Skip to main content

Glenn Ward Dresbach Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS D81

Scope and Content Note

Correspondence, literary manuscripts, newspapers, magazines, clippings, scrapbooks, advertisements, announcements, certificates, commission, greeting cards, invitations, lists, memoranda, military orders, notes, notices, photographs, programs, remittance advices, reports and other documents; pertaining primarily to the literary career of the internationally celebrated Arkansas poet, but also to his personal, familial, business, social, civic, military and other affairs, and to Beverley Githens Dresbach. Included are the literary manuscripts and the first publication of many prize-winning poems which later appeared in the several volumes of Dresbach's collected works, in numerous anthologies of American and British poetry, and in textbooks of English literature used in college and high school courses throughout the nation.

Correspondents include: Brooks Atkinson, Marjorie Barrows, William Stanley Braithwaite, Van Wyck Brooks, Harvey Chalmers II, Richard Church, Katharine Cornell, Virginius Dabney, Clifton Fadiman, Orval Eugene Faubus, Herbert P. Finger, Edsel Ford, James William Fulbright, Claude Albert Fuller, Ethel Romig Fuller, Lillian Gish, Elizabeth Goudge, Bruce Gould, Louis McHenry Howe, Langston Hughes, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, Otto Kerner, Max Lerner, Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni, John Masefield, Harriet Monroe, Marianne Moore, Andrew Russell Pearson, Lily Peter, Vance Randolph, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Eleanor Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt Jr., Frank Alden Russell, Carl Sandburg, James William Trimble, Mark Van Doren and others.

Places with which material is associated include: Madison, Wisconsin; Panama Canal Zone; Knoxville and Norris, Tennessee; Washington, D.C.; and especially Tyrone, New Mexico; Lanark and Chicago, Illinois; and Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

Dates

  • 1907-1968

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

No Use Restrictions Apply.

No Interlibrary Loan.

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

Biographical Note

Glenn Ward Dresbach was born in Illinois on September 9, 1889 and was an only child. Glenn graduated from Lanark High School and attended a special three-year program at the University of Wisconsin from 1908-1911, where he served as editor of Wisconsin Magazine and won a national intercollegiate award for poetry. After graduating from college, Glenn joined the accounting career force where he worked with the Panama Railroad in the Canal Zone and Phelps-Dodge Corporation of Tyrone, New Mexico between 1911-1921. In 1917, Glenn joined the army and quickly progressed through the ranks, his promotion to major was approved before World War I ended. In 1921, Glenn married Mary Angela Boyle and started back into the career field of accountancy. In 1943, Mary Angela Boyle passed away and in 1944, Glenn remarried to Beverley Githens. Glenn published eleven books of poetry between 1916-1950 including: Selected Poems (1931) published by Henry Holt and Company, and The Collected Poems, 1914-1948, of Glenn Ward Dresbach (1949) published by Caxton Publishers. His poetry has appeared in more than 200 anthologies, textbooks, magazines, and journals, including Poetry, one of the most prestigious poetry journals in America. Glenn was also received over 100 awards and honors, including the George Sterling Memorial Prize, American Literary Association Prize, Poetry World Prize, Hamlin Garland Prize, and United States Poet Laureate International, and he and Beverley were honored with a gold medal distinguishing them as Outstanding Literary Couple by President Diosdado Macapagal of the Philippines in 1965. A few years later in 1968, Glenn Ward Dresbach passed away and is now buried in the Fayetteville National Cemetery in Washington County.

Extent

14 Linear Feet (21 boxes)

Arrangement of the Papers

Materials are arranged in ten series:

  1. Series 1. Correspondence (Box 1)
  2. Series 2. Literary (Boxes 2-3)
  3. Series 2. Subseries A. Manuscripts of Published Books (Items 1-369)
  4. Series 2. Subseries B. Manuscripts of Individual Poems (Items 370-1130)
  5. Series 3. Periodicals: Poems and Prose of Glenn Ward Dresbach published in periodicals (Boxes 15-19)
  6. Series 4. Clippings: Poems and Prose of Glenn Ward Dresbach published in periodicals (Boxes 4-5)
  7. Series 5. Periodicals: Articles about Glenn Ward Dresbach and his work (Box 5)
  8. Series 6. Clippings: Articles about Glenn Ward Dresbach and his work (Box 6)
  9. Series 6. Subseries A. Articles About Glenn Ward Dresbach, His Life, and Literary Career (Items 1-66)
  10. Series 6. Subseries B. Articles Containing Reviews of Glenn Ward Dresbach's Book (Items 67-207)
  11. Series 7. Scrapbooks (Boxes 7-8, 20-21)
  12. Series 8. Awards, Certificates, Honors (Box 9)
  13. Series 9. Miscellaneous (Boxes 10-13)
  14. Series 10. Beverley Githens by Type of Dresbach material document (Box 14)

Acquisition Information

The Glenn Ward Dresbach Papers were donated to the Special Collections Department by Beverley Githens Dresbach of Eureka Springs, Arkansas in July 1968.

Related Materials

Records relating to the Glenn Ward Dresbach Papers include:

Beverley Githens Dresbach Papers MC 134

Glenn Ward Dresbach Modern Poetry Collection Photoduplicates MS D81m

Processing Information

Processed by Samuel Sizer; completed in March 1970.

