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         Crane Hart:     more books (100)
  1. The Complete Poems of Hart Crane (Centennial Edition) by Hart Crane, 2001-05
  2. The Bridge (Paperback 1992) by Hart Crane, 1992-07-17
  3. Hart Crane: Complete Poems and Selected Letters (Library of America) by Hart Crane, 2006-09-21
  4. Hart Crane by Philip Horton, 1957-01-01
  5. Hart Crane: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Poets)
  6. White Buildings by Hart Crane, 2001-05
  7. Complete Poems by Hart Crane, 1984-09
  8. Hart Crane: A Biography by Clive Fisher, 2002-04-01
  9. Hart Crane: A Collection of Critical Essays (20th Century Views)
  10. The Broken Tower: The Life of Hart Crane by Paul L. Mariani, 2000-04
  11. Letters of Hart Crane and His Family. by Hart Crane, 1974-09
  12. Hart Crane: After His Lights (Modern & Contemporary Poetics) by Dr. Brian M. Reed Ph.D., 2006-04-28
  13. The poetry of Hart Crane;: A critical study by R. W. B Lewis, 1967
  14. O My Land, My Friends: The Selected Letters of Hart Crane

1. Hart Crane
Hart Crane (18991932) Photographed by Harry Crosby, Le Moulin, 1929. (Photographs, Caresse Crosby Papers, Southern Illinois U at Carbondale's Library Affairs Showcase) Used by permission What laughing chains the water wove and threw! W., The Broken Arc A Study of Hart Crane (1969). Crane, Hart, The Complete Poems and Selected Letters and Prose of Hart
http://www.lit.kobe-u.ac.jp/~hishika/crane.htm
My Poet Pages Poet Links
Hart Crane (1899-1932)
Photographed by Harry Crosby, Le Moulin, 1929.
Photographs
, Caresse Crosby Papers, Southern Illinois U at Carbondale's Library Affairs Showcase)
Used by permission What laughing chains the water wove and threw! I learned to catch the trout's moon whisper; I Drifted how many hours I never knew, But, watching, saw that fleet young crescent die,- And one star, swinging, take its place, alone, Cupped in the larches of the mountain pass - Until, immortally, it bled into the dawn. I left my sleek boat nibbling margin grass. . . [(from "The Dance") The Bridge
Biographical Notes
  • Born July 21, 1899, Ohio
  • Died Apr. 27, 1932 (suicidal jump from a steamer home from Mexico, where he had been on a Guggenheim Fellowship)
  • 2 volumes of poetry published in his lifetime: White Buildings (1926), and The Bridge (1930), winning the annual Poetry award in 1930
  • Influenced by: Walt Whitman, T. S. Eliot, and Ezra Pound (surprise?)
Mystic Fire Video might be of some help.
Bibliography
  • Bennett, M.F.

2. Hart Crane
Found 2 websites and 1 other resources for 'crane hart.'
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/crane/crane.htm
Hart Crane (1899-1932) Biographical Sketch On "Black Tambourine" On "Chaplinesque" On "Episode of Hands" ... External Links Compiled and Prepared by Edward Brunner Return to Modern American Poetry Home Return to Poets Index

3. Education Planet Literature,Authors And Poets,Alphabetical
0 Lesson Plans, 0 Books, 0 Software. 0 Maps, 0 Videos, Find 'crane hart'books. Home/Literature/Authors and Poets/Alphabetical Listing crane hart (2).
http://www.educationplanet.com/search/Literature/Authors_and_Poets/Alphabetical_

4. Oral History - Hart Crane
Hart Crane. Impressions of Hart Crane and the literary scene in Ohioand New York City during the 1920s. The project includes a WBAI
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/oral/guides/hart.html
Project List Oral History Research Office
Hart Crane
Impressions of Hart Crane and the literary scene in Ohio and New York City during the 1920s. The project includes a WBAI radio program transcript with reminiscences by friends.
Last update: 11/30/00

