American poet and painter who first attracted attention for his eccentric punctuation, but the commonly held belief that E.E. Cummings had his name legally changed to lowercase letters is erroneous – preferred to capitalize the initials of his name on book covers and in other material. Despite typographical eccentricity and devotion to the avant-garde, Cummings's themes are in many respect quite traditional. He often dealt with the antagonism between an individual and masses, but his style brought into his poems lightness and satirical tones. As an artist Cummings painted still-life pictures and landscapes to a professional level.
Humanity i love you because
when you're hard up you pawn your
intelligence to buy a drink.
(from 'Humanity i love you', 1925)
Edward Estlin Cummings was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His father was a Harvard teacher and later a Unitarian minister. Cummings was educated at Cambridge High and Latin School, and from 1911 to 1916 he attended Harvard, where he met John Dos Passos. Cummings became an aesthete, he began to dress unconventionally, and dedicated himself to painting and literature. He graduated in 1915 with a major in classics.
With Dos Passos and others he published in 1917 Eight Harvard Poets. During the last years of World War I, he drove an ambulance in France. Indiscreet comments in the letters of a friend led to Cummings's arrest and incarceration in a French concentration camp at La Ferté-Macé. Later, he found out he had been accused of treason, but the charges were never proved. This experience gave basis for Cummings's only novel, The Enormous Room (1922), in which he drew acidly funny sketches of the jailers and sympathetic portraits of prisoners. It was followed by collections of verse, Tulips and Chimneys (1923), which contrasted the evils of war to the 'sweet spontaneous earth' and XLI Poems (1925). In the 1920s and1930s Cummings divided his time between Paris, where he studied art, and New York, where he had a child with a friend's wife.
In Paris Cummings met the poets Ezra Pound, Hart Crane, and Archibald MacLeish. His friends also included the philosopher A.J. Ayer, who had a short affair with his wife, Marion Morehouse. She was twelve years Cummings's junior, a former Ziegfield showgirl and one of the leading models of the age. Cummings's friendship with Ayer lasted over twenty-five years. Once Cummings took Ayer to see the legendary stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. "You walk on tightropes as if they lay on the ground," Cummings wrote in a birthday poem to Ayer, "and always, bird eyed, notice more than we notice you notice".
Cummings supported himself by painting portraits and writing for Vanity Fair. Throughout the 1920s, he contributed to The Dial, perhaps America's greatest literary journal. & (1925) and is 5 (1925), inspired by Apollinaire, were written in the poet's new style. The books presented his radical experiments with punctuation and typography, and he used lower letter cases in his own name. In 1930 he Cummings published a sixty-three page volume with no title. Grammatical anarchism, a modern extension of romanticism, was a both result of the poet's hostility to mass society and his attempt to find a new way to write on old subjects: "Since feeling is first / who pays any attention / to the syntax of things / will never wholly kiss you". (from 'since feling is first', 1926) In the line "mOOn Over tOwns mOOn" (1935), which showed the movement of the full moon, the letters became pictorial signs.
Cummings believed that modern mass society was a threat to individuals. "Progress is a comfortable disease," Cummings once wrote. He was interersted in cubism, and jazz, which had not became mass entertainment, and contemporary slang, an unorthodox form of language. In his poems Cummings often expressed his rebellious attitude towards religion, politics, and conformity. "the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls / are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds / (also,with the church's protestant blessings / daughters,unscented shapeless spirited) they believe in Christ and Longfellow, both dead". (from 'the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls', 1923) But Cummings also celebrated the joy of life and the beauty of natural world, of which people have unluckily estranged themselves. "anyone lived in a pretty how town / (with up so floating many bells down) spring summer autumn winter / he sang his didn't he danced his did." (from 'anyone lived in a pretty how town', 1940)
In 1927 his play him was produced by the Provincetown Players in New York City. During these years he exhibited his paintings and drawings, but they failed to attract as much critical interest as his writings. Moreover, his ballet Tom, based on Uncle Tom's Cabin, was pronounced undancable, and fourteen publisher had politely turned down his new book, entitled 70 Poems. In 1931 Cummings travelled in the Soviet Union and recorded later his impressions in Eimi (1933), a version of Dante's descent into Hell, in which he saw the Russians as "undead." However, on leaving Russia he also translated Louis Aragon's Le Front Rouge, a poem influenced by Mayakovsky.
When Cummings did not find a publisher for 70 Poems, he got $300 from his mother and published the collection in 1935 under his own imprint, the Golden Eagle Press, but now entitle No Thanks.