Index, by Item Number, to Correspondents in Series 1

(With partial index to significant correspondents in Series 7, 8, and 10)
Abbott, Charles David.
129
Abell, Harry B.
180
Adams, Emory S.
128, 130, 134
Adams, Mary.
263
Alba, Nanina.
185
Archer, William H.
105
Armstrong, A. Joseph.
9
Atkinson, Brooks.
(See Series 7, volume 12)
Babington, Margaret.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Barrows, Marjorie.
149, 152, 159 (see also Series 7, volume 14)
Beadle, George W.
(See Series 7, volume 10)
Beatty, Morgan.
(See Series 7, volume 12)
Bingham, Barry.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
Blackwell, Richard.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
Blocker, Hyacinth.
148
Boggs, Tom.
111
Bohr, Nettie R.
(See Series 7, volume 2)
Boie, Mildred.
90
Borman, Walter R.
110
Boyd, Sue Abbott.
403
Braithwaite, William Stanley.
14, 21
Brewton, John Edmund.
165
Briggs, Dorothy Bell.
161
Brooks, Dean.
80
Brooks, Van Wyck.
29
Brown, Warren Wilmer.
16
Browne, Anita.
107
Bryson, Harold C.
37
Campbell, Margaret T.
69, 106
Canning, Patrick S.
181, 183
Carmichael, Leonard.
140
Cavileer, Evelyn.
94
Chalmers, Harvey II.
187, 191 (see also Series 7, volumes 6, 9, 10, 11, 13, and Series 10, number 1)
Chapler, Elinor G.
60
Chatfield, Alice E.
124
Cherrington, Edith.
57, 63
Church, Richard.
179 (see also Series 7, volume 12 and Series 10, number 1)
Chute, Marchette.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
Clark, Welford.
109
Claytor, Roberto.
53
Cleworth, Thomas Stuart.
198, 202
Cooper, Alice Cecilia.
62
Cornell, Katharine.
(See Series 7, volume 6)
Cota, Madlyn Dudley.
27
Cousins, Margaret.
142
Dabney, Virginius.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
Daggett children.
400
Derleth, August.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Doyle, Thomas Lyndsey.
113
Dresback, J. E.
121
Dyer, Frank L.
31
Early, Stephen.
133
Edgar, G. A.
89
Edwards, Joyce J.
99, 100
Everett, Louella D.
103
Fadiman, Clifton.
(See Series 7, volume 6)
Faubus, Orval Eugene.
189
Ferguson, Ruth D.
146
Finger, Herbert P.
102, 114, 117 (see also Series 10, number 1)
Forbes-Boyd, Eric.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Ford, Edsel.
175, 176, 184, 186, 193, 405 (See also Series 7, volumes 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, and 13)
Fulbright, James William.
266 (See also Series 7, volume 14 and Series 10, number 1)
Fuller, Claude Albert.
264
Fuller, Ethel Romig.
145
Geck, L. A.
6
Geldert, Grace D. B.
10
Gibbs, Mailon.
43
Gilchrist, Marie.
39
Gillespie, John.
410
Gipson, James Herrick.
200
Gish, Lillian.
(See Series 7, volume 12)
Goethals, George Washington.
2, 12
Goudge, Elizabeth.
178, 199 (see also Series 7, volume 6)
Gould, Bruce.
127, 132
Greenup, E. M.
131
Griffith, E. V.
147
Grunewald ("Mrs. Grunewald").
(See Series 10, number 47)
Hamilton, Lynn.
141
Hamilton, Ozbert.
28
Hannaford, Adelaide.
409
Harper, Samuel A.
34, 168
Hayungs, Marie.
170
Held, Marian.
104, 122
Herzberg, Max J.
66, 67
Hickey, Daniel Whitehead.
22
Hoar, Constance Entwistle.
82
Holmes, Helen.
79
Hornbeck, Stanley K.
173
House, Lindsey.
26
Howe, Louis McHenry.
36
Hughes, Langston.
262
Hughes, Ruth P.
54
Hutchins, R. J.
3
Johnson, Lyndon Baines.
399
Jonsson, Martha.
192
Katz, A. Raymond.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Kean, Lillian Logan.
74, 75
Kee, Mary Lou.
123
Kennedy, Jacqueline Bouvier.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Kerner, Otto.
198, 201
Kidwell, Lorna Tallent.
65
Kleinmaier, George G.
88
Klun, Karl.
51
Kohler, Foy David.
(See Series 7, volume 14)
Leach, Lucile Pittman.
44
Leake, Harold H.
404
LeFebre, George.
164
Lepansky, Eva.
402
Lepansky, Fanny.
402
Lepowsky.
(See Lepansky)
Lerner, Max.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
Love, Adelaide.
30
Lufborrow, Sylvia Gardiner.
81, 116
Lyons, Eugene.
126
McLane, Eugene G.
(See Series 10, number 1)
McLean, Margaret Prendergast.
91
McCutchan, Ken.
166, 167
McNutt, Paul Vories.
139
Malone, Ted.
(See: Russell, Frank Alden)
Manfred, Ernest F.
158
Marinoni, Rosa Zagnoni.
156, 162, 177 (see also Series 7, volumes 6, 8, and 9)
Masefield, John.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Mason, Perry.
163
Mathes, Meta B.
59
May, Beulah.
408
Melton, Elvia Graham.
52
Moncrieff, Bryce A.
172
Monroe, Harriet.
(See Series 7, volumes 2 and 11. See also: MS/D81, Dresbach, Glenn Ward. Modern Poetry Collection …)
Montgomery, Francis L.
143
Moody, Minnie Hite.
182
Moore, Marianne.
(See Series 7, volumes 7 and 11 and Series 10, number 1)
Morgan, Gertie.
77
Morse, Irl.
46, 55, 71, 95
Moult, Thomas.
268 (See also Series 10, number 1)
Mullins, David Wiley.
265 (See also Series 10, number 1)
Nash, Dorothy.
153
Naylor, John L.
70
Nelson, Olive Hering.
154
Noyes, Alfred.
(See Series 7, volume 7)
O'Kane, Daniel W.
83
Ollre, Leona.
72
Patterson, Samuel W.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Pearson, Andrew Russell.
(See Series 7, volume 14)
Pearson, Leon.
(See Series 7, volume 9)
Percival, Cramer.
24
Peter, Lily.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Pierce, Clinton Albert.
188
Polachel, Goldie Avery.
145
Randolph, Vance.
(See Series 7, volume 8 and Series 10, number 1)
Raney, W. Llellyn.
78
Rasey, Jean.
119, 120
Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan.
(See Series 7, volume 6)
Reid, Robert Pittman.
86
Reynolds, Margaret.
42
Ritchie, Michael A.
190 (see also Series 10, number 1)
Rittenhouse, Jessie Belle.
13
Roberts, Lester.
68
Roosevelt, Eleanor.
(See Series 7, volume 8)
Roosevelt, Theodore Junior
56, 58
Russell, Frank Alden.
97, 406, 407 (see also Series 7, volume 6)
Samuel, Maurice.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Sandburg, Carl.
(See Series 7, volume 6)
Sawyer, E. M.
5
Schaar, Frances.
169
Scholossberger, Emily.
144
Serena ("Sister M. Serena").
171
Seymour, George Steele.
41, 61
Shapiro, Dorothy B.
40
Sherwin, Sterling.
155, 157
Showerman, Grant.
11
Sizer, F. P.
15
Small, Gertrude Louise.
64
Smith, Frank DeSales.
174
Sparks, William Sheppard.
73
Stahl, John M.
(See Series 7, volume 2)
Straub, Carlyle.
45, 48, 84, 85
Sughroe, Charles.
118
Sullivan, Aloysius Michael.
193, 197
Thatcher, Maurice Hudson.
101
Trent, Lucia.
194
Trimble, James William.
267 (see also Series 7, volumes 8, 11, and 12)
Turner, Marion H.
93
Udall, Stewart Lee.
(See Series 7, volume 10)
Ulio, James A.
136, 137, 138
Untermeyer, Jean Starr.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Urry, William.
(See Series 10, number 1)
Van Doren, Mark.
195 (see also Series 7, volume 7)
Ward, Marie Erwin.
160
Weissart, Charles A.
112
Westwood, Richard W.
92
Weymer, Harry K.
35
White, George H.
87
White, Helen Constance.
7, 196
Wikstrom, Paul.
76
Williams, B. Y.
98
Williamson, Margaret.
125
Williamson, William Martin.
150, 151
Wills, Charles E.
135
Wons, Tony.
49, 50
Wood, Mildred.
20
Wrinn, Mary J. J.
38
Yuzon, Amado M.
398 (see also Series 8, numbers 3 and 6)