5. Wanadoo
Translate this page Hart Crane. Key West, une gerbe d’îles. bilingue, traduit de l’américainpar Pierre Mréjen et Jean-Marc Sens. alidades 1988, collection
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/alidades.librairie/Crane.htm
Attention
Cliquez-ici
pour en savoir plus. Retour Assistance Publicité

6. Samuel Greenberg And Hart Crane
Hart Crane's Emblems of Conduct is made of lines borrowed from Greenberg,a poet who died 1917 at age 23. Greenberg and Hart Crane.
http://www.logopoeia.com/greenberg/crane.html
Samuel Greenberg: American Poet
Home Bio Works Praise ... City Crane Emblems Reading Links E-mail
Greenberg and Hart Crane
Critical attention to Greenberg has its foundation in studies of Hart Crane's poetry. Crane's " Emblems of Conduct ", which his editors at first assumed to be a completely original work, is actually a mosaic of slightly-altered lines taken from six of Greenberg's poems. Crane never acknowledged Greenberg as the original author of the appropriated lines. The connection was not documented until both men were already dead. Most Crane scholars have maintained that Greenberg's effect on Crane's work may be seen only in "Emblems of Conduct" and in scattered lines in a few other poems. Within their analyses, however, there are sometimes suggestions that the influence may have been more extensive. John Unterecker, for example, in trying to downplay Greenberg's importance, ends up including him on a very selective list of influences: Greenberg's work entered Crane's mind in much the same way that Eliot's, Stevens's, Donne's, Whitman's and Poe's had.

7. Index Des Noms - CRANE Hart
Translate this page crane hart. Chronologie Repère, Ouvrage Presse, Colloque vers un autresite. 1998, Gérard TITUS-CARMEL. L'Elancement. Eloge de Hart CRANE.
http://art-contemporain.eu.org/base/noms/4016.html
CRANE Hart Chronologie Repère, Ouvrage
Presse, Colloque, Conférence, Débat
Exposition
Page contenant un lien vers un autre site 1998, Gérard TITUS-CARMEL. L'Elancement. Eloge de Hart CRANE

8. :: Norton Poets Online :: Hart Crane
Hart Crane, Printed with permission of the Trustees of Columbia University in theCity of New York. Hart Crane was born in 1899 in Garrettsville, Ohio.
http://www.nortonpoets.com/craneh.htm
Hart Crane Links Books
credit: Hart Crane Papers, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University. Printed with permission of the Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York. :: Hart Crane was born in 1899 in Garrettsville, Ohio. He began writing poetry as a teenager, and over strong opposition from his father eventually moved to New York City to establish himself as a poet. His work, including the book-length poem The Bridge quickly guaranteed him a place among the most significant American poets of the twentieth century; his homosexuality and his heavy drinking tinged his life with both glamor and tragedy. Crane committed suicide at the age of thirty-three.
More on Hart Crane
The Broken Tower
, a biography of Hart Crane by Paul Mariani
The Hart Crane WebBridge, including links to poems online, reference and research sources, and more

The Hart Crane page at the Academy of American Poets site
...
The Hart Crane Memorial at Case Western Reserve University

The Complete Poems of Hart Crane White Buildings (date) The Bridge (date) Home

9. Hart Crane
Hart Crane, Education on the Internet Hart Crane, the son of a drug storeowner, was born in Garretsville, Ohio in 1899. He worked in a
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAcraneH.htm
Hart Crane
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Spartacus
USA History British History Second World War ... Email
Hart Crane , the son of a drug store owner, was born in Garretsville, Ohio in 1899. He worked in a shipyard and in advertising before moving to New York City in 1923. His first collection of poems, White Buildings , was published in 1926. A second volume of poems, The Bridge , appeared in 1930. An alcoholic, Crane became involved with the wife of his friend, Malcolm Cowley . The couple went to Mexico but on their return Crane committed suicide by jumping from the ship Orizaba on 27th April 1932. spartacus@pavilion.co.uk

