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Recorded by Academy of American Poets staff for Poem-a-Day, a series produced by the Academy of American Poets. Published on August 3, 2024. www.poets.org
E.E. Cummings, in full Edward Estlin Cummings, (born October 14, 1894, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.—died September 3, 1962, North Conway, New Hampshire), American poet and painter who first attracted attention, in an age of literary experimentation, for his unconventional punctuation and phrasing. Cummings's name is often styled “e.e. cummings” in the mistaken belief that the poet legally changed his name to lowercase letters only. Cummings used capital letters only irregularly in his verse and did not object when publishers began lowercasing his name, but he himself capitalized his name in his signature and in the title pages of original editions of his books. - bio via Britannica.com Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe
Read by Terry Casburn Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman
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Edward Estlin (E.E.) Cummings was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He attended the Cambridge Latin High School, where he studied Latin and Greek. Cummings earned both his BA and MA from Harvard, and his earliest poems were published in Eight Harvard Poets (1917). As one of the most innovative poets of his time, Cummings experimented with poetic form and language to create a distinct personal style. A typical Cummings poem is spare and precise, employing a few key words eccentrically placed on the page. Some of these words were invented by Cummings, often by combining two common words into a new synthesis. He also revised grammatical and linguistic rules to suit his own purposes, using such words as “if,” “am,” and “because” as nouns, for example, or assigning his own private meanings to words. Despite their nontraditional form, Cummings' poems came to be popular with many readers. “No one else,” Randall Jarrell claimed, “has ever made avant-garde, experimental poems so attractive to the general and the special reader.” By the time of his death in 1962 Cummings held a prominent position in 20th-century poetry. John Logan in Modern American Poetry: Essays in Criticism called him “one of the greatest lyric poets in our language.” Stanley Edgar Hyman wrote in Standards: A Chronicle of Books for Our Time: “Cummings has written at least a dozen poems that seem to me matchless. Three are among the great love poems of our time or any time.” Malcolm Cowley admitted in the Yale Review that Cummings “suffers from comparison with those [poets] who built on a larger scale—Eliot, Aiken, Crane, Auden among others—but still he is unsurpassed in his special field, one of the masters.”-bio via Poetry Foundation Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe
Recorded by Academy of American Poets staff for Poem-a-Day, a series produced by the Academy of American Poets. Published on October 29, 2023. www.poets.org
¿Qué entendemos por “Paradoja”? ¿Y por “Narración Oral”? ¿Qué es una “Narración en Tercera Persona”? Refrescamos poemas y narrativas de Juan Carlos Onetti, E E Cummings, Dalmiro Saenz, Hilda Doolittle, Almudena Grandes, Raquel Campos y Roberto Fontanarrosa, en las voces de nuestros locutores Además, ¿Cuántas editoriales se disputaban tener a Wagner entre sus creadores? ¿Qué otras extrañas aficiones tenía Vladimir Nabokov? ¿Quién fue Nancy Cunard y qué rol jugó en la Inglaterra de mediados del Siglo XX? ¿Qué relación tenía Rafael Alberti con las artes plásticas? ¿Cuál de los amores de Lope de Vega se lo califica como una relación tormentosa? En el segmento “Dramaturgos Dramaturgas” nuestro invitado es Luis Saez. Pensamos las letras de las canciones de Wos, Ligia Piro, Buddy Guy y Miguel Abuelo, entre otros. Como siempre, escuchamos las voces de nuestros oyentes quienes nos acercan sus propios textos o aquellos que escogieron de otros, para seguir creando este infinito collage sonoro de lecturas compartidas. POESIA 1110: Un espacio para pensar y resonar el acto poético en todas sus formas; la poesía de todas las cosas
Si te gusta lo que escuchas y deseas apoyarnos puedes dejar tu donación en PayPal, ahí nos encuentras como @IrvingSun Junio 1. El incongruente – Ramón Gómez de la Serna 2. Siddhartha – Herman Hesse 3. La habitación enorme – E.E. Cummings --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/irving-sun/message
I'm more….with you --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/daisy726/support
Forgetting and Remembering --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/daisy726/support
Read by Terry Casburn Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman
Dawn to Dusk --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/daisy726/support
This week my guest Sophie Howarth and I are diving into what it really means to create your own pace in a culture that prioritises faster and more.Sophie is an artist, writer and teacher, whose work is about deepening connection to ourselves, one another and the wider web of life. We talk thorough ways to tune into your surroundings and get comfortable with going slow, and how Sophie includes and promotes this practice in her own work.Tune in to see just how much you can discover on a pilgrimage within the fabric of your own life! About Sophie Across an eclectic career spanning the arts, activism, social enterprise and government, Sophie has been committed to developing more imaginative responses to our most urgent concerns. Best known as the Co-Founder and first Director of The School of Life, Sophie has also been Curator of Public Programmes at Tate Modern, Faculty Lead at Year Here, Head of Education and Research at iniva, and a Special Advisor on Social Action in the Number 10 Policy Unit. She is also the author of several books including The Mindful Photographer, Street Photography Now and Family Photography Now.You can find out more about Sophie here:https://www.sophiehowarth.com/https://poetrypharmacy.co.uk/the-distillery/online/ Interested in Self-belief School? Here's all the info: https://selfbelief.school/enrol/ References“Ode” by Zoe Higgins (poem)“I thank you god for this most amazing day”, E E Cummings (poem)If Women Rose Rooted, Sharon Blackie (book)Quotes“Tuning ourselves into noticing brings so much depth, but it can't be done in a hurry. You just can't do it if you're busy getting from A to B in a race.” “Sometimes making peace with all the things undone, all the people that we failed to get back to, all the ambitions that we're not pursuing, allows for this really loving space of just being with what is.”“With that privacy attention, these things that happen without an audience, that aren't shared, that aren't for anyone else except our ourselves and our beloveds. These are the really precious resources that we have.”