Index to poems by title

(Series Number—Item Number)
Abandoned Farm In Spring
2-153, 370; 4-1
Abandoned Lane
2-371; 4-2
Abandoned Road
3-Apr
Above The Street
2-372
Adventurer, The
2-373; 4-4
…(Adventures In Homemaking)
4-362
Afraid Of The Stairs
2-374; 4-5
After The Rain
A-4
Against Order
2-375, 376; 3-106
All That We Defend
2-1089
Almanac, The
2-194, 377; 4-6
Along The Trail
2-378
Altar, The
2-379
America Is Singing
2-380; 3-8
Angel Food Cake
2-381; 3-58
Another Way
7-Apr
Answer, The
2-149, 297, 382
Answer In Gold
2-383; 3-139
Ant Battle
A-5
Ant Nest, The
2-384; 4-8
Antelopes
2-146, 385; 4-9
Apple Seeds
A-15
Apple Tree, The
2-386
Apples Over A Fence
2-10; 3-75; A-1
Archery Class
10-Apr
Archery Class- Girls' School
2-387, 388
Argument, The
2-389, 390; 3-40; 4-11
Armistice Day, 1943
2-391
Army Of Wild Flowers
2-392; 3-43
Ashes
2-80, 393
At An Orchard Gate
2-321, 394
August Noon
2-395
Autumn
2-396; 4-12
Autumn Colors
2-397
Autumn Garden
2-398; 4-13
Autumn In The Desert
2-399
Autumn Inventory
Mar-44
Autumn Midnight
2-103, 400
Autumn Rafters
2-401; 4-14
Autumn Rain
15-Apr
Autumn Road, An
2-368, 402; A-28
Autumn Song
2-4, 264, 403, 404, 405, 406; 3-16; 4-16; 6-139; A-1
Autumn Tavern
2-104, 407; 4-17, 18
Autumn Threnody
2-86, 269, 408
Autumn Waterfall
2-291, 409
Autumn Woods
2-205,410
Autumnal
2-77, 95, 266, 411, 412
Autumnal Equinox
2-217, 413; 4-19, 20
Back In These Meadows
2-191, 326, 414
Back To The Sea
2-415; 3-159; 4-21
Ballad Of The Cities
2-416, 417
Banking The Wall
22-Apr
Banner, The
23-Apr
Banners Of The Cedars
2-418
Barge Canal
2-419; 4-24
Barn Swallows
2-420, 421
Bat Chimney
2-422; 4-25
Beachcomber
Mar-37
Beauty Defends
2-79, 425; 3-145
Bee Hunter, The
2-161, 302, 423
Bee-Tree, The
2-424
Behind Its Fallen Walls
2-108, 426
Better Reason, A
2-427; 3-35
Bill Of Sale
2-428; 4-26
Birds In The Wind
3-122; 4-27, 28
Bird's Nest
2-429
Bittersweet
2-430
Bittersweet In A Flower Shop
2-431; 4-29
Black Butterfly
2-432
Black Colt, The
2-433; 4-30
Bloodroot In An Old Field
2-37, 434, 435
Bloom
2-288, 436
Bloom Of Butterflies
2-139, 437; 4-31
Blue Lagoon
Apr-32
Boast, The
2-178; 4-33
Boat, The
2-438
Bobsled Ride, The
2-184, 439; 4-34
Book-Ends, The
2-440
Boughs
2-294
Bouquet, The
4-35; A-4
Boy In A Coal Car
2-441; 4-36; A-23
Boys Tease A Wounded Hawk
4-37; A-9
Breaking The Colt
Apr-38
Breast Of Stone
2-188, 323, 442
Bridges
2-192, 443
Brief Inventory
3-144
Brief Wings
2-62, 444
Bright Blocks
2-445
Broken Gourd, The
2-446, 447
Broken Lock, The
Mar-70
Broken Music
2-367
Brook Under Snow
2-316, 448; 4-39
Buffalo Robe, The
3-170
Bullfrog Chorus
2-449; 3-61
Burning Leaves
Apr-40
Burro Bells In The Moonlight
A-7
Burros
2-143; 4-41
Butterflies On The Rock
14-Mar
Butterfly, The
Apr-42
Byroad, The
2-450; 4-43
Cactus Bloom
Apr-44
Caleb Andrew Williams, Banker
2-610
Calves In Pasture
2-451; 4-45
Captured Hawk, A
2-355, 452
Cardinal's Nest, The
2-453; 3-29
Caribbean Coast
2-454; 3-152
Carrier Pigeon
Apr-46
Castle, The
2-268; 3-174
Cattle In The Autumn Wood
2-455; 4-47
Caution
2-456; 3-85
Cave, The
2-190, 457, 458, 459, 460; 3-31; 4-48; A-27
Cavern Winds
2-339
Caverns
Apr-49
Cedar
2-461
Cedar On The Ledge
2-141; 4-51
Cedar River
2-365, 462
Cedars
Apr-52
Cellars
2-463
Century Of Progress Hymn
4-53, 54
Century Of Progress Hymn, 1933
2-464
Century Of Progress Hymn, 1933-
2-105, 271
Chain Of Flowers
2-81; 3-91; 4-55
Change Of Plans, A
2-465; 3-27
Changed Country
2-220, 466
Charity Basket
2-98, 467; 4-56, 57, 214
Charm Against Avarice
2-468
Chickadee Tracks
2-469; 3-183
Child and Meadowlark
Mar-54
Child and Minnow
2-470
Child's Question, A
2-64, 471
Chimney, The
2-229, 472
Chimney Swallows
Feb-44
Chinese Print, A
2-13; 4-58
Chips
2-473, 474; 4-59
Choice Of Eagles, The
2-279
Christmas Letter, A
2-23, 475
Christmas Tree, The
2-476; 4-60
Christophe's Citadel
2-216, 337, 477
Cider
4-61, 62
Circle, The
2-97, 236, 478; 4-63
Cities Of America, The
2-479; 3-7
City In The Desert, The
2-480
Cliff, The
2-481
Climbing Rose, The
2-482
Clipped Hedge, The
2-483
Clod, The
2-152, 300, 484
Cloud Islands
2-485
Clouds At Sunset
2-486; 4-64
Clump Of Bushes, The
2-487; 4-66
Coast
2-488
Coasting Hill
2-185, 489; 4-67
Cobwebs
2-490; 4-68
Cock-Crow
2-491
Cock Crows Near The Desert, A
2-366, 492
Cock Pheasant
3-167; A-3
Cockatoos
2-493; 4-69, 70
Cold Spell
Mar-92
Colt In The Wire
2-66; 3-125
Colts
2-47, 299, 494
Colts In Pasture
Apr-65
Communication
3-157
Compass, The
2-495; 4-71
Conquest
2-167, 304, 496
Continuity Of Courage, The
2-497, 498, 499
Contradiction
2-500
Contradictions
2-501; 4-72
Copperhead, The
Feb-76
Core, The
2-201, 502
Corn Huskers, The
2-504, 505; 4-73
Country Night Sounds
Apr-74
Courage
2-506, 507; 3-82
Covered Bridge
2-14; 3-133
Cowbells
2-227; 4-75
Cowbird, The
2-508, 509, 510; 4-76
Crocus
2-512; 3-137
Crocus, The
2-511
Crows
2-513
Crows In Spring
2-514; 4-77, 78
Crow's Nest, The
2-102, 252, 515
Culprit, The
2-516; 3-56
Cupped Hand, The
2-517
Currents
2-260
Curtain, The
2-518; 9-46
Cycles
2-218, 333, 519
Cyclone Cellar
Apr-79
Damask Rose
2-520
Damask Roses
3-146
Dandelions
2-521; 4-80
Danger
2-82, 522; 3-79
Dead Wood
Apr-81
Death Valley
2-129, 286, 523
Debt, The
2-524; 3-84
Deeper In The Interior
2-525; 3-5
Deeper Spring, A
2-245
Defeat
2-526
Delirium
2-527
Desert
2-131, 528, 529, 530, 763; 4-82, 214; A-21; 9-106
Desert, The
2-142, 295, 531, 532; 4-97
Desert Bird Bath, A
2-533
Desert Bird Bath, A
2-277
Desert Bruial
A-5
Desert Legend
2-352, 534
Desert Penitents
2-535
Desert Rain
2-536
Desert Shadow Songs
2-369, 537
Deserted Barn In Winter
2-232, 346, 538
Deserted Farms
4-83, 182
Deserted Grist Mill
2-539
Deserted Mill
2-112, 540; 4-84
Deserted Orchard
2-171, 309
Deserted Orchards
2-541
Design For The Frost
2-542; 4-85, 86, 87
Detour, The
2-543, 544; 4-88
Dewdrop
2-34; 3-53
Discarded Map
2-211; 4-89
Discoveries
Apr-90
Discovery
6-120
Dock Watchman
2-545
Dogwood
2-546
Dogwood Winter
15-Mar
Downy Things
2-547; 4-91
Dragons, The
2-548; 3-69
Drifted Spring
2-549
Dropped Stitch, The
2-225; 4-92, 93
Dry Season
2-158, 550; 4-94
Dump Heap
2-204, 331, 551; 4-95
Dusty Road
Apr-96
Early Morning In A Glade
2-121, 280, 552; 4-97; A-19
Early Morning In Spring
3-130
Early Pasture
2-553; 4-98
Earth Renewed; Three Poems Of Spring
4-381
Earth's Nearness
2-554; 3-136
Echo, The
2-555, 556; 4-99
Edge, The
20-Feb
Edge Of Spring, The
2-557; 4-100
Elusive Beauty
2-137, 558; 4-101
End, The
Feb-31
End Of Summer