10. Who2 Profile: Hart Crane
HART CRANE • Poet. Name at birth Harold Hart Crane Bright Courage.Hart Crane joins actress Natalie Wood in our loop Death By Yacht.
http://www.who2.com/hartcrane.html
HART CRANE Poet Name at birth: Harold Hart Crane Bright, volatile, short-lived and hard-drinking, Crane was in some ways an archetype of the Roaring Twenties author. Crane is best known for The Bridge (1930), an epic vision of American life with the Brooklyn Bridge as a central image. Crane is often compared to Walt Whitman, both for his modern American sensibilities and for the homoerotic imagery some find in his work. In sheer style Crane also resembled T.S. Eliot , whom he admired. Crane committed suicide by leaping from the S.S. Orizaba in 1932.
Extra credit : Crane was no relation to Stephen Crane, author of The Red Badge of Courage
Hart Crane joins actress Natalie Wood in our loop Death By Yacht
Other 20th-century poets include Allen Ginsberg E.E. Cummings Robert Graves and Langston Hughes
Hart Crane Web Bridge

Fan page with links to his poems and some excellent essays Modern American Poetry
With a long meaty bio of Crane, plus analysis of his poems American Academy of Poets
A biography and brief poetical analysis
From the Heath Anthology of American Literature , with an emphasis on his sexuality Birth:
21 July 1899 Birthplace:
Garrettsville, Ohio

11. Classic Poet Hart (Harold) Crane
Hart Crane. HART (HAROLD) CRANE (1899 1932) Hart Crane drowned after jumping overboardfrom a steamer bringing him back to the US after a visit to Mexico.
http://www.poetrymagazine.com/archives/1998/may/crane.htm
Hart Crane
HART (HAROLD) CRANE
US poet whose long and mystical poem The Bridge was written in 1930. Using the Brooklyn Bridge as a symbol, he attempted to link man's present with his past, in an epic continuum. His better works show the influence of the French Symbolists, and T.S.Eliot, as well, differing though especially in Crane's emphasis on the positive and even the ecstatic. His master poem The Bridge follows in the tradition of Walt Whitman, in fifteen sections moving from New York to California, featuring historical figures, as well as technological and natural wonders. Hart Crane drowned after jumping overboard from a steamer bringing him back to the US after a visit to Mexico. His suicide followed a life in which he shuttled from one varied job to another and cut short the career of one of America's most promising young writers. From "The Bridge"
Poem: To Brooklyn Bridge How many dawns, chill from his rippling rest
The seagull's wings shall dip and pivot him,
Shedding white rings of tumult, building high

12. Hart Crane
Hart Crane (18991932) Hart crane hart Crane's work is perhaps bestknown for its laudatory images of industrial and urban life.
http://www.angelfire.com/az2/MysticCat/crane.html
Hart Crane
Hart Crane
Hart Crane's work is perhaps best known for its laudatory
images of industrial and urban life. "To Brooklyn
Bridge," which has been called his greatest poem,
is a glowing tribute to the grand bridge that
connects the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and
Brooklyn. When it was completed in 1883, the Brooklyn
Bridge was the longest suspension bridge
in the world. "To Brooklyn Bridge" is one
section of a longer work entitled The Bridge. To Brooklyn Bridge How many dawns, chill from his rippling rest The seagull's wings shall dip and pivot him, Shedding white rings of tumult, building high Over the chained bay waters Liberty— Then, with inviolate curve, forsake our eyes As apparitional as sails that cross Some page of figures to be filed away; —Till elevators drop us from our day ... I think of cinemas, panoramic sleights With multitudes bent toward some flashing scene Never disclosed, but hastened to again, Foretold to other eyes on the same screen; And Thee, across the harbor, silver-paced As though the sun took step of thee, yet left

