleeping soundly
2-A-5-198
The she-cat was no lady
2-A-3-235, 236; 6-A-2-139, 140
She didn’t want orchids
2-A-4-302; 6-A-3-92
She forgot nothing
2-A-5-270, 271, 272, 273
She found with every passing day
2-A-6-303
"She goes on a strange, sad mission to the West"
2-A-3-340
She had borne him only yesterday
5-E-13-289
She is a bronze panther
5-E-11-224
She is the star of sandlot circus now
2-A-5-219, 220, 221; 6-A-3-198
She left the dishes in the sink
2-A-6-236; 6-A-4-133
She loved the arts and all things artsy
2-A-4-282; 5-E-6-91
She moves through night rooms like a wrath
2-A-3-6, 7; 2-B-7-124; 5-C-3-16; 5-E-7-130; 6-A-2-42
She never had time for love--
5-E-10-181
She sat and sewed
2-A-3-323
She sat in deep contentment by the hour
2-A-6-200
She slept all over when she slept
2-A-2-226; 6-A-1-261
She told me that she loved him very much
5-E-10-183
"She walked by night, an eerie ghost-like slit"
2-A-3-345
"She was a blackbird, quick of wing"
2-A-4-327
She was not known as one who loved the stars
2-A-5-93
The shops are open but no buyers come:
5-E-11-226
The shore lark’s skyward song predicts the place
2-A-1-344, 345; 6-A-1-155
"Shorn of your Iliads, my special child"
2-A-6-107, 108
"Short enough to run under a horse, if the horse would stand still"
2-A-4-13; 6-A-2-201
Should auld acquaintance be forget
2-A-1-152; 6-A-1-73
Show me an actor
2-A-2-119; 6-A-1-216
"A shrike, somehow symbolic of the cold"
2-A-6-112, 113, 114; 5-E-11-216
The silence of goldfish is greatly to be commended
2-A-4-96, 146; 5-E-11-222; 5-E-13-285
"Simmons, sir? Ben Simmons was a farmer"
2-A-5-206, 207; 6-A-3-193
Sit blind and do not speak
2-A-5-79, 80; 2-A-6-304; 5-E-13-295; 6-A-3-148
Sitting for a portrait my (disapproving) kinsmen
2-A-5-100
The sky is Can Gogh blue above the Hondo
2-A-1-28; 5-E-10-195
A slant of roof is comforting
2-A-5-101, 102, 103
The sleek cow prospers this patch of pasture
2-A-1-91, 92; 6-A-1-47
"Sling me a cucumber milkshake; it is a hot, hot night in June"
2-A-5-104
Slowly the twilight smouldered in his veins
2-A-6-181
A small boy harbors many a hope
2-A-2-75
The snake has spent so much time in
2-A-1-311
So foolish were our fears that he
2-A-4-278
So gentle was he
2-A-5-119; 5-E-9-172; 6-A-3-159
So like a stifled soul that never grows
2-A-2-317
Some boy has grown to man who never bled
2-A-1-150; 2-A-6-251
Some folks turn on with LSD
2-A-6-92; 6-A-4-67
Some men cut off their ears to prove
2-A-2-1; 6-A-1-170, 171
Some men have delusions of grandeur;
6-A-2-136
Some men put on their hats and coats
2-A-6-305
"Some men see visions, bright and strong"
2-A-4-252; 6-A-3-70
Some men take bread
2-A-3-242; 6-A-2-146
Some men’s beginnings are so deep
6-A-1-81
Some other kind of day might bring
2-A-2-246; 6-A-1-264
Some people take the wrong road accidentally
2-A-5-216; 6-A-3-196
Some people will do anything for a rhyme
2-A-1-58
some places I’ve come away from hungry; never yours
2-A-3-225
Some sea-wind that we never knew
2-A-5-57; 5-E-4-32
Some seemed to think he sang off key
2-A-6-139; 6-A-1-166
Some things about the Good Old Days
2-A-6-306
Some things about his farm I’ve left unsaid
2-A-1-173; 2-B-7-110, 118; 6-A-1-85, 86
Some things cannot be done: to name a few
2-A-1-286
Some things defy defining
2-A-3-199
"Some things have not been done, though Spring demands"
2-A-3-52, 53; 6-A-4-18
Some things in passing I recall
2-A-1-27
Some things one may assume of man and beast
2-A-1-164, 165, 166; 6-A-1-82
Some things should not be put to verse
6-A-2-236
"Some things we may, and some we mayn’t"
2-A-1-80
Some western wind has blown him here
2-A-5-17, 18, 19
Some women don’t think kindly
2-A-3-231; 6-A-2-133
Some writers who can’t get printed
2-A-1-335; 2-A-5-178
Someday I shall marry you
2-A-6-307
Someday I shall write you of better
2-A-1-174
Someday I will write on how we are all poets
2-A-3-37, 38, 39, 40; 2-B-7-15
Somehow the teacher felt it right away
2-A-4-3
Something in the air foretold
2-A-4-185; 6-A-3-24, 25
Something with a voice like God’s
2-A-4-181, 182; 2-B-7-77
Sometime between midnight and dawn
2-A-1-130; 6-A-1-62
Sometimes between morning and night the lone creature Love
2-A-1-333, 334