2-559; 4-102
Experienced Traveler
4-103
Explorers
2-197; 4-104
Eyes Light Up, The
2-560; 4-105, 106
Faces
2-561
Fall Plowing
2-562, 563; 4-107
Falling Blossoms
2-564
Family Album
2-565; 4-108
Fancy Boat, The
2-566; 3-23
Fancy Work
2-567
Farm, The
2-568; 9-47
Farm Burial Ground
2-569; 4-109, 110
Father To His Dead Son, A
2-351, 570
Fawn's First Rain, A
2-571; 4-111
Fawn's First Snow, A
A-7
Feel Of Silk, The
2-244
Fence, The
A-17; 4-182
Field, The
2-18, 154, 572, 573, 574; 3-123; 4-112
Field Mice
2-575
Field Of Red Clover, A
4-113, 114
Fiesta
2-576
Fifty Sacks Of Corn
2-240
Fine Feathers
4-115
Fireflies
2-577
Firewood
4-116
First Day At School
2-579
First Loneliness
2-578; 3-74
First Parting
2-579, 580; 4-117
First Sled, The
2-581; 4-118
First Snowfall
4-119
First Spring In Town
2-582, 583; 4-120
First Sping Rain
Mar-46
First Tracking Snow
2-318, 584; 4-121
Flamingo
2-585; 3-117
Flax Flower
2-36, 586; 4-122, 123
Flight Of Herons -- Gila River
2-125, 289, 587; 4-241
Flock Of Chickadees
2-588; 4-124
Flood Control
3-166
Floodmark
2-282
Flower, The
2-589; 4-125
Flowering Locust
2-590, 591, 592
Flowers On The Ledge
2-593; 4-126
Fog
4-127, 200
Footprints In The Dew
2-594; 4-128
Footsteps In Snow
2-595; 4-130
For The New Year
2-596
Forest Of Ferns
2-597; 4-131
Forgotten Hands
2-598; 4-132
Foundation, The
3-87; 4-133
Fountain, The
2-40; 3-158
Four-Leaf Clover
4-134
Fox Tracks
2-601; 3-163
Free Samples
2-602; 4-135
Friends In Spring
2-196, 603; 4-136, 137, 138, 139
Fugitives
Sep-48
Gain
2-604, 605; 4-140
Game Country
2-127, 606; 4-141
Garden Left Alone
2-230, 607, 608; 4-142, 143; A-22
Garden Mood
2-166, 307, 609
Ghost Town Album
2-610
Ghost Towns
2-145; 3-110; 4-144
Ghostly Battles
A-24
Gifts
2-247
Girl And Orchard
3-131
Girl In The Spring Wind
2-611
Girl's Choir
2-612
Girls' Choir
2-612; 3-90
Giving
2-187, 613; 4-145
Glass Cane, The
2-614; 4-146
Gnawing Mouse, The
3-122
Golden Interval
2-615; 4-147
Good Sign, A
Mar-36
Good Turn, A
20-Mar
Gourd At The Spring, The
2-110, 616, 617, 618; 4-148
Gourds
2-619
Grandma
2-620; 3-142
Grapevine Swing
2-621; 3-134
Green Wood
2-622; 4-149
Ground Bird's Nest
2-43; 4-150
Grown Up
2-623; 3-28
Guardian Flower, The
4-151
Guardians, The
2-624
Guide-Line, The
4-152
Gulls
2-625; 4-153
Gypsy Song, A
2-239, 626
Gypsy Wagons
2-627
Harbor Dusk
2-628; 4-154
Harbor Lights
2-629,630; 4-155
Hard Place, A
3-177; 4-156
Hard Winter, A
2-631
Hardwood
4-157
Hardy Perennials
2-632
Harvest Song
4-158
Harvesters
2-633, 634, 635; 4-159
Haunted House
2-111, 636; 4-160
Haunted House, The
19-Feb
Haunted Mine, The
2-637
Haven, The
Mar-99
Hawk Circles
2-638
Hawk In The Twilight
2-255
Hay Makers
2-640; 4-164
Hay Wagon
2-641
Haystack In A Wintry Field
2-642, 643; 4-165
Hazy Weather
2-644
Heat Lightning
2-6; 4-166
Heirloom, The
2-645; 4-167
He Garden
2-646
Herb Garden
Mar-89
Herb Gardens
Feb-63
Herb Gatherer, The
2-164, 647; 4-168
Herd, The
2-648
High Pasture
2-649
High Pastures
4-169
Highest Apple, The
2-650
Hill Farm Auction
2-651; 4-170
Hill In Autumn, A
2-173, 310, 652
Hill Of Cedars
2-72, 653; 4-171, 172
Hill Pasture, The
2-25, 168, 306, 654
Hills
2-655
Hills In Twilight
2-656, 657, 658; 4-173
Hired Girl, The
2-659
Hollyhocks
2-660, 661; 3-68
Honey In The Wall
2-5, 662, 663; 3-67, 176; 4-174, 175; A-1
Horse Mint
3-180
Horses
4-176
House For The Birds, A
2-664; 4-177
House For The Wrens
2-665; 4-178
House In The Willows, The
2-666
Huckleberries
2-667; 3-93
Humming Bird, The
2-668
Hunting Dogs
4-179
Hurdy-Gurdy
A-1, 26
Hymn To The Desert
2-669
I Have Always Said I Would Go
A-2
I Have Been Picking Cherries
4-180
I Have Watched
4-181
I Heard A Gipsy's Violin
2-363, 670
I Heard A Thrush When Twilight Came
2-357, 671
I Made You A Song
2-672
I Shall Remember The Bugles
2-673
I Would Build Myself A House
2-353, 674
Ice Harvest (The Pool)
4-182
If Scars Are Worth The Keeping
A-24
In A First Reader
4-183
In An Oats Field
10-Mar
In An Old Orchard
2-174, 313, 675; 4-184
In The Cannon's Mouth
2-115, 676, 677; 4-185
In The Desert
2-678, 679; A-17
In The Firelight
2-680, 681; 4-186
Inheritance, The
2-682
Inscription On A Cabin Door
2-683
Inspiration
4-187
Interiors
2-684
Intimation To The Touch
2-202, 330, 685
Introduction
2-686, 688
Introduction (Child And Meadowlark)
2-688
Introduction Of A Child To A Meadowlark
2-686, 687
Intruder, The
2-689; 3-121
Invader, The
2-690; 4-188
Invocation
2-691
Island, The
3-128; 4-189; A-23
Isolation
2-692, 693
It Is Summer
Feb-39
It Was The Heart
2-50, 694, 695
Jewelled Idols
2-696; 3-106
Jim
2-697
Jose And Juan
2-135, 698
Journey
4-190
Journey's End
4-191
Jug, The
2-699; 3-179
Jungle, The
2-90, 238, 700
Jungle Night
2-338
Jungle River
4-192
Jungle Trail
2-701
Just Passing By
4-193
Keep A Place For Flowers
Mar-95
Key, The
2-702
Kind Of Apples, The
2-703
Kitten In The Snow
2-704; 4-194
Lake Of Gold
2-705
Landmark, The
2-706
Lantern, The
2-707, 708; 3-115
Lantern In The Storm
2-709; 4-195
Lark And The Guinea Hens, The
2-243
Lark Meadow
2-132, 276, 710
Lark's Feather
2-711, 712; 4-196
Larkspur
2-28, 713; 3-50
Lash, The
4-182
Last Corn Shock, The
2-17, 714; 3-102, 124; 6-102; A-1, 6, 10, 16, 25, 30
Last Cowboy, The
4-197
Last Grizzly, The
2-118, 273, 715, 716
Last Lark Of Summer
2-85, 265, 717; 3-104; 4-198, 214
Last Ship, The
4-199
Lasting Springs
2-718; 4-200
Late Comers
Feb-41
Late For Chores
2-719, 720; A-1, 14, 23
Late For School
4-201
Late From The Field
4-202
Late Plowing
2-193; 4-203, 204, 205
Late Winter Dusk
4-206
Leaf-Edge
2-46, 721
Leaf Patterns
2-722; 4-207
Leaves Agaisnt The Moon
3-169; 4-208
Ledge Flowers
2-119, 274, 723; 4-102
Left-Over Wood
2-75; 3-149; 4-209
Let There Be Kites Again
2-16, 724; 4-210; A-23
Let Winter Stay
2-725
Life Or Death
A-28
Lights, The
2-726; 3-156
Lines For Under A Ship Model
2-212, 335, 727
Listening
2-728
Little Bird
2-157, 301, 729
Little Owls, The
2-11; 4-212; A-1
Little Ships That Never Sail, The
4-213, 214; 6-116; 9-51
Little Spring, The
A-20
Little Spring Flows Clear Again, The
4-215, 216; A-2, 19, 20
Little Wolf, The
2-730
Little World, The
3-150
Locked Door, The
2-107, 731, 732, 733; 4-217
Locket, The
2-222; 4-155
Lone Drake
2-734
Lone Farmer
2-735
Loneliness
2-203; 4-218
Lonely Field, A
2-736, 737, 738, 739; 3-171
Lonely Flute
2-740
Lonely Road, A
2-248
Lost Boy
2-99, 741; 4-219
Lost Brook, The
2-181, 312, 742; 4-220
Lost Cities
2-93, 263, 743
Lost Heron
2-130, 287, 744
Lost Kite, The