Good News: European banking giant HSBC has pledged not to fund any more fossil fuel projects going forward! Link HERE. The Good Word: The splendid Christmassy poem [little tree] by e.e. cummings. Good To Know: Learn a bit about the remarkable backstory of “Deck The Halls”! Good News: Belgium plans to tax private jets, among […]
The panel performs a thorough close readings of two well-anthologised poems by E. E. Cummings--'i sing of Olaf glad and big' and 'the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls'--examining how their structure and formal aspects reflect their content.Continue reading
In episode 128, Tom executes a not-so-deep dive into the poetry of e e cummings, by reading 4 of his better known poems. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tomreadsyourstory/message
i carry your heart with me i carry your heart with me (i carry it in my heart) i am never without it (anywhere i go you go, my dear; and whatever is done by only me is your doing, my darling) i fear no fate (for you are my fate, my sweet) i want no world (for beautiful you are my world, my true) and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you here is the deepest secret nobody knows (here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life; which grows higher than soul can hope or mind can hide) and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart i carry your heart (i carry it in my heart) Image: The Fisherman & the Syren by Frederic Leighton
We're waxing poetic about the legacy of the revolutionary and ever eccentric E.E. Cummings! We explore his work and interesting life and events that shaped his style, including being a pacifist during war and a few tumultuous relationships! There also might be an 50 year overdue library book story tossed in for good measure!
Edward Estlin Cummings, a menudo escrito como E. E. Cummings, fue un poeta, pintor, ensayista, autor y dramaturgo estadounidense. Escribió aproximadamente 2.900 poemas, dos novelas autobiográficas, cuatro obras de teatro y varios ensayos. A menudo se le considera como uno de los poetas estadounidenses más importantes del siglo XX. Cummings está asociado con la poesía modernista de forma libre. Gran parte de su trabajo tiene una sintaxis idiosincrásica, y hoy nos acercaremos a sus sabias palabras con la siguiente frase: Se necesita coraje para crecer y convertirse en quien realmente eres.
Is love truly madness?It's certainly foolishness for Poet E.E. Cummings.In this episode I explore Since Feeling is First , one of his more famous love poems that looks at the way in which love almost always overrides reason. It is a fine example of the mastery Cummings held over form, grammar and syntax. On its surface it is a seemingly simple theme but, like all Cumming's works, that surface impression is just the beginning.The First E.E Cummings Episode: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0QTnL3ZYMzLKkbCBFCFTfKThe Show Notes: https://wordsthatburn.substack.com/p/since-feeling-is-first-by-ee-cummings?sd=pfInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/wordsthatburnpodcast/Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/burnwordsThe music: https://www.scottbuckley.com.au/ Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
An episode of almost 10 mins on poetry for Spring (although before the intro there's a mention of November :)). This was recorded in late April but have only just had time to create it and publish. I had a bit of a fluey/cold when recording this!Initially this was only going to be poems by e.e.cummings but then the big ginger neighbourhood cat Brother G inspired me to read Neruda's wonderful 'Ode to the Cat'... and he sat and listened all the while:) xFeaturing mewing from Brother G too, from about 2 mins 20 in :) xThe episode is a reading of five poems - the first four short ones by e.e.cummings and the last, longer one by Pablo Neruda.'Who are you, little i' by e.e cummings'Spring is like a perhaps hand '- by e.e.c'In Just Spring' by e.e.c'In Spring Comes' by e.e.c'Ode to the Cat' by Pablo NerudaPlease see chapter markers to skip to each, if you'd like x** - please see the donate button on 'Buy me a coffee' as so happy to find out about this! Any contributions towards coffees, poetry books and cat treats... (& of course the podcast/audio recording/editing costs!) gratefully received x...............................................................................................................................................................................Please see more artwork, articles and info at www.rowenascotney.com Music by Chad Crouch www.soundofpicture.com - 'Ringling'Artwork by Rowena ScotneyEpisode cover - 'Spring buds & 'The Trees' by Larkin' - sketch (detail)Podcast cover - 'Garden Robin' - feltingSupport the show
Quick check in: who doesn't love a transcendental poet? One who plays with typography? Who doesn't like a poem about incense? Frankincense? One thing I always remembered about Cummings is he spent a sting in NYC at 4 Patchin Place in greenwich village : which is a pretty cool address!