Sometime betwixt midnight and dawn
2-A-1-130; 6-A-1-62
Sometimes between the young we were
2-A-3-123; 6-A-2-90
Sometimes a well runs over
2-A-4-115
Sometimes in anger we consign
2-A-2-360; 6-A-2-30
Sometimes Love draws inside its walls
2-A-6-106; 6-A-4-76
Sometimes we lie and tremble still
2-A-1-46
Somewhere my mother lost the child
2-A-4-269; 5-E-6-90
Somewhere out there the cow will calve tonight
2-A-6-102; 6-A-4-71
Somewhere there is a child who does not know
2-A-1-167, 168; 2-B-7-3, 94, 118; 6-A-1-84
Somewhere within the grind of the machine
2-A-2-287; 2-A-3-342; 5-E-11-235
A sonnet I shall undertake to write
5-E-4-3
Sorry the pen
2-A-2-245
"The sparrow, blazing back by sparrow reason"
2-A-5-163
The sparrow shivers near his Lord
2-A-1-94, 95, 96; 6-A-1-142
The sparrows have not made amends
2-A-3-276
"Speak, if you will speak, from the grave"
2-A-3-21
Spelled by that dull maternal Nay
2-A-4-221, 222, 223; 5-E-4-26
The spider weaves
2-A-6-14
The spirit casts a shadow
5-E-11-229
Spirits remembered are not spirits dead
2-A-5-3, 4; 5-E-7-114; 6-A-3-46, 116, 117
Spring
2-A-1-93
Spring came up the river
6-A-1-48
Spring is a coming thing; it is never done
2-A-5-171; 6-A-3-182
Spring is confirmed
2-A-5-110
Spring was a canvas
2-A-6-203, 204; 2-B-7-37; 6-A-4-119
Spring was a woman ripe and willing
2-A-2-173
The stairs creak; the shutters bang
2-A-4-343; 6-A-3-112
Standing high on the cactussed peak
2-A-2-43
Star that is stone
2-A-4-1, 2
The starling errs: the rains of August threw
2-A-4-204, 205, 206; 2-A-5-180
Steel and stone
2-A-4-344, 345, 346; 2-B-7-27; 6-A-3-114
Stop and buy your churn or trunk
2-A-3-151
"Strange, how the rest of this earth fails for us"
2-A-3-322; 6-A-2-180
Strange of mien
2-A-3-302, 303; 6-A-2-171
Strawberries! –a dry name in the mouth
2-A-5-202, 203; 5-E-6-77; 6-A-3-191
"The street was ours, but in the park"
2-A-5-137; 2-B-7-124
"Strong like a ruler, Richard, your mother’s Teutonic fancy"
2-A-3-213, 214
The studied heart
2-A-1-197
"Such beauty must be evil, for it leaves me only pain;"
5-E-10-181
Suddenly the birds become extraordinarily beautiful
2-A-5-209; 6-A-3-194
"Suddenly, savagely"
2-A-5-208
Suddenly the world depends on you. The wall
2-A-3-221,222; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-12-274
The summer children set up store
2-A-5-213; 6-A-3-195
"Summer, I commend my child"
2-A-5-218
Summer is a wind to bend in
2-A-6-32, 33; 6-A-4-43
"Summer, the loving season"
2-A-4-335
Sun cannot blind them
2-A-6-228; 6-A-4-131
The sun comes up and slants so hard
2-A-4-303; 6-A-3-94
The sun gets in the poet’s eyes
2-A-2-162; 6-A-1-236
"Sun-kin, I shudder at the thought of cold"
2-A-4-168; 2-B-7-99, 118; 6-A-3-19
The Sunday Creek runs hard and clear
2-A-5-212, 229, 230; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-12-261
Sunshine will set the bone grief shattered
2-A-3-208; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-2-126
The sweet green noose of love has hanged me high
2-A-2-309, 310; 2-B-7-124
A sweet profundity forbade
2-A-5-240; 5-E-7-127
Swiftness is a habit
2-A-3-356; 6-A-2-194
Swiftly the sweet ants find the fallen bird
2-A-1-133
Swindle me gently
2-A-1-163
A symphony twines itself around my heart
5-E-4-22
Tacked on a piece
2-A-2-176, 177
Take care: dehumanize nor mammilate
2-A-6-258
"Take, for example, if example’s needed"
2-A-5-267, 268
Take heed of every mortal. He may hold
2-A-1-59
"Take leave, my child, of your summer world"
2-A-3-179; 6-A-2-115
Take me in life not simple as a bell
2-A-4-235, 236; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-1-13; 6-A-3-60
The tax upon their sin provides my syntax
2-A-4-262
Tears are such a conscious thing
2-A-4-112
"Tears, tears, mothers’ tears, weeping over ashes"
2-A-3-354
Teen-age girls who tie up phones
2-A-6-97; 6-A-4-68
Tell me if I’m right
2-A-5-251
The teller of the wind lifts high
2-A-6-308
Thank God they’ll never automate
2-A-6-309
Thank heavens Grandmama is gone
2-A-6-93, 94
Thank heavens the summer is over
2-A-1-288; 2-A-4-219; 6-A-2-223
Thanks for the invitation you sent
2-A-3-106; 6-A-4-9
The thanks that make men hustle is the damn that makes them die
2-A-6-127