4-221
Lost Place, The
2-745; 4-222
Lost Ship
9-Mar
Lost Spring, The
2-165, 298, 746
Lost Valley
2-144; 4-223; A-26
Lucifer
2-257, 747, 748, 749; 4-224
Magic Lariat
3-49, 168; A-3, 12
Mail Box
2-750; 3-127
Man Of Few Words
2-51, 751; 3-13
Manger On A Winter Night
4-225
Mangoes
2-752; 4-226, 227
Map, The
2-753; 3-72
Maple Sugar
4-228
March Wind
2-754
Marigolds
4-182
Marsh Creek
2-57, 755
Marsh Fire
2-170, 756, 757, 758
Marsh Grass
4-229
Mates
4-230
Meadow, The
2-759; 4-231
Meadow Land
Mar-45
Meadow Larks
2-760
Meek Man, A
2-761
Meeting By Moonlight
4-232
Memory
2-762, 763
Meteor
2-764; 3-73
Mexican Street Scene
2-765; 3-65
Miners Of Coal
4-233
Miniature, The
4-234
Mission Bell
2-147, 293, 766, 767; 4-97; A-9
Mock Orange
2-768
Moment Interlude
2-358
Moment Romantique
2-30, 769
Monkey House, The
2-770
Monument
2-771
Moonlight Harvest
2-305
Moonlight Sonata
3-162
More Scope
2-772
Morning
2-117, 253, 773
Mortgage
2-774
Moth Of Silence
2-91, 775; 4-235
Moths And Lights
2-776
Mountain Air (The Ozarks)
2-777
Mountain Background
2-189, 324, 778
Mountain Nocturne, A
2-779
Mountain Pastures
2-780; 4-236
Mountain Snow
2-128, 285, 781
Mountain Trail
2-124, 284, 782
Mountain Water
3-122
Mountainside Of Bloom, A
4-237
Mourning Doves
2-113, 783, 784, 785, 786
Murderer God Sentenced, The
2-241
My Christmas Tree
2-27, 787; 3-97, 113
My Fathers Tilled The Soil
3-101
My Neighbor's Garden
2-788
Nameplate For Our House
3-76; 4-238
Needle's Eye, The
A-17
Neighbors, The
4-239
Nest, The
2-789; 4-240, 241; 9-49
Nesting Place
2-790, 791, 792
Nests
2-160, 793, 794; 4-242
New Almanac
2-795
New Dress, The
2-796, 797
New Field, The
2-798; 3-107
New Neighbor, The
2-799
New Tenant
2-151, 800; 4-243
New Walls
2-246
Night
2-48, 801; 3-12
Night Hawk
2-255
Night Of Departures
2-92, 262, 802
Night Sound
4-244
1943
2-803
No Fire Left
2-177; 3-123
Nocturne
2-804; 3-17
Nocturne In June
2-808
Not To A Temple Dancer
2-806
Now
2-807; 3-119
Now In The Time Of Harvest
2-808; 4-245
O Dreamer Of Dreams
2-350, 809; 4-246
O Restless Spirit
2-810
Ode On The Completion Of The Panama Canal
2-811; 3-38
Of Certain Things
4-247
Old Barn In Winter
Feb-78
Old Barn Struck By Lightning, An
2-163, 812, 813, 814, 815
Old Barns In The Rain
A-1, 23
Old Bridge
2-169, 816; 4-248
Old Bridge In Snow
2-319, 817; 4-249, 250
Old Bridge In The Woodland
2-818
Old Bridges
2-819; 3-86
Old Gate, An
2-820; 3-143
Old Iron
2-821
Old Man At A Party
2-822
Old Man's Garden, An
2-150, 823; 4-251
Old Mansions
2-340
Old Mill, An
2-824, 825
Old Pasture
4-252, 253
Old Pasture Corners
4-254
Old Road In The Hills
2-176, 826; 4-255
Old Sailor, The
A-29; 4-256
Old Sled, An
2-827
Old Sportsman
3-181
Old Wedgewood Plates
22-Feb
Old Wood In Spring, An
2-349, 828
On Being Asked What Will Happen To Poetry In The Next Ten Years
2-829, 830; 4-257
On Being Asked Where Will The New Poets Come From
2-15, 831
On Building A Wood Fire
26-Feb
On Flushing A Cock Pheasant
2-54, 832; 3-24, 167
On Planting Hollyhocks
2-660
One Face From The Crowd
2-833
Orchard
2-162, 303, 834; 4-258
Orchard Interval
2-207, 332, 835
Orchard Spring
4-381
Out Of That Fury
2-836
Palace Of Dreams, The
4-259
Parallel
2-315, 837
Parlor Furniture
2-209, 838; 4-260
Pasture Brook
2-839
Pasture Spring, The
4-261
Patrins Of Summer
4-262
Pattern Of Swallows
2-840
Pearl, The
2-841
Peddler, The
2-842
Peddler Beats His Horse, A
2-67; 3-182
Peddlers Of Paris - 1943-, The
Feb-69
Percherons
2-843; 3-116
Permanence
Feb-35
Persimmons
2-844; 3-147
Pheasant, The
4-263
Picking Cherries
2-845
Piece Of String, A
2-846; 4-264
Pigeons
2-847, 848; 3-60
Pioneer Blood
4-200
Place For Flowers, A
2-849
Place In The Sun, A
2-249
Places I Will Take You
3-108; 2-1131
Plovers
2-850
Plowmen
4-265
Pocket Knife, The
2-851
Pollen
2-852; 3-175
Pond Lillies
2-853, 854
Pool, The
4-182
Pool In The Aspens, The
4-266
Possession
2-327, 855
Postscript, The
2-856, 857; 4-267
Prairie Fire
2-858
Price Of Corn, The
2-242
Processional
2-859; 4-268
Prospect Sign
2-860
Protective Coloring
4-241
Quack Medicines
2-861, 862
Quail, The
2-4, 863; 3-158
Quail In The Hay
4-269
Quail Procession
2-320
Quail's Nest, The
2-364, 864
Quality Of Courage, The
2-865; 3-22
Quest
2-261
Rabbits In The Hutch, The
2-250
Rag Doll, The
2-866
Rag Rug, The
2-867; 3-18
Rain After Drouth
2-159; 4-270
Raindrop
2-60, 868
Range Calves
2-869; 3-165
Range Cattle
2-140, 763, 870, 871; 3-63; 4-271; A-23
Rats
2-872; 3-173
Realization
2-873
Reasonable Doubt, A
2-874; 3-34
Rebels, The
2-341
Reckoning
2-875
Red Ear, The
A-15
Red Geranium, The
2-876; 4-272
Redbuds, The
2-877; 3-138
Refuge
2-878; 4-241, 273
Remember, O Cities
2-879
Rememberance Of A Woodland
4-274
Renewed Search
2-325
Requiem
3-126; A-5
Retrospect
3-169
Revealed (On Watching An Oil Painting Being Cleaned)
2-114, 880, 881, 882, 883; 4-275
River Change
2-884
Riveter, The
2-885, 886
Road Warnings
2-887
Rock Ledges
2-888
Root-Bound
2-889; 4-276
Root Cellar
2-890, 891; 3-51
Roots
2-133, 892; 4-277
Roots Of Pain, The
2-893; 3-107
Rough Hands
2-894; 4-278
Ruins
2-Mar
Ruts In The Thaw
2-354, 895
Saboteurs
2-896
Sacked City--Old Panama, The
2-215, 334, 897
Sailing Ships In Storm
2-898, 899, 900
Sailor's House
2-901
Sales, The
2-902
Salt For The Cattle
4-279
Salt Lick
2-210, 342, 903
Salute To The Pioneers
3-100, 101, 111; 4-280
Salute To The Pioneers (Carroll County, 1839-1939)
9-101
Salvation
4-281
Sanctuary
2-904; 4-282
Sanctuary, The
2-906, 907, 908
Sand Box
2-909
Scarecrow
2-910; 3-33
Scarecrow In Autumn
4-283
Sea Chest, The
2-911, 912
Sea-Rain
2-913, 914
Sea Shell, The
2-199, 915; 4-284
Sea Shell In Mountain Brook
2-916
Second Look
2-917
Secret Hoard, The
2-206; 4-285
Sent For Water
2-24, 918, 919, 920; 4-286; A-26
Sentinels
2-921; 4-287
September Water-Color
9-120
September Watercolor
2-922
Serpent Skin, The
2-923
Shadows On Leaves
3-106
Shadows On The Grass
2-924
Shadowy Hand
2-925; 3-88
Shangri-La
2-926; 927
Shattered Lute, The
2-928
Shell, The
2-929, 930
Shells
2-931
Shining Armor
2-932; 4-288
Ship Comes In, A
2-213, 933
Ship's Bell
2-256, 934; A-11
Ship's Lantern
2-935; 3-114
Ships That Never Sail
Mar-96
Shower At Harvest Time
2-936, 937; 4-289
Shower Of Dew
2-56, 938
Sickle Moon
3-1; 4-290
Siesta
4-291
Sign Boards, The
2-939
Signboards, The
Mar-81
Silence
4-292, 293
Silent Trumpets
2-940
Silouettes
2-941; 4-294
Since Youth Is All For Gladness
2-360, 942; A-18, 28
Sink Hole, The
4-83, 182, 295
Sky Pages