Um dos #poetas mais marcantes e ativos do século XX, Edward Estlin Cummings era americano e, com sua escrita, se tornou uma das figuras mais famosas da #poesia em língua inglesa inglesa. Seus #poemas sobre amor e sobre natureza e principalmente sua poesia erótica são talvez os temas mais populares de seus escritos, especialmente entre os jovens. A poesia de Cummings é radical por sua pontuação e fraseamento não convencionais, tendo sido ele considerado pelo #poeta concreto Augusto de Campos um dos principais responsáveis pela renovação da forma na poesia das últimas décadas. Além destes temas, a sátira é uma característica marcante de seus poemas.
Toma Aí um Poema: Podcast Poesias Declamadas | Literatura Lusófona
Edward Estlin Cummings, usualmente abreviado como e. e. cummings, em minúsculas, como o poeta assinava e publicava, foi um poeta, pintor, ensaísta e dramaturgo norte-americano. Nasceu em 1894 e faleceu em 1962. ►► Apoie pequenas editoras. Compre livros de autores independentes! https://loja.tomaaiumpoema.com.br/ _________________________________ E. E Cummings — Soneto Não será sempre assim... Quando não for, Quando teus lábios forem de outro; quando No rosto de outro o teu suspiro brando Soprar: quando em silêncio, ou no maior Delírio de palavras desvairando, Ao teu peito o estreitares com fervor; Quando, um dia, em frieza e desamor Tua afeição por mim se for trocando: Se tal acontecer, fala-me. Irei Procurá-lo, dizer-lhe num sorriso: “Goza a ventura de que já gozei.” Depois, desviando os olhos, de improviso, Longe, ah tão longe, um pássaro ouvirei Cantar no meu perdido paraíso. _________________________________ Use #tomaaiumpoema Siga @tomaaiumpoema Poema: Soneto Poeta: E. E Cummings Tradução: Manuel Bandeira Voz: Jéssica Iancoski https://tomaaiumpoema.com.br ATENÇÃO Somos um projeto social. Todo valor arrecadado é investido na literatura. FAÇA UM PIX DE QUALQUER VALOR CNPJ 33.066.546/0001-02 ou tomaaiumpoema@gmail.com Até mesmo um real ajuda a poesia a se manter viva! #poesia | #poemas | #podcast
Toma Aí um Poema: Podcast Poesias Declamadas | Literatura Lusófona
Edward Estlin Cummings, usualmente abreviado como e. e. cummings, em minúsculas, como o poeta assinava e publicava, foi um poeta, pintor, ensaísta e dramaturgo norte-americano. Nasceu em 1894 e faleceu em 1962. ►► Apoie pequenas editoras. Compre livros de autores independentes! https://loja.tomaaiumpoema.com.br/ _________________________________ E. E Cummings — Amo Você amo você (mais linda namorada) como a ninguém na terra inteira e eu amo-a bem mais que tudo que há no céu – há luz solar e canto à sua chegada embora o inverno espalhe em toda parte tanto silêncio e tanta escuridão que ninguém mais percebe outra estação grassar na vida (minha vida à parte) – e se o que se diz mundo por favor ou sorte ouvisse o canto (ou visse que a luz do meio-dia se avizinha quão mais feliz o coração caminha a perto de mais perto de você creria (namorada) só no amor _________________________________ Use #tomaaiumpoema Siga @tomaaiumpoema Poema: Amo Você Poeta: E. E Cummings Tradução: Gil Pinheiro Voz: Jéssica Iancoski https://tomaaiumpoema.com.br ATENÇÃO Somos um projeto social. Todo valor arrecadado é investido na literatura. FAÇA UM PIX DE QUALQUER VALOR CNPJ 33.066.546/0001-02 ou tomaaiumpoema@gmail.com Até mesmo um real ajuda a poesia a se manter viva! #poesia | #poemas | #podcast
Recorded by Academy of American Poets staff for Poem-a-Day, a series produced by the Academy of American Poets. Published on April 16, 2022. www.poets.org
Support Topic Lords on Patreon and get episodes a week early! (https://www.patreon.com/topiclords) Lords: * Cort * https://twitter.com/postgoodism * Fabian * https://twitter.com/rygorous Topics: * Black Square Day (inventing holidays and subsequently forgetting everything about them) * Nostalgia for old computers isn't because they were good, but because they sucked in ways that were simple to understand * The Dirtywave M8 tracker * Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, by Robert Frost * https://www.greatestpoems.com/stopping-by-woods-on-a-snowy-evening/ Microtopics: * The music videos of Max Cooper. * Styptic pencils. * Doing archaeology on your own Google calendar. * A stable time loop where your