That horse was such a lovely thing
2-A-1-236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246; 2-B-7-6, 64
That the odds
2-A-4-230
That which consumed you first consumes me last
2-B-7-79, 118, 119, 120, 121
"Their father, hoping to be left alone"
2-A-6-55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-179
Then lay him gently in the earth he tilled
2-A-6-310
There are a thousand things I need to do
2-A-4-89; 6-A-2-232
There are always guns and cameras
2-A-4-198; 5-E-7-117; 6-A-3-44, 45
There are better things
2-B-7-126
There are days when I cannot remember my own name
2-A-4-85, 86, 87, 88; 5-E-11-216
There are fluttering swifts in the chimney
2-A-6-200
There are more seasons of the year than four
2-A-2-157, 158; 2-B-7-13; 6-A-1-231
There are no quiet places now
2-A-5-5; 6-A-3-118
There are no sounds on earth as sweet as these
2-A-3-238, 239; 2-B-7-21; 6-A-2-142, 143
"There are some fine things happening, not reported"
2-A-5-269
There are some letters simply will not go
2-A-5-300
There are some things I still resent
2-A-6-311
“There are three new calves
2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-228
"There have been heartbreaks, and there will be more"
2-A-2-298
There is a fabulous quality to the sun
2-A-5-223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228; 2-B-7-74; 5-E-9-168
"There is a fence here, but you can’t see it"
2-A-2-150, 151; 2-B-7-11; 6-A-1-228
There is a lonely man
2-A-3-296
There is but one Poet; He is God
2-A-5-59
There is no joy so singular
2-A-5-239
There is no power which can keep
2-A-1-210; 6-A-1-104
"There is no season, though the seasons change"
2-B-7-126
There is no severe weather alert
2-A-2-89; 2-B-7-75; 5-E-12-256
There is nothing wrong with my last year’s suit
2-A-4-158
There is only one way to succeed
2-A-6-312
There is something about November that smoulders
2-A-6-313
"There is too much to love, to leave"
2-A-6-314
There once was a dance names Lulu
2-A-2-244
There was a darkness in him which
2-A-6-34; 5-E-8-154; 6-A-4-44
"There was a star, I remember"
2-A-3-72; 6-A-2-68
There was a time when one quick glance distinguished
2-A-5-188, 189, 190, 191, 192; 2-B-7-69
There was always music in my mother’s house
2-A-5-278; 6-A-4-14
There was of course considerable dissension
2-A-2-349; 5-E-5-54; 6-A-2-54
There was still snow in that high place
2-A-2-335, 336, 337, 338; 2-B-7-66
There were no ghosts to haunt him then; he wrote
2-A-4-83, 84
There will come a day
2-A-4-330
There’s many a ZIP
2-A-4-341
"These are the days when men draw up there testes,"
5-E-11-232
"These are the hulks of angels, wrapped around"
2-B-7-126
These hills are poorer now that Joe is gone
2-A-3-287
These last few lines are not so much for you
2-B-7-103, 118; 5-E-8-145
These new men’s shirts
2-A-1-151
They are saying some discouraging things
2-A-5-236; 6-A-3-201
"They come to town on Saturday, the people from the mountains"
5-E-4-10
They could not say just where or when
2-A-3-153, 154; 2-B-7-61; 5-E-5-55
"They do not ask return, these men who rest"
5-E-5-60
They fenced a brand-new graveyard site
2-A-4-36
They gave the girl a signet ring
2-A-5-9
They had no faces and their trunks were glass
2-A-3-15; 5-E-12-251; 6-A-2-45
"They have new jeans, new shirts, new shoes"
2-A-5-258
They have planted thyme outside my window
2-A-6-24
They hear her song each morning in the plant
2-A-2-35
"They let me go with honors (if but few),"
6-A-1-168
They lit three candles on the altar for Luigi
2-A-5-296
They now live in a new house on the hill
2-A-4-190
They put things on postcards in Rome
6-A-1-29
"They said I could write of beauty, if ecstasy, and pain"
2-A-2-32; 5-E-13-287, 288; 6-A-3-59
They said my father could never farm this land
2-A-6-88; 5-E-4-26
They smiled and shook hands with the smug-faced recruiter
5-E-5-64
"They went to gather pears, but found"
2-A-2-278, 279, 350, 351
"They write, and we are grandly entertained"
2-A-4-48; 6-A-2-217
"They’ll bury him, come spring"
2-A-2-85; 2-A-6-66
They’ll have to hitch the horses up without me there this spring
2-A-2-133, 134; 5-E-4-30; 5-E-9-170; 5-E-11-220
They’ve boarded up The Rendezvous
2-A-4-194, 195