2-208, 343, 943
Slow Defeat
2-182, 944, 945, 946; 3-123
Slow Quest
2-172, 261, 947
Small Boy In A Garden
2-948
Smell Of Water, The
2-136, 949, 950
Snow Architect
2-951; 4-296
Snow In Spring
2-219, 952; 4-297
Snow Of The Roofs
2-953, 954; 4-298
Snowbird
3-122
Snowed In
2-955
Snowflake On Her Cheek
4-299
Snowy Adventure
4-300
Snowy Bough
2-956
So Brief The Time
2-957; 3-71
So Soon The Fruit
2-74, 958; 4-301
Softly The Night
2-959; 4-302
Sombrero
2-960
Son Of The Middle Border…
3-160
Song
2-42, 53, 71, 126, 278, 362, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975; 3-3, 63, 64, 112, 122; 4-182, 303, 304, 305; A-9
Song For This Spring
2-976; 3-83
Song In Autumn
4-306
Song In The Wind
4-307
Songs Of The Plains
A-19
Songs Out-of-Doors
Apr-97
Songs While The Fruit Is Growing
2-977
Sonnet
2-100, 267, 978
Sower Who Reaped The Sea, The
2-979
Sparrows
2-980
Sparrows, The
2-981
Sparrows' Choice, The
2-982; 3-19
Spring
2-983; 4-308
Spring-And-War
2-55, 984; 3-77
Spring Comes To Desert Mountains
2-985; 4-309
Spring From Granite
2-122, 281, 986
Spring House, The
2-987; 4-310
Spring Interval
4-311
Spring Morning
2-21, 988; 4-312, 313, 314
Spring Plowing
2-989; 4-315, 316
Spring Revived, A
2-990; 4-317
Squirrel Nests
2-991; 3-26
Squirrels
4-318
Stag Comes To Drink, A
2-993
Star, The
4-319
Star-Face
2-251
Star Map
2-994
Stars In Water
2-9; 4-320
Stir Of Wings
2-49, 763, 995
Stone Wall
2-996; 3-124
Storm Come To The Desert
2-997
Storm- Flowers
2-359
Storm In The Night
2-998
Storm-Rain Songs
2-999
Strange Harvest
2-344, 1000
Strategy, The
2-1001
Strays
2-120, 275, 1002, 1003; 4-321
Strong Men
2-234, 1004; 3-62
Summer Memory, A
2-1005; 4-322
Summer Night
4-323
Summer Twilight
2-200, 328, 1006
Sundial
2-1007; 4-324
Sunset Argosy
2-1008
Survival
2-1009; 4-325, 326
Swallows Have Returned, The
4-327
Swamp Water
3-151
Swift Water
2-1010
Talk Of Cedars, The
2-134, 292, 1011
Tamed Drake, The
4-328, 329, 330
Tapestry, The
2-96, 235, 1012, 1013
Targets
2-1014
Tent, The
2-1015; 4-331
Tested Things
2-1016; 3-48
These Fragrances
4-332
These Moments
2-70, 1017
Their Autumn Night
2-1018, 1019
Three Poems
4-200
Threshing Day
2-1020; 4-333
Through The Blowing Leaves
A-11
Thunder In The Desert
2-1021
Thunder In The Jungle
2-1022; 3-128
Thunder Shower
4-334
Tide, The
2-1023
Time
2-1024, 1025
Tired Hands
2-68, 1026
To A Caged Hawk
4-335
To A Child Trying To Catch A Minnow
2-470
To A Cottonwood
4-336; A-13
To A Lantern
2-1027
To A Late Robin
2-1028; 3-140
To A Quail Calling In The Dusk
2-311; 3-105
To A Rabbit's Foot
2-1029,1030
To A Robin In Late Summer
Mar-63
To A Scarlet Tanager
A-18
To A Ship's Lantern
2-2031; 4-337
To A Thrush In LaSalle Street
2-89, 259, 1032
To A Young Sophisticate
Mar-42
To My Horse
2-329; 4-338
To One Reported Missing
2-83, 1033
To Quail Under Snow Crust
2-231, 347, 1034
To The Statuette Of A Boy…
2-1035
To Thirst
2-1036
To Tried Steel
3-161
Tollhouse, The
2-223, 1037; 4-339
Too Much Freedom
2-1038, 1039; 3-21
Touch, The
2-1040; 4-340
Touch Of Magic
4-341
Toy Balloons
2-1041, 1042
Toys
2-1043
Tracks In The Snow
3-183
Train Whistle-Spring Night
2-1044; 4-342
Tramps And Scarecrow
2-1045; 3-118
Tramp Steamer
2-1046; 3-80; 4-343, 344, 345, 346
Transients
2-109, 1047; 4-273
Trapped Waters
2-59, 1048
Travel Notes
2-106, 1049; 4-347
Travelers
2-7; 4-348
Traveler's Return
Feb-52
Traveling At Home
2-1051; 3-141
Travellers
A-1
Tree, The
2-195; 4-349
Tree Remembered, The
2-1051, 1052; 3-178
Tree Rings
Mar-57
Tree-Rings
2-1053
Tree Sounds
2-38; 4-350
Trees By Water
2-1054
Trees In Storm
2-314, 1055
Tropic Port
2-214, 336, 1056
Tropic Tapestry
4-351
Tropic Town
2-1057; 4-352
Trout, The
2-1058
Tugboat Captain
2-1059
Tumble Weeds
2-290
Turning Home
2-175, 226, 345, 1061, 1062; 4-353
Two Pairs Of Gloves
2-1063
Two Towns, The
2-33, 180, 317, 1064
Vagabond At The Gates, A
2-1065, 1066; 3-154, 155, 172; A-8
Valentine, The
4-354
Village Bus Depot
2-1067; 3-109
Village Of The Doves, The
2-356, 1068
Vine, The
2-1069, 1070
Vine At The Edge Of An Abyss
2-123
Vine At The Edge Of The Abyss
2-283, 1071
Visit, The
2-224; 9-50
Visitors
2-1072; 4-355
Voice, The
2-221, 1073; 4-356
Voice Through The Thunder
2-1074; 3-140
Voyages
4-357
Wagon In The Lane
2-1075; 4-358
Wagons
2-179, 1076; 3-94, 101
Wagons Come At Sunset, The
2-1077; 4-359
Wall, The
4-360
Wander's Drinking Song, A
4-361
Wash Day In The Tropics
4-362
Watchers, The
2-1078, 1079
Watching By A Sick Bed
2-58, 1080; 3-4
Water Over A Cliff
Mar-55
Watercress
2-1081; 4-363
Waterfall
2-291, 241
Water-Finder, The
A-17
Watering The Stock
2-1082; 3-30
Water-wheel
2-1083; 3-164
Wave Of Roses, A
A-4
We Burn The Leaves- 1943-
Feb-73
We Do Not Say Farewell
12-Feb
Wedge Of Wings, The
2-1085; 4-364
What If All Beauty Stays?
2-1086
What Is In Water
Mar-98
What Is In Water?
2-1087, 1088
What We Defend
2-1089; 3-6, 78; 4-365
What Would You Do?
2-1090
When The Cows Come Home
4-366
Where Dreams Have Been
2-29; 4-367
Where Gypsy Wagons Stood
4-368
Where Summer Passed
4-369
White Ballet
2-3; 3-52
White Birches
2-1091
White Cane, The
2-1092; 4-370; A-26
White Fences
2-1093
White Heron, The
3-129
White Owl
2-361, 1094
White Processionals
2-1095; 4-371
White Water
2-101, 308, 1096
Who Has Not Loved
2-1097
Wild Crab Apples
Mar-47
Wild Ducks On the Pond
2-1098
Wild Geese
2-1099
Wild Geese Again
3-41; 4-381
Wild Goose, The
2-1100; 3-120
Wild Goose Feather
2-1101; 4-372
Wild Honey
3-11; 4-373, 374
Wild Rose
4-375, 376
Wild Roses, The
2-8, 1102; 3-135
Wild Stallion
2-1103, 1104; 4-377
Wild Strawberries
2-155; 4-378
Willow Dam, A
4-379
Willow Dam, The
4-380
Willow Whistle
2-258; 4-381
Willow Whistle, A
2-156, 740, 1105; 4-382, 383
Wind In The Corn
2-1106; 4-384
Windbreak, The
2-198, 1107
Windmill, The
2-1108; 3-32
Windows, The
2-1109; 4-385
Winds, Blow No Longer
2-1110
Wings
2-1111, 1112; 4-386
Wings Into Sunset
2-94, 720, 1113; 4-97
Wings Of Dusk
3-103
Winter Chores
2-1114; 4-387
Winter Morning
2-183, 1115, 1116
Winter Music
4-388
Winter Signs
3-148
Winter Song
2-1117
Winter Twilight
2-1118
Winter Wheat
2-61; 4-389
Witch Grass
2-1119
Witches' Song
4-390
Wolf, The
2-1120
Woman At Harvest
2-1121
Wood
2-1122; 3-25
Wood Lot, The
4-391
Wood Thrush
Feb-65
Woodland Bridge
2-1123; 4-392, 393
Woodland In Winter
2-228, 1124; 4-394, 395
Woodland Spring, A
2-1125; 4-396
Woodpile
2-1126; 3-59
Words
2-32, 695, 1127; 3-39
Workhorses On Sunday
2-1128
Wren's House
2-88, 237, 1129