13. Modernism Archive, May, 1998: Hart Crane
Hart Crane Sheri Mehew (smehew@aviron.com) Mon, 08 Jun 1998 1015190700 Next message Laurie Dokson Re Hart Crane ; Previous
http://www.liquidsquid.com/modernism/mod/0598/0038.html
Hart Crane Sheri Mehew ( smehew@aviron.com
Mon, 08 Jun 1998 10:15:19 -0700
Hello
I have been lurjing here for a while, and find that I need a little input.
I am taking Modern American Literature, and at this point we are discussing
Modernism. We have just finished reading Brooklyn Bridge. Our Prof. did
not spend much time discussing this, and I was wondering if anyone had any
helpful insight. I found this poem to be highly depressing, with many
references to suicide.
Thanks
Sheri Mehew

14. Art Crane
Hart Crane A Legacy of Names for the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgenderand queer communities. Click here for more info. The Hart Crane Web Bridge.
http://www.queertheory.com/histories/c/crane_art.htm

Histories Index

Paul Cadmus

John Cage

Pat Califia
...
Wally Cox

Art Crane
Quentin Crisp

Mart Crowley

Ines de la Cruz

Wilson Cruz
... Find A Subject
Hart Crane
Online Resources Texts: Art Crane Texts: Queer Histories Texts: Authors Index ... Suggest a Name Names Index: A B C D ... Scholars Index The Broken Tower: The Life of Hart Crane by Paul L. Mariani The Broken Tower does a fine job of recreating the passionate energy and vitality of Crane's life. Mariani weaves lines from Crane's letters and poems into his narrative throughout, and while he does not skimp in his accounts of the poet's alcoholism and promiscuous sex life with other men, he treats these matters simply as components of the poet's complex personality. O My Land, My Friends : The Selected Letters of Hart Crane by Hart Crane, Langdon Hammer (Editor), Brom Weber (Editor), Weber Brom Over 300 letters by one of America's greatest poets. Crane, whose career began with the Great War and ended with the Great Depression, died at the age of 32. But in that short time, he trafficked with many of the era's most significant figures: Sherwood Anderson, Malcolm Cowley, e.e. cummings, Marianne Moore, Eugene O'Neill, Katherine Anne Porter, Alfred Stieglitz, Gertrude Stein and Yvor Winters among them. A document as passionate, revealing, and ultimately as tragic as Crane's short life.

15. The Hart Crane WebBridge (Ed. Brad Lucas)
" . . . a gathering place for scholars and artists with a shared interest in the poetry and life Category Arts Literature Authors C crane, hart......The hart crane WebBridge All work is done on a strictly volunteer basis to providea forum for people interested in the life and poetry of hart crane.
http://unr.edu/homepage/brad/hart/crane.html
The Hart Crane WebBridge And to be. . . . Here by the River that is East
Here at the waters' edge the hands drop memory;
Shadowless in that abyss they unaccounting lie.
How far away the star has pooled the sea
Or shall the hands be drawn away, to die?
Kiss of agony Thou gatherest,
O Hand of Fire
gatherest Photograph reproduced with permission.
Special Collections, Kent State University Library.
Welcome to the Hart Crane WebBridge, a gathering place for scholars and artists with a shared interest in the poetry and life of Hart Crane. This site was created out of necessity and a desire to bring several disparate creations together. While there will be continual efforts to add materials to the site, all who visit here are encouraged to contribute. Please send scholarly papers, explications, links or other materials, and encouarge other interested parties to help build this bridge....
The Poetry Reference and Research Sources People, Vendors, and Miscellaneous
Essays, Papers, and Explications ... Selected Bibliography
This site is linked from the following locations: Modern American Poetry Site, Hart Crane