The things I ask are simple things
2-A-2-55, 56
The things I own are things of paper
2-A-4-47; 6-A-4-17
Things must be done
6-A-3-8
"Things rattle in this house, things click and thump"
2-A-4-54; 6-A-2-219
The things she loved so much are in their places
2-A-5-281, 282
"This book is mine, but any book of mine"
2-A-2-118
This evening
5-E-6-103
This fear of death that I abhor
2-A-5-287
This for myself I write in memoriam
2-A-5-120, 121
This fruit is a pastel gyration
2-A-4-155
This is a night for poems and fire
2-A-4-60; 6-A-2-220
This is a part of the woods I haven’t seen
2-A-4-3234, 325; 2-B-7-103, 118
This is a reaching kind of day
2-A-6-31; 6-A-4-42
This is disputed country: somehow it overlaps
2-A-1-225, 226, 227; 2-B-7-5; 5-C-3-15; 6-A-1-111
This is my official biography and let
2-A-1-119, 120; 5-E-6-76
"This is my world, and I am happy here"
2-A-5-290; 5-E-11-234
This is part of the woods I haven’t seen
6-A-3-104, 105
This is the answer to waiting
2-A-2-53
This is the gist of the season here
2-A-3-191; 6-A-2-121
This is the land of the prophets
2-A-5-184; 5-E-5-66
"This is the last of school, and who can say as"
2-A-1-107; 5-E-5-56
"This is the morning of Judgement, this is the Ultimate Dawn"
2-A-3-323
This is the way it was: (on the other hand. . . )
2-A-2-120
This is the will
2-A-5-261; 6-A-4-8
This is the year they promised me
2-A-4-277
This man is not a man at all;
5-E-13-294
This morning my father laid the stove for fire
2-A-3-161, 162
This morning on my way to live
2-A-1-38; 5-E-6-96
This night can never pass and you not here
2-A-6-16
This report must
6-A-3-110
This road runs outward to September places
2-A-3-289, 290, 291; 6-A-2-164, 165
This room rejoices
2-A-5-291; 2-B-7-124
This sacred quill I give unto your hand
2-A-3-329
This sky awaits great things; this spare outcropping
2-A-4-200; 2-B-7-122, 123
This tweeter is a blooper
2-A-1-148; 6-A-1-68
"This was my home, where now the hill"
6-A-3-115
This was the child who beat a path
2-A-2-69; 6-A-2-3
This was the first year the hawthorn failed
2-A-1-188, 189, 190, 191, 192; 2-B-7-41
This year’s at the Janus
2-A-6-69
Those that we need most leave us
2-A-5-280; 2-B-7-125
Those who are fed
2-A-6-44
Those we have always had plenty do not know the size of nothing
2-A-1-257, 258, 259; 5-E-11-212; 5-E-5-47; 5-E-10-201
Though every heart has roses
2-A-5-111; 6-A-4-19
"Though he was old, he still could see"
2-A-3-343
Though heir to ivory palaces by grace
2-A-3-192; 2-B-7-90, 118; 6-A-2-123
Though I have left
2-A-1-175; 6-A-1-87
"Though ill, my hours"
6-A-1-23
Though it is true the angels are much younger
2-A-1-266
Though luck for the mission
2-A-4-176
Though nothing is due today that I know of
2-A-6-104; 6-A-4-73, 74
Though there is not an ear to hear
2-A-2-36
A thousand things went wrong when my Grandfather’s angels
2-A-3-282, 283; 2-B-7-123; 5-C-3-15; 5-E-9-173; 6-A-2-161
Three days of age and still without a name
2-A-1-314, 315; 5-E-12-262; 6-A-1-141
"Three geese,"
6-A-2-89
"Throw caution to the wind, girls"
2-A-3-83
Thrust back into the cool cave of time
2-A-1-86, 87; 2-B-7-73
Thus were the mountains: crag and timber
2-A-5-214, 215
The ties I bind are not so blest
2-A-5-301
Time cannot wither not can cliché stale
2-A-2-83
"The time is coming, I suppose"
2-A-3-103
The time is getting close and hot
2-A-5-77
Time plots a phantom in my bones
2-A-6-182
Time was that ultimate judge whose gavel fell
2-A-3-147
The times that try men’s souls are never gone
2-A-4-37
To a small boy
2-A-1-306
To be a book a book should be
2-A-5-318; 6-A-4-27
To be born in a manger
2-A-4-25; 5-E-8-160
To bring in wood for a winter fire
2-A-5-255, 256; 6-A-4-6
To demonstrate the ease with which
2-A-4-323
To give a child a book is suddenly
6-A-4-28, 29
To give the world a poem betroths a man
2-A-6-5; 6-A-4-30
"To give things names, the village was called Lincoln"
2-A-5-181
To live
2-A-2-53
"To love is all there is, and we must take it"
2-A-6-8, 9, 10, 11
To walk at night a stranger is a tactless thing
2-A-6-110; 5-E-11-230
Today from camp the ten year old
2-A-2-129
Today he leaned to fingerprint
2-A-2-69; 6-A-1-202
"“Today,” he said, “we learned to count. . .”"
