William Carlos Williams
William Carlos Williams was an American-Puerto Rican poet and physician closely associated with modernism and imagism. His Spring and All (1923) was written in the wake of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land (1922). In his five-volume poem Paterson (1946–1958), he took Paterson, New Jersey as "my 'case' to work up. It called for a poetry such as I did not know, it was my duty to discover or make such a context on the 'thought.'" Some of his best-known poems, "This Is Just to Say" and "The Red Wheelbarrow", are reflections on the everyday. Other poems reflect the influence of the visual arts. He, in turn, influenced the visual arts; his poem "The Great Figure" inspired the painting I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold by Charles Demuth. Williams was awarded a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems (1962).
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📖 Books
Prentice Hall Literature--Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes--The American Experience
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1999
Prentice Hall Literature--Silver
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1991
Prentice Hall Literature--The American Experience
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1989
The Other Persuasion
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1977
The United States in Literature -- All My Sons Edition
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1973
The United States in Literature -- The Glass Menagerie Edition
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1973
Selected essays of William Carlos Williams
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1954
The United States in Literature [with three long stories] -- Seventh Edition
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1952
In the money
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1937
White mule
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1937
The knife of the times and other stories
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1932
A voyage to Pagany
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1928
Poems
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1909