Index to poems by first line

(Series Number—Item Number)
A bee has groped from the heart of a flower,
4-303
A broken bough on the tree--
2-21, 988
A careless wind had sowed the seeds
2-593; 4-126
A child is playing in the sand…
2-909
A cock crows near the desert
2-366
A cock crows near the desert;
2-492
A fawn sleeps in the glade.
2-121, 280, 552; 4-97; A-19
A feathery touch, cold from the upper air,
4-299
A fire that smolders in his brain;
2-491
A gloom has settled on the earth before,
2-497, 498, 499
A high wall is between our places--
4-360
A hurry of wings past the sunset's gold,
2-961
A jade vase in a quiet room
4-182
A little wind will loosen now
2-4, 264, 403, 404, 405; 3-16; 4-16; 6-139; A-1
A lofty man had found his rest at last
2-771
A lonely boy, across the upland pasture
2-239, 626
A lonely field soon gets in trouble.
2-171, 736, 737, 738, 739
A path, grown over, led into the field.
2-574
A piece of string
2-846; 4-264
A pile of hard wood that we have to chop
2-1126; 3-59
A poorhouse is just that and little more--
2-247
A potent dust drifts out on winds, unseen
2-852; 3-175
A rumble in the dark throat of the hills
2-1022; 3-128
A ship of cloud fades down the west
2-358
A shower drove him from his garden ground
2-664; 4-177
A stag comes to drink at a spring that is flowing
2-993
A tiny hollow in rust-colored rock
2-277, 533
A wash day was a serious matter--
4-362
A wave of roses broke against the wall
A-4
A white beach, where the lazy breakers curl,
2-1057; 4-352
A white cloud drifts to meet a sail at sea
A-29; 4-256
A wide smooth highway passes it, unheeding
2-223, 1037; 4-339
About deserted farms there is a sense
4-83, 182
About us in the night we hear
3-169; 4-208
Above the blue door is a scroll
2-104, 407; 4-17, 18
Above the map a reaching hand was spread
2-753
Above the map a reaching hand was spread,
Mar-72
Above the pale cracked lips of sand
2-130, 287, 744
Above the patchwork of the snow
2-511
Above you, through steel-tinted slits of eyes,
2-231, 347, 1034
Across from the hillside where we stood
2-904, 905; 4-282
Across the massive ruins of the walls
2-921; 4-287
Across the melting snows
4-127
After lightning's blinding flash
2-998
After the rain in the upland pastures
2-962; A-4
Again great prows are gliding through a sea
2-486; 4-64
Again the clouds are sailing ships
4-312, 313, 314
Against the horizon I have seen their heads
2-140, 763, 870, 871; 3-63; 4-271; A-23
Against the moon, the frosted tower
2-103, 400
Ages ago the families huddled
2-48, 801; 3-12
All day his courage faced the growing odds;
Mar-99
All night the pounding blizzard shaped
2-184, 439; 4-34
All that he struggled for he loved,
4-281
All working days of each week, they had plodded
2-1128
Along the hillside where the wagon wheels
2-895, 354
Along this rippled grass birds dip their breasts
4-229
Always, when they had come before,
2-107, 732, 733, 731; 4-217
American is singing--
8-Mar
America is singing--not the catchtunes
2-380
Among discarded things, the shacks had grown
2-204, 331, 551; 4-95
An empty wagon makes the loudest sound--
2-179, 1076; 6-94, 101
Another plowman turns the furrows
4-315
Another wonder of the world is made.
2-811
Another wonder of the world is made!
Mar-38
Are these the fields where the hail
2-139, 383
Around me in the upland pasture
4-307
Around us silence of the night,
2-58, 1080; 3-4
As if the world must hear in silence
2-940
Ask all men what we defend and each may make
2-1089
Ask all men what we defend, and each may make
3-6, 78; 4-365
Ask one who knowns and he will say
2-75; 3-149; 4-209
At dawn, five petals, the color
2-36; 4-122
At first, I could not tell
15-Apr
At first I thought it was the sound
2-40; 3-158
At first, it seemed incredible--
2-706
At first the boy had meant
2-429
At first the thunder sounded
2-1021
"At last I have it" whispered Kate, "at last"
2-244
At many fires I warmed
2-1117
At twilight in that land of weathered hills
2-250
At work on inland farms he must have dreamed
3-96; 6-116
At work on inland farms he must have dreamed,
4-213, 214; 9-51
Back and forth against the sky
2-562, 563; 4-107
Back in these meadows not a thing is changed;
2-191, 326, 414
Bare willows form a straggling line
2-535
Beauty defends itself against all comers:
2-79, 425; 3-145
Because fawns sleep in daisies
2-126, 278, 963
Because three little girls had roamed away
4-35; A-4
Before the battle soldiers fight the fear
A-24
Behind its fallen walls is the city broken
2-108, 426
Behold the realms of light
2-994
Behold this sudden prince who goes
2-580
Below headlands, ephemeral
2-485
Below the wooly cap, his eyes
2-581; 4-118
Beside his pasture brook the ragweeds stood
4-263
Beside the road, the town dump desecrates
2-8, 1102; 3-135
Between these twin fawns caught in ecstacy
2-440
Beyond the tropic town the beaches curl
Mar-37
Birds never find a scarcity of things.
2-793; 4-242
Black flames of Barbary long ago had dyed
2-251
Blown leaves are flecks of rust
2-92, 262, 802
Blushing less than the peach
2-844; 3-147
Boy with the willow whistle blow
4-381
Boy with the willow whistle, blow
2-258
Brief histories of loveliness
2-594; 4-128
Bright masts swat upward on the rippled blue
2-214, 336, 1056
Bronze is too cold and too exact
3-76; 4-238
Brooks bellowed from the hills
2-149, 297, 382
By chance I found it, blooming in a place
2-589; 4-125
By the luminous shore of a moon-kissed sea
4-259
Cattle, grazing down to the roots
2-136, 949, 950
Cloud-ships are riding the pearly billows
2-156, 1105
Cloud-ships are riding the rainbow billows
4-382
Coal smoke pressed down the heavy air
2-372
Crowds swept through canyons of the patterned stone--
2-221, 1073; 4-356
Curve after curve the river
2-1010
Dark rivulets of bison trickled here,
2-210, 342, 903
Dark water flows between
2-57, 755
Death under the sea
3-128
Deep in the clearing of the winter wood
2-229, 472
Deep down in the darkness and the chill of a world in a crumbling cell,
4-233
Deserted, it stands in a cup
2-19, 111, 636; 4-160
Despoilers of the earth have battered down
2-692, 693
Dip your hand in the mountain water
4-182
Dolores wears a crimson dress to match her flaming lips
2-576
Down a hill,then up a hill
2-368, 402; A-28
Down a trail of the mountain
A-7
Down the lane and across the clover
20-Mar
Down through a valley that yucca clouded,
4-197
Down trails whore burros, saddled
4-116
Down wide hushed stairways of the air,
2-3; 3-52
Drift softly, wings of dusk,
3-103
Dust settled on the grass along the lane;
2-1009
Dwarfed cedars line the steep banks, looking down
2-365, 462
Each day hurt dreams insisted
2-500
Each spring we watch the birds
2-1111; 4-386
Each year when all the dogwood altars
15-Mar