2-A-4-328; 6-A-3-107
Today I could tell of more miracles than I dare
2-A-5-222; 6-A-3-199
Today will be the day I call down fire
2-A-6-51; 6-A-4-55
Today you are a sacred cow
2-A-6-184; 5-E-7-114; 6-A-4-110
The tombs are silent little mounds of clay
2-A-6-82
Tomorrow morning we would light no fires
2-A-1-289; 6-A-1-129
Tonight I shall dream of the one I love
2-A-6-151
Tonight she graduates from grammar school
2-A-3-163; 6-A-2-110
Too few can comprehend the desert’s call
2-A-1-40; 5-E-12-258
Too much of living
2-A-6-25
The tooth that was killing
2-A-2-77
The tortoise beat a poorly programmed hare
2-A-6-315
The train poured down
2-A-3-148, 149; 5-E-10-196
Translating summer into another tongue
2-A-6-172, 173, 174, 175, 176; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-174; 6-A-4-107
The tree holds to the leaf
2-A-6-10, 41
"Tricked captive, lying aslant the moss-grown staves"
2-B-7-125; 6-A-4-25
"A trumpet vine, if one allows"
2-A-4-110, 111
Turning our watches back against the onslaught of November
2-A-3-172
"“Twas the day before Tuesday, and all through my jeans"
2-A-6-316
“Twas the night before Christmas. And all through the shop
2-A-5-37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42; 5-E-4-29; 6-A-3-188
Twenty-one civilizations
2-A-6-64, 65, 66; 5-E-11-220
The Twist has proved that anyone
2-A-3-28; 6-A-2-53
Two doves blew in today from a country place
2-A-6-91; 6-A-4-65, 66
Two months ago
2-A-6-250; 6-A-2-211; 6-A-4-140
Two night fishers were first to hear the cry
2-A-4-50, 51, 52, 53; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-9-177; 6-A-2-218
"Unclimbed, except perhaps by squirrel"
2-A-6-75, 76; 6-A-4-59
Under the frowning hill the stallion nests
5-E-6-99
Under the weight of twenty grackles
2-A-4-81; 6-A-2-230
The unflown bird
2-A-4-276
Vacation slides these joys evoke
2-A-5-77
"Verily, the vireo"
2-A-1-313; 5-E-7-122
The village lay in the sweltering day
2-A-6-157
The villain who bashes the hero
2-A-3-313
The vines are tangled in the deep
2-A-6-317
"Waiting to wed Ulysses, four-leaf letterman"
2-A-1-325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-215; 6-A-1-148
The walk I would walk in the wood
2-A-6-109
Walking by night around this living pond
2-A-6-111; 6-A-4-78, 79
Walking in the splendid terror
2-A-3-144
Walking one morning when the kindly mist
2-A-2-288, 289; 2-A-7-72; 6-A-2-7
Water was meant to be drunk from a glass
6-A-2-6
Was ever a man so dumb he shunned
2-A-3-83; 5-E-7-114
Was God there when you passed?
5-E-6-74; 5-E-11-225
The wasted gardens deplore this unseasonable month
2-A-2-15
Water was meant to be drunk from a glass
2-A-2-287
The way we tell the weather here
2-A-5-253
we are conceited enough to believe that the
2-A-6-318
"We are not safe within our walls,"
2-B-7-126
We built a tree-house high above a glen
2-B-7-125; 5-E-6-107
We came down beside the bayou.