------------NO
--------THANKS TO
T----------TO
-Farrar & Rinehart
-Simon & Schuster
--Coward–McCann
---Limited Editions
---Harcourt, Brace
----Random -House
---- Equinox Press
-----Smith & Haas
------Viking Press
-----------Knopf
-----------Dutton
----------Harper's
--------- Scribner's
-------Covici-Friede
(arranged in the form of a funeral urn in the dedication page of No Thanks)
From 1952 to 1953 Cummings was a professor at Harvard. His series of lectures were appeared under the title i: six nonlectures. In 1957 he received a special citation from the National Book Award Committee for Poems, 1923-1954, and in 1957 he won the Bollinger Prize. Cummings was married three times, first to Elaine Orr; the marriage ended in divorce in less than nine months. He then married Anne Minnerly Barton, they separated in 1932. The rest of his life Cummings shared with Marion Morehouse, a photographer and model, whom he met in 1933. They collaborated in 1962 in Marion Morehouse's photographic book, Adventures in Value. Cummings died of cerebral hemorrhage on September 3, 1962, in North Conway.
For further reading: The Magic-Maker by Charles Norman (1958); E.E. Cummings, the Art of His Poetry by N. Friedman (1960); E.E. Cummings and the Growth of a Writer by N. Friedman (1964); E.E. Cummings by B.A. Marks (1965); E.E. Cummings: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. by N. Friedman (1972); E.E. Cummings, a Remembrance of Miracles by B.K. Dumas (1974); Dreams in a Mirror by Richard S. Kennedy (1979); Critical Essays on E.E. Cummings, ed. by G.H. Rotella (1984)
Selected works:
Eight Harvard Poets, 1917 (with others)
The Enourmous Room, 1922
Tulips and Chimneys, 1923
&, 1925
XLI Poems, 1925
is 5, 1926
him, 1927 (play)
by e e cummings, 1930 [published without a title]
CIOPW, 1931
W, 1931
Eimi, 1933
no thanks, 1935
Tom, 1935 (a ballet from H.E.B. Stowe's novel Uncle Toms Cabin)
One Over Twenty, 1937
Collected Poems, 1938
New Poems, 1938
50 Poems, 1940
1 x 1, 1944
Anthropos: The Future of Art, 1945
Santa Claus, 1946
Eimi, 1948
XAIPE, 1950
i, six nonlectures, 1953
Poems 1923-1954, 1954
95 Poems, 1958
A Miscellany, 1958
Adventures in Value: Fifty Photographs by Marion Morehouse, 1962
73 Poems. 1964
Fairy Tales, 1965
E.E. Cummings, a Miscellany Revised, 1965
A Miscellany Revised, 1965
Complete poems, 1968
Three Plays and a Ballet, 1968
Selected Letters of e e cummings, 1969
Complete Poems: 1913-1962, 1972
Poems 1905-1962, 1973
Uncollected Poems (1910-1962), 1981
1981; Etcetera: the Unpublished Poems of e e cummings, 1983
His Whist and Other Poems for Children, 1983
Complete Poems 1904-1962, 1994
Humanity i love you because
when you're hard up you pawn your
intelligence to buy a drink.
(from 'Humanity i love you', 1925)
Edward Estlin Cummings was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His father was a Harvard teacher and later a Unitarian minister. Cummings was educated at Cambridge High and Latin School, and from 1911 to 1916 he attended Harvard, where he met John Dos Passos. Cummings became an aesthete, he began to dress unconventionally, and dedicated himself to painting and literature. He graduated in 1915 with a major in classics.
With Dos Passos and others he published in 1917 Eight Harvard Poets. During the last years of World War I, he drove an ambulance in France. Indiscreet comments in the letters of a friend led to Cummings's arrest and incarceration in a French concentration camp at La Ferté-Macé. Later, he found out he had been accused of treason, but the charges were never proved. This experience gave basis for Cummings's only novel, The Enormous Room (1922), in which he drew acidly funny sketches of the jailers and sympathetic portraits of prisoners. It was followed by collections of verse, Tulips and Chimneys (1923), which contrasted the evils of war to the 'sweet spontaneous earth' and XLI Poems (1925). In the 1920s and1930s Cummings divided his time between Paris, where he studied art, and New York, where he had a child with a friend's wife.
In Paris Cummings met the poets Ezra Pound, Hart Crane, and Archibald MacLeish. His friends also included the philosopher A.J. Ayer, who had a short affair with his wife, Marion Morehouse. She was twelve years Cummings's junior, a former Ziegfield showgirl and one of the leading models of the age. Cummings's friendship with Ayer lasted over twenty-five years. Once Cummings took Ayer to see the legendary stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. "You walk on tightropes as if they lay on the ground," Cummings wrote in a birthday poem to Ayer, "and always, bird eyed, notice more than we notice you notice".
Cummings supported himself by painting portraits and writing for Vanity Fair. Throughout the 1920s, he contributed to The Dial, perhaps America's greatest literary journal. & (1925) and is 5 (1925), inspired by Apollinaire, were written in the poet's new style. The books presented his radical experiments with punctuation and typography, and he used lower letter cases in his own name. In 1930 he Cummings published a sixty-three page volume with no title. Grammatical anarchism, a modern extension of romanticism, was a both result of the poet's hostility to mass society and his attempt to find a new way to write on old subjects: "Since feeling is first / who pays any attention / to the syntax of things / will never wholly kiss you". (from 'since feling is first', 1926) In the line "mOOn Over tOwns mOOn" (1935), which showed the movement of the full moon, the letters became pictorial signs.