future self adds "Black Square Day" to your calendar. * Bringing a palindrome to the palindrome party. * Telling your visitors "it's Black Square Day; dress appropriately." * Celebrating the day you really burned the casserole. * Black Squaroling. * A way that your community organizes itself. * Getting in a pissing contest with your neighbors about whose house has the most black squares. * Booting up to a BASIC prompt so you need to write a short BASIC program to load the program you want to run (probably another BASIC program) * How the Commodore 64 BASIC determined where the line you were editing started and ended. * How Commodore 64 BASIC stored lines of code internally. * Survivorship bias among early microcomputer users. * Accepting a certain level of brokenness because fixing the problem will take an unbounded amount of time. * Machines that are simple enough for a single human to understand vs. those that are not. * What percentage of the Commodore 64's ROM is dedicated to implementing floating point math. * Varying levels of nostalgia for developing for the Playstation 3. * The room in London that the Playstation 2 had instead of a debugger. * The Tool PS2. * Fetishization of the mid-2010s tower PC * Second order nostalgia, for what 90s emulation of 80s games looked like. * Nostalgia for objectively terrible art style. * All the walls swimming all the time. * The 15 year nostalgia gap where nobody wants to remember the early 3D console games. * Making music on the toilet every day. * Trackers. * What Trackers are better at vs. traditional DAWs. * Music that ships with its own source code. * Technical limitations transforming into a unique aesthetic. * How to hide a second song in the same tracker module. * Doing a thing on the screen while music loops. * A portable device to edit spreadsheets that only has a trackball. * Looking at your song through a straw. * Loading a ProTracker module in FastTracker. * Trying to identify which tracker created the MOD you're reading by looking for file format bugs unique to that tracker. * Fixing bugs by hex editing an executable and that becomes the version everybody uses now. * What you call it when an archaeologist writes the file spec. * Unknown sources of dubious quality. * Lore of unknown provenance about how to play a mod file. * Watching dense notation scrolling by. * Loading tracker music into various players to see how their performances of the same material vary. * Trying to load up music you wrote fifteen years ago and needing to source old versions of all the plugins you used. * Watching the woods fill up with snow. * A very evocative one of those. * Whether sleep represents death in this poem or if it's just sleep this time. * Why write a poem. * Interviewing the author of a poem and then interviewing everyone who ever read the poem before writing the authoritative interpretation of that poem. * A joke that doesn't really seem like a joke at all. * Rating a poem on a five star scale and then deciding how many of those stars belong to each of the stanzas. * The Three Musketeers sequels that nobody has read. * Getting paid by the line and adding a character to your story that speaks only one word at a time. * How to write 300 books a year. * Taking out the but because there's nothing for it to but. * Ceramic clown statues.
i carry your heart with me(i carry it inmy heart)i am never without it(anywherei go you go,my dear;and whatever is doneby only me is your doing,my darling) i fearno fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i wantno world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)and it's you are whatever a moon has always meantand whatever a sun will always sing is youhere is the deepest secret nobody knows(here is the root of the root and the bud of the budand the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which growshigher than soul can hope or mind can hide)and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars aparti carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/thewanderingpaddy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
come listen to thisepisode (this episodeis for you)it's about the man who made beatniks sound good forfor all of 20 minutes(20 minutes is what it waS)ee cummings!