5-E-11-227
We came here once before: it may have been
2-A-6-205
We came upon the trapper’s shack at dusk
2-A-3-19; 6-A-2-46
"We can never escape our wars, and few of us try"
2-A-5-126; 6-A-3-162
We cannot always gauge the trout
2-A-2-374; 2-A-6-54
We can’t let our old loves go-they flicker and flame
2-A-2-51; 5-E-4-15
We come into this Christmas month with awe
2-A-5-127
We do not sing when sorrow moves the brow--
5-E-5-59
We don’t adjust
2-A-1-178
"We drove all night, we drove all day"
2-A-2-37
We found him crumpled
2-A-2-181; 2-A-3-111
We get few jokes more startling
6-A-3-40
We have always been involved; things did not wait
2-A-3-320, 321; 5-E-11-212
We have been blowing about the village like dry leaves
2-A-6-212; 6-A-4-125
We have been blowing about the village like dry leaves
2-A-6-212; 6-A-4-125
We have come a long way Greg
2-A-1-60, 61, 62
"We knew him first in April, when the lake"
2-A-4-182, 183; 5-E-5-49
We leaned over the back fence
2-A-4-33
We love to see Harry The Ragman come
2-A-2-344
We love your story
2-A-1-12
"We loved the lines,"
6-A-1-117
We must relate ourselves somehow to winter
2-A-4-93; 5-E-13-282
We never knew each other in July;
2-B-7-126
We never knew when next the fox might strike
2-A-3-97, 98, 99, 100; 2-B-7-122, 123
We nominate for Man of the year
2-A-3-295
We rush forth from our houses
2-A-5-138; 6-A-3-172
We searched the shadows of the mind
5-E-7-133
We seek by some means to contain
5-E-7-133
"We slept till noon, and after noon"
6-A-1-169
We stand upon a fearful precipice
2-A-2-95
We took the products of the wood
2-B-7-125
We turned in summer to the sea
2-A-1-247; 6-A-1-115, 116
We walk with Brahms
2-A-6-115; 6-A-4-80, 81
"We were a town, a people once, a way of life"
2-A-3-247
We will come back one day and find this shore
2-A-5-292
The weary frames of men deny the hour.
2-B-7-126
Weep not to see me lying
5-E-11-242
“We’ll have no violence on this Grecian stage
2-A-4-231
The well-dressed gentleman this year
2-A-4-279
Went out after dark to bring in wood
2-A-5-248; 2-B-7-125
We’re building a cabin
2-A-3-127, 128, 129
West of Joplin the trees fall away from the road
2-A-5-117; 5-E-7-140; 5-E-11-221
The West was won by men with guts
2-A-2-83
The western sky where night rewrites the day
2-A-1-13; 6-A-1-8
We’ve lost a lot of orchids hereabout
2-A-5-186
We’ve never faced cold weather better;
6-A-3-204
What air defies
2-A-1-384; 6-A-1-167
"What angel have you spoken to, what seen"
2-A-3-184
"What, come home and not find Tommy there"
2-A-6-319
What do we know of our children
2-A-6-139; 6-A-2-44
“What does a bee sing?”
6-A-1-184
What does the glow-worm
2-A-1-64
What have we wrought of word and stone
2-A-6-320
What I have done is plainly unimportant
2-A-4-272; 6-A-3-79
What I have done this morning will not hold
2-A-1-47; 2-B-7-105, 118; 6-A-1-24
What I require
2-A-4-340
What I resolved on January 1st
2-A-6-70
What if a sudden thaw occurred
2-A-4-129
"What is a word, that the wind can take it"
2-A-6-230, 231, 232, 233; 2-B-7-38
What is more intimate ever than the voices
2-A-6-140, 141, 142, 143, 144; 6-A-4-94
What man has greater rapture known
5-E-8-141
What moves a man to action now
2-A-3-216, 217, 218
What Muse amuses you in Venice now
2-A-2-306; 2-B-7-51; 6-A-2-11
What time of year is there that does not find
2-A-3-335a
What was that sound of weeping that you heard
2-A-1-252, 253, 254, 255; 6-A-1-119
What we already know diminishes you
2-A-2-208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214; 2-B-7-122, 123
What we predict
2-A-6-1, 2, 3, 4
What we pursue
2-A-3-116
What will my children say when I bring forth
2-A-1-303, 304, 305; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-1-137, 138, 139
What will you call these years when I’m at rest
2-A-6-145
What ever happened to Adabelle Hess
2-A-5-280; 2-B-7-124, 125; 5-E-7-130; 6-A-3-69
Whatever room
2-A-6-239; 6-A-4-137
Whatever you might have in mind
2-A-6-321
When April stormed toward summer
2-A-5-172
When April thawed the river
2-A-4-108, 109
When asked such apropos things
2-A-3-32, 33
When circumstance has hanged us high
2-A-1-202; 6-A-1-99
When does that muse we nursed decline the breast
2-A-3-147; 5-E-12-255
When he had died and there was none to bless him
2-A-4-347
When he was a child
2-A-1-169, 170, 171
"When he was an old, magnificently ruined"
2-A-3-200, 201; 5-E-8-146
When he was five and she was eight
2-A-2-135, 136, 137, 138
When he was four
2-A-4-175; 6-A-3-21
"When he was gone, she swore to build"
2-A-2-277
"When he was six, he picked up sticks"
2-A-1-235
When her bones became too sharp
2-A-4-30; 6-A-2-208
When I am tired of all that life implies
2-A-6-150, 151
When I am walking two long miles
2-A-2-308
When I consider
2-A-4-242
When I get on a public ferry
2-A-1-34; 2-A-4-337
"When I go gathering poems, there are those"
2-A-6-98; 6-A-4-69
"When I go out unsponsored, let my bones"
2-A-2-105
When I had two eyes
2-A-6-46; 5-E-13-303
When I have dies and gone to heaven
2-A-4-240
When I have gone to war and died
2-A-5-306; 5-E-5-68
When I remember that our lives were spent
2-A-6-322
When I was half my present age
2-A-1-292; 6-A-1-131