16. Hart Crane - The Academy Of American Poets
The Academy of American Poets presents a biography, photograph, and selected poems.
http://www.poets.org/lit/poet/hcranfst.htm
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Hart Crane Shakespeare , Marlowe, and Donne Allen Tate , Katherine Anne Porter, E. E. Cummings , and Jean Toomer , but his heavy drinking and chronic instability frustrated any attempts at lasting friendship. An admirer of T. S. Eliot , Crane combined the influences of European literature and traditional versification with a particularly American sensibility derived from Walt Whitman . His major work, the book-length poem, The Bridge , expresses in ecstatic terms a vision of the historical and spiritual significance of America. Like Eliot, Crane used the landscape of the modern, industrialized city to create a powerful new symbolic literature. Hart Crane committed suicide in 1932, at the age of thirty-three, by jumping from the deck of a steamship sailing back to New York from Mexico. This bio was last updated on Jun 12, 2001. A Selected Bibliography Poetry White Buildings
The Bridge
The Complete Poems and Selected Letters and Prose

Prose Letters (1952) Edited by B. Weber.

17. Hart Crane (1899-1932)
Readers interested in this modernist poet will be directed to several tribute sites, academic resources, and texts of his works. hart crane (18991932). General Resources. hart crane Page (Michael Eiichi Hishikawa)
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/c/crane_h20.htm
Hart Crane (1899-1932)

18. From Revolution To Reconstruction: Outlines: Outline Of American Literature: Mod
hart crane was a tormented young poet who committed suicide at age 33 by leaping into the sea.
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/LIT/hcrane.htm
FRtR Outlines American Literature Modernism and Experimentation ... Authors Hart Crane (1899-1932)
An Outline of American Literature:
by Kathryn VanSpanckeren
Modernism and Experimentation: Authors: Hart Crane (1899-1932)
Index Hart Crane was a tormented young poet who committed suicide at age 33 by leaping into the sea. He left striking poems, including an epic, The Bridge (1930), which was inspired by the Brooklyn Bridge, in which he ambitiously attempted to review the American cultural experience and recast it in affirmative terms. His luscious, overheated style works best in short poems such as "Voyages" (1923, 1926) and "At Melville's Tomb" (1926), whose ending is a suitable epitaph for Crane: monody shall not wake the mariner.
This fabulous shadow only the sea keeps. Index

19. Hart Crane - Selected Works
At the Poets' Corner website.
http://www.geocities.com/~spanoudi/poems/crane10.html

20. The Hart Crane WebBridge: "Melville's 'Crossing The Tropics': A Source For Crane
crane, hart. The Complete Poems and Selected Letters and Prose of hart crane.ed. Brom Weber. crane, hart. Complete Poems of hart crane. ed. Marc Simon.
http://unr.edu/homepage/brad/hart/poe.html
Intoxication of the Heart v. Elevation of the Soul: Notes on Hart Crane and Edgar Allan Poe Olivier Alexis One of Hart Crane's earliest literary influences was Edgar Allan Poe. By 1916 Crane had acquired a copy of Tales of Mystery and Imagination and was, probably also around this time, marking in it ''passages concerned with the nature of artistic composition'' (Unterecker, 32-33). But it seems likely that Crane's study of Poe's theory of poetics began even earlier. One of Crane's earliest surviving poems, ''The Moth That God Made Blind'' (Crane, Complete Poems, 167-169), dating from late 1915, appears to have been composed along lines suggested by ''The Poetic Principle'' (Poe, Poetical Works, 183-217), an essay in which Poe discusses ''the essentiality of what we call Poetry''. Poe argues that ''a poem deserves its title only inasmuch as it excites by elevating the soul'', and that he who would produce this excitement must possess an ''immortal instinct, [...] a sense of the Beautiful''. But, Poe goes on to warn, ''the mere repetition [...] of forms, sounds, and colours [...] is not poetry''. If this is all he has achieved, the aspiring poet ''has yet failed to prove his divine title'', for he has not quenched the ''thirst [that] belongs to the immortality of man''. According to Poe, this thirst is ''a consequence and an indication of [man's] perennial existence'': It is the desire of the moth for the star. It is no mere appreciation of the beauty before us, but a wild effort to reach the beauty above.

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