Early that spring he had made
2-1082; 3-30
Earth could not hold all richness that was there--
2-162, 303, 834; 4-258
Earth, heap the gold we cannot take away.
2-86, 269, 408
Earth quickens even at the mangled edge
2-55, 984; 3-77
Easy to cut-- quick to burn!
2-1122; 3-25
Ever since I remember the tentative stirring
2-113, 783, 784, 785, 786
Eyes learning to explore
2-64, 471
Faces…at the windows of the years
2-561
Far off a window's flower of light
2-175, 1061; 4-353
Fences and roads didn't mean a thing
3-170
Fields turn against the order and routine
2-375, 376; 3-106
First golden pollen of the dawn is blown
4-169
First of the downy things to wake and stir
2-547; 4-91
Five petals keep an innocence of blue
2-586; 4-123
Flamingo is a dancer--and many a gringo,
2-585; 3-117
Flash of the fang
2-201, 308, 1096
Flash of your silver pinions
2-536
Flesh that has never burned with fever,
4-190
Flying mane and rolling eyes,
Apr-38
Folded are wings of the winds;
2-779
For a little while the skin
2-923
For just a little while today
2-953, 954; 4-298
For many years the pasture spring could build
7-Apr
For sometime now, you have been making faces
Mar-42
Forever people have been staring down
2-1087, 1088; 3-98
Frail towers of the larkspur, blue and white,
2-646
From a copper-green cauldron of meadow
2-513
From all the fallen bloom of splendor lifts
2-215, 334, 897
From bramble citadels of snow
2-320
From cliffs I have watched the sea-rain trample the sea
2-913, 914
From high, green sanctuaries of its boughs,
2-195; 4-349
From hovels, in each stench of narrow street
2-696; 3-106
From root, through wood, to bloom, the sassafras
3-132
From slow dark waters edged with shadow-drift
2-125, 289, 587; 4-241
From slow, wide circles in the upper air
4-161, 162, 163
From that hot, treacherous jungle in his breast
2-90, 238, 700
From that lone dark before
Feb-41
From the dark stem of stone
2-147, 293, 766, 767; 4-97; A-9
From the mysterious depths
3-129
From the snowy bough
2-956
From this same road, I have seen before
2-163, 812, 813, 814, 815
From this spark-showered, grinding stone of days
3-161
Give me the silver strumming of the rain
4-323
God, greatest of poets, sing
4-308
Gone from those cellars now is every scent
2-463
Gone now are scars of flood and pounding storm
2-14; 3-133
Goose-wedges driving to the north this year
2-1099
Great friendliness I find in cliffs that break
2-999
Hail, roisterer from cool taverns
2-174, 313, 675; 4-184
He always said a scythe was meant
20-Feb
He banks the stone wall of his house with leaves,
22-Apr
He brought the plant to her when he returned
2-768
He did not only shovel snow
4-300
He drifts from dusts of twilight sifted there
2-87, 255, 639
He felt no pity, at the sagging gate--
2-789
He felt no pity at the sagging gate--
Sep-49
He followed the bees from clover couches,
2-161, 302, 423
He found me hunting in his clover field
2-799
He found the field, when first he came,
2-182, 944, 945, 946; 3-123
He guards dark heaps of cargo, waiting now
2-545
He had assumed a bored indifference
4-201
He had chased it a long time,
2-432
He had grown used to cattle's patient eyes
2-341
He had never found the time to tame
2-25, 168, 306, 654
He had not taken kindly to the task
2-896
He had raced the clouds, and tossed
2-66; 3-125
He had seen that his father always took,
Mar-36
He intimated he was not one
2-699; 3-179
He is a figure standing on
2-885, 886
He jostled her a little in the crowd,
2-1092; A-26
He keeps it--while the fields have grown
4-391
He keeps pretending, more and more of late,
4-178
He lifts a shaggy eyebrow to observe
2-822
He remembered in books the young kings going
2-641
He remembers the time when wings flashed by
2-745; 4-222
He said a quail nest that he happened on
2-45, 863; 3-158
He saw again the eager lift of head,
4-279
He saw majestic towers rise
2-268
He seemed content enough each year--until
Mar-70
He smelled the smoke of apple wood
2-318, 584
He smelled the smoke of apple wood,
4-121
He started chopping the fragrant wood
2-474
He stood a moment at the edge
A-28
He stood with morning in the prairie grass
3-160
He tells of wild geese that had turned their wedge
2-220, 466
He turned from crowded streets, not knowing where
2-196, 603; 4-136, 137, 138, 139
He was a man of few words…
2-51, 751; 3-13
He was not like any other colt
2-433; 4-30
He was only a little lad
2-24, 918, 919, 920; 4-286; A-26
He, whom life drove from the city,
2-480
He worked for us one year
2-911, 912
Heat falters at these feathery walls, and turns
2-597; 4-131
Heat waved above the bundles spread
2-936, 937; 4-289
He'd jostled her a little in the crowd,
4-370
Her blue dress blows by the wall, and far-off hazes
3-131
Her eyes were bright and quick was her pace
2-620; 3-142
Her letter told him just the usual things
2-856, 857; 4-267
Here are the elfin forests, under trees
2-667; 3-93
Here beauty is but mellowed by each year
2-340
Here, by a cabin sagged on emptiness
Apr-81
Here I have seen wide circles that a hawk
2-638
Here is a magic flute
4-183
Here is the ecstacy of youth and spring
2-611
Here moves a frangrance that enthralls the sense,
4-381
Here, of the earth and close to earth are stored
Mar-51
Here, of the earth and close to earth, are stored
2-890, 891
Here on the rim of night, here at the edge of autumn,
Feb-65
Here passed the warrior and the cross
2-124, 284, 782
Here thwarted gods have left their signatures
2-131, 528, 529, 530, 763; 4-62, 214; A-21; 9-106
Here, under fruit-globed patterns of the trees,
2-171, 309, 541
Here, under shaggy bark, the tree
2-1053; 3-57
Here walks a man with clustered blues and golds
2-1041, 1042
Here were the trails of their desires!
3-100, 101, 111; 4-280; 9-101
Here where the afternoon is edged with night,
10-Mar
Here, where the weathered house had been, he found
3-87; 4-133
Here where we found him sleeping let him lie,
A-5
His bank made no pretense of ornament
2-610
His father had said he must find out,
2-874; 3-34
His hands were calloused and brown
2-894; 4-278
His house and fields are far from town--
2-1072; 4-355
His wife had often made it clear
2-761
Hold this last wild rose petal in your hand,
2-344, 1000
Hot colors drip from jungle walls
4-351
Hot sands I crossed no longer burn my eyes--
2-678
How many tempests for how many years
2-188, 323, 442
Hurry, little laughing girls
A-1, 26
I am the vastness where the dreamer stands
2-142, 531, 532, 295; 4-97
I do not remember the name of the town--
2-106, 1049; 4-347
I followed his thoughts--
2-599
I found it on a little slope
2-557; 4-100
I found it on a morning when the wings
2-144; 4-223; A-26
I get lonely for horses--
4-176
I go to break the crust of snow
2-183, 1115, 1