When I was six and you were five
6-A-2-199
When I was the child in the belly of the bone
2-A-4-265, 266, 267, 268; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-10-206; 5-E-12-272
When I was very small I left
2-A-4-220
"When I was young, I rose from bed"
2-A-5-233, 234
When it was late and the corn stood gold
2-A-2-346, 347, 348; 5-E-7-132
When it was obvious that the play was dying
2-A-1-336, 337; 2-B-7-7, 130, 131, 132
"When last the geese flew here, this field was new"
2-A-4-274; 6-A-3-82
When man has conquered outer space
2-A-5-110
When moments of glory are few and far between
2-A-3-36; 6-A-2-57, 58
When neighbors grouse that cold has got their carrots
2-A-3-202; 6-A-2-124
When night seizes the thin blue air of winter
2-A-2-221; 6-A-1-257
When our lawns green up
2-A-5-170; 6-A-3-181
When paid
2-A-3-252
When people have “a perfect right”
2-A-5-10; 6-A-3-122
When she had canned the things she meant to can
2-A-5-68; 6-A-3-143
When summer drives the neighbors to the shores
2-A-3-23; 6-A-2-49
"When taught with fire, I turned to fire"
2-A-1-78
"When the equinox becomes dreadfully vernal,"
6-A-4-61
When the feed mill exploded
2-A-2-163; 5-E-7-116; 6-A-1-237
When The Fugitive
2-A-5-123
"When the last child was gone, she thought that she"
2-A-3-353; 2-B-7-127, 128, 129
When the woods crack
2-A-4-309; 6-A-3-98
When they look back and try to reconstruct
2-A-4-40, 41, 42, 43, 44; 2-B-7-62, 101, 118; 5-E-12-265; 6-A-2-212, 213
"When Time, like a shop-worn trinket"
2-A-3-134, 135
When this snow melts
2-A-4-102
"When we are children, Christmas is no"
2-A-2-290
When we have done
2-A-2-183; 6-A-1-245, 246
"When we were young, we never hung"
2-A-4-224; 6-A-3-52
"When young, I limped; my growing pains"
2-A-2-330; 2-B-7-125
Whenever I think of those who lived and wrote
2-A-4-197
Whenever summertime arrives
2-A-3-248; 6-A-2-149, 150
“Where are the pretty place gone may go. . . “
2-A-1-196; 6-A-1-96
Where autumn hung her golden pears
2-B-7-125; 5-E-11-239
Where but in God and nature lies perfection
2-A-5-200
Where does a poem
2-A-6-154
"Where has greatness its end, and beauty its foundation"
2-A-1-39
"Where have I failed you, love, my only love"
2-A-2-298
"Where May runs into June, and the hill for green"
2-A-6-155; 2-B-7-32, 114, 118; 6-A-4-101, 102
Where the sparrow made his bed
2-A-3-279
Where this path leads I cannot guess
2-A-6-123, 124; 2-B-7-36; 6-A-4-90, 91
"Where I am, come autumn, I shall see"
2-A-3-185; 5-E-10-192
"Wherever Peace lifts up her head,"
5-E-6-79
"Wherever you sleep tonight, I bless that sleep"
2-A-2-315
"Whether boy or bird, I cannot tell"
2-A-1-180, 181, 182
While I was looking for the way back home
2-A-2-161
White cat prying into the winter dusk
2-A-6-168
The white cock blows about the winter yard
2-A-6-169, 170; 2-B-7-34; 6-A-4-105, 106
The white cock raises (now and then)
2-A-5-28; 6-A-3-129
"White stallion, fierce centaur, propelled by man’s brain"
2-A-1-283
Who are the great? I ask my soul
2-A-1-54
Who can presume to say what the dead would want
2-A-2-30
Who is such a season
2-A-5-51, 52, 53, 54
Who knows what his terriblest need is
2-A-4-275; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-3-83
Who sings in patterns any more
2-A-6-96
Who sows the seeds of anger
2-A-6-27; 6-A-4-37, 38
Who took this picture I may never know
2-A-4-216
Who will buy my penny poems
2-A-2-300, 301; 6-A-2-9
Who will remember what the causes were
2-A-2-116, 117; 2-B-7-80, 118, 122, 123; 5-E-12-262; 6-A-1-215
Who will tote your firewood
2-A-6-149
“Whom God hath joined let no man put asunder”
2-A-1-381; 2-A-2-141
Why do I sing when those for whom I sing
2-A-3-219, 220
Why fret about the race
2-A-2-184; 6-A-1-247
Why is it folks
2-A-3-164; 6-A-2-25
"Why is it, when I need a haircut worst"
2-A-1-279
The wind blows through
2-A-1-149; 2-B-7-122, 123; 5-E-11-215; 6-A-1-71, 72
The wind has whipped the fog about the steeple
2-A-3-348
The wind in the high pines buzzes
2-A-2-175
The wind in their skirts was translucently lyrical
2-A-2-293, 294, 295, 296, 297; 2-B-7-46; 5-E-10-209
The wind in the dark
6-A-3-111
Wind is too wild to define to a child
2-A-2-18; 6-A-1-178
The wind was our discoverer—it brought
2-A-1-300; 6-A-1-134, 135
The window-
2-A-6-129, 130, 131, 132
The wine in the lark
2-A-2-380
Winter confirms what summer had denied
2-A-1-51, 52; 2-B-7-116, 118; 6-A-1-25
The winter sun lay water-thin
2-A-1-203, 204, 205; 2-B-7-4; 6-A-1-100
"Winter was vast and white, was all the reading"
2-A-6-210
The winter wolf is long and lean
2-A-6-211; 6-A-4-124
With a cloud
2-A-4-33
"With her unborn child, my first sister-in-law"
2-A-6-72
With no harsh censure relegate my love
2-A-6-223
With postage rates up in the air
2-A-3-190; 6-A-2-120
with shovels over their shoulders
2-A-6-235
With the finger of your love
2-A-6-117
With this ring he her weds
2-A-5-250; 6-A-4-5
With upraised arms the mighty oak
2-A-6-224
"With you not here this year, my late, late love"
2-A-3-176
The wolf that was the wind has found a place
2-A-4-94, 95
The woman who looks down on your new coat
2-A-1-380, 381
Wonderful things can happen when you read a book.