i like my body when it is with your body. It is so quite new a thing. Muscles better and nerves more. i like your body. i like what it does, i like its hows. i like to feel the spine of your body and its bones,and the trembling -firm-smooth ness and which i will again and again and again kiss, i like kissing this and that of you, i like, slowly stroking the,shocking fuzz of your electric furr,and what-is-it comes over parting flesh….And eyes big love-crumbs, and possibly i like the thrill of under me you so quite new me gusta mi cuerpo cuando está con tu cuerpo es una cosa tan pero tan nueva los músculos mejores y más nervios me gusta tu cuerpo. y lo que hace. sus cómos. la columna vertebral y me gusta sentir todos tus huesos y el temblor y la firme suavidad que yo habré una y otra y una vez, de besar, y me gusta besarte esto y aquello me gusta acariciar con lentitud y sentir la descarga de tu piel eléctrica y lo que sea que viene sobre la carne abierta… y ojos como grandes migas enamoradas y quizá hasta me guste el estremecimiento de vos debajo mío tan tan nueva
Love is the answer. Amy begins sharing a poem about love by E E Cummings; the poet known for turning his nose to the conventions of punctuation, structure and syntax. This leads to a deeper conversation about love and loss with guest Karla McOmber. Karla shares a series of stories about losing herself before finding true love, losing that love prematurely resulting in an addiction to feeling and needing love. It's an episode that goes to the root of the root while blooming with hope. Amy finds a way to relate and elevate that is Eternally Amy.
i like my body when it is with your body. It is so quite new a thing. Muscles better and nerves more. i like your body. i like what it does, i like its hows. i like to feel the spine of your body and its bones,and the trembling -firm-smooth ness and which i will again and again and again kiss, i like kissing this and that of you, i like, slowly stroking the,shocking fuzz of your electric furr,and what-is-it comes over parting flesh….And eyes big love-crumbs, and possibly i like the thrill of under me you so quite new Twitter:@camelliayang Website: https://www.camelliayang.com/ Join 1,000+ lifelong learner to receive a monthly newsletter from my Chiwi Journal.
An original poem written by Max and scored with music by onlymeith, shared through Creative Commons licensing.In the Poetry Soundtrack Project, tenth grade Poetics students immerse in the reading and writing of poetry while studying Creative Commons, remix culture, and the free-culture movement.To create this podcast, Credo students 'scored' original poetry with music and sound, exploring how layered media can create new emphasis and even alter meanings.The Poetry Soundtrack Project is a free-culture project in Dr. Gordon's tenth grade Poetics at Credo High School.
Today's episode ends on a question: who were your quarantine poets? The ones you read relentlessly as the pandemic stretched on and you had more time on your hands? For a lot of the sincerely bluejay community it looks like E. E. Cummings was a big one - if you want to be a part of this conversation please DM me or submit a voicemail to the Learning to Fly Podcast! For more information about the Come As You Are Open Mic check out these links! To purchase Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/come-as-you-are-open-mic-tickets-154635975365 To submit your work: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScRECR3X7qj8WIzpCi0FaXHK90mIw45KwC0XvIa8uOojbPgRA/viewform To share about the event: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VyLq2CHhKyZONC_kR98IQT81ci2hb3p-8Q0lcVDvbow/edit --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sincerelybluejaypoetry/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sincerelybluejaypoetry/support
Amanda Holmes reads E. E. Cummings’s poem “[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in].” Have a suggestion for a poem by a (dead) writer? Email us: podcast@theamericanscholar.org. If we select your entry, you’ll win a copy of a poetry collection edited by David Lehman.This episode was produced by Stephanie Bastek and features the song “Canvasback” by Chad Crouch. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
April 25, 2021 - "somewhere i have never travelled..." By E. E. Cummings, Read By Cristina Martin by The Desmond-Fish Public Library & The Highlands Current, hosted by Ryan Biracree
April 24, 2021 - "maggie And Milly And Molly And May" By E. E. Cummings, Read By Lucille Merry by The Desmond-Fish Public Library & The Highlands Current, hosted by Ryan Biracree
A poem by e.e. cummings to thank all of you listeners!
Good News: A designer has invented a combination skylight/water desalinator that can provide clean drinking water and cheap lighting to the residents of Chile’s shantytowns, Link HERE The Good Word: A lovely and important quote from e.e. cummings. Good To Know: Something fascinating about big statues around the world… Good News: More amazing progress in […]
e.e. cummings is explored and a listener's poem is read. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jacob-davies2/support
e.e. cummings is explored and a listener's poem is read. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jacob-davies2/support