Cummings believed that modern mass society was a threat to individuals. "Progress is a comfortable disease," Cummings once wrote. He was interersted in cubism, and jazz, which had not became mass entertainment, and contemporary slang, an unorthodox form of language. In his poems Cummings often expressed his rebellious attitude towards religion, politics, and conformity. "the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls / are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds / (also,with the church's protestant blessings / daughters,unscented shapeless spirited) they believe in Christ and Longfellow, both dead". (from 'the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls', 1923) But Cummings also celebrated the joy of life and the beauty of natural world, of which people have unluckily estranged themselves. "anyone lived in a pretty how town / (with up so floating many bells down) spring summer autumn winter / he sang his didn't he danced his did." (from 'anyone lived in a pretty how town', 1940)
In 1927 his play him was produced by the Provincetown Players in New York City. During these years he exhibited his paintings and drawings, but they failed to attract as much critical interest as his writings. Moreover, his ballet Tom, based on Uncle Tom's Cabin, was pronounced undancable, and fourteen publisher had politely turned down his new book, entitled 70 Poems. In 1931 Cummings travelled in the Soviet Union and recorded later his impressions in Eimi (1933), a version of Dante's descent into Hell, in which he saw the Russians as "undead." However, on leaving Russia he also translated Louis Aragon's Le Front Rouge, a poem influenced by Mayakovsky.
When Cummings did not find a publisher for 70 Poems, he got $300 from his mother and published the collection in 1935 under his own imprint, the Golden Eagle Press, but now entitle No Thanks.
------------NO
--------THANKS TO
T----------TO
-Farrar & Rinehart
-Simon & Schuster
--Coward–McCann
---Limited Editions
---Harcourt, Brace
----Random -House
---- Equinox Press
-----Smith & Haas
------Viking Press
-----------Knopf
-----------Dutton
----------Harper's
--------- Scribner's
-------Covici-Friede
(arranged in the form of a funeral urn in the dedication page of No Thanks)
From 1952 to 1953 Cummings was a professor at Harvard. His series of lectures were appeared under the title i: six nonlectures. In 1957 he received a special citation from the National Book Award Committee for Poems, 1923-1954, and in 1957 he won the Bollinger Prize. Cummings was married three times, first to Elaine Orr; the marriage ended in divorce in less than nine months. He then married Anne Minnerly Barton, they separated in 1932. The rest of his life Cummings shared with Marion Morehouse, a photographer and model, whom he met in 1933. They collaborated in 1962 in Marion Morehouse's photographic book, Adventures in Value. Cummings died of cerebral hemorrhage on September 3, 1962, in North Conway.
For further reading: The Magic-Maker by Charles Norman (1958); E.E. Cummings, the Art of His Poetry by N. Friedman (1960); E.E. Cummings and the Growth of a Writer by N. Friedman (1964); E.E. Cummings by B.A. Marks (1965); E.E. Cummings: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. by N. Friedman (1972); E.E. Cummings, a Remembrance of Miracles by B.K. Dumas (1974); Dreams in a Mirror by Richard S. Kennedy (1979); Critical Essays on E.E. Cummings, ed. by G.H. Rotella (1984)
Selected works:
Eight Harvard Poets, 1917 (with others)
The Enourmous Room, 1922
Tulips and Chimneys, 1923
&, 1925
XLI Poems, 1925
is 5, 1926
him, 1927 (play)
by e e cummings, 1930 [published without a title]
CIOPW, 1931
W, 1931
Eimi, 1933
no thanks, 1935
Tom, 1935 (a ballet from H.E.B. Stowe's novel Uncle Toms Cabin)
One Over Twenty, 1937
Collected Poems, 1938
New Poems, 1938
50 Poems, 1940
1 x 1, 1944
Anthropos: The Future of Art, 1945
Santa Claus, 1946
Eimi, 1948
XAIPE, 1950
i, six nonlectures, 1953
Poems 1923-1954, 1954
95 Poems, 1958
A Miscellany, 1958
Adventures in Value: Fifty Photographs by Marion Morehouse, 1962
73 Poems. 1964
Fairy Tales, 1965
E.E. Cummings, a Miscellany Revised, 1965
A Miscellany Revised, 1965
Complete poems, 1968
Three Plays and a Ballet, 1968
Selected Letters of e e cummings, 1969
Complete Poems: 1913-1962, 1972
Poems 1905-1962, 1973
Uncollected Poems (1910-1962), 1981
1981; Etcetera: the Unpublished Poems of e e cummings, 1983
His Whist and Other Poems for Children, 1983
Complete Poems 1904-1962, 1994
http://kirjasto.sci.fi/cummings.htm
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