5-E-7-129; 6-A-4-120
Wonderful to be warm again
2-A-6-323
The words of men do little good
6-A-2-130
The world abounds in goodly men
2-A-4-306
"The world comes down upon us, bit by bit"
2-A-6-125; 2-B-7-88, 118
"A world he did not know existed, wise"
2-A-5-288, 289; 2-B-7-57; 5-E-7-128
The world is quietest at dusk
2-A-2-68; 2-B-7-125; 5-E-5-39; 6-A-1-201
The world was neither round nor square
2-A-4-263, 264
A wound when stitched or clamped or bound
2-A-1-26
"Wounded, I bleed"
2-A-3-267; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-2-157
A wreath on rock is Sitting Bull.
5-E-10-189
"Write something special, said the bobolink"
2-A-6-237; 6-A-3-163; 6-A-4-134
Year after year comes the cuckoo returning
2-A-2-130; 6-A-1-220
The year ahead
2-A-6-234; 5-E-8-160
The year we put the plow away
2-B-7-125; 6-A-4-139
The years dissolve; he is a willowy youth
2-A-4-122; 5-E-8-157
The yellow bird
2-A-3-109; 6-A-2-83
"Yep, I know old Redeye; I’ve knowed him since a kid"
2-A-5-279
yes sir it is truly sad
2-A-2-113
Yesterday my ship sailed out
2-A-5-36
"You are in place here now, between the vase"
2-B-7-124; 5-E-6-109; 5-E-13-275
You are my innermost delight
2-A-3-274
You are so like an angel grown that I
2-A-3-304
You are the Sputnik of the year
2-A-2-285
"You call her “Mother Earth”, and yet I scorn"
2-A-6-151
"“You came in late last night”, his mother said"
2-A-5-2
You can set your clock by the postman on our route
2-A-5-86
"You cannot guess how often, day or night"
2-A-5-314, 315; 2-B-7-124; 6-A-4-21, 22, 23
You cannot hold a child who likes to browse
2-A-1-299; 5-E-4-13; 6-A-1-133
You cannot hold the child who likes to browse
2-A-1-299; 5-E-4-13; 6-A-1-133
You cannot rob a house of its housing spirit
2-A-3-1; 6-A-2-39, 40
You can’t take it with you
2-A-6-86
You drive a hundred miles through space
2-A-1-97; 5-E-10-194
You hold my heart within your close-cupped hands
2-A-4-211.
You must go on without me
2-A-6-83, 252
"You needn’t honk, old friend"
2-A-5-33; 6-A-3-136
You say you’ve gone a million miles and haven’t found a lover
2-A-2-121
"You see, I never knew your people well"
2-A-1-63; 5-E-4-31
You seldom hear a dog bark around here any more
2-A-4-61; 2-B-7-125
You set a goal
2-A-5-125
"You think I know my wines, Love, but I don’t"
2-A-1-348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353
You wouldn’t think a child so small
2-A-3-198; 6-A-2-91
Young are the angels on missions of mercy
2-A-6-253, 254
Your line
2-A-5-77; 5-E-13-302; 6-A-3-55
Your two-dollar meal
2-A-2-76
Your vote for salad
2-A-4-160
Youth is on the market
2-A-3-346

Creator

Source

Title
Edsel Ford Papers
Status
Completed
Author
E.M. Lang
Date
July 1975
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections Department Repository

Contact:
University of Arkansas Libraries
365 N. McIlroy Avenue
Fayetteville AR 72701 United States
(479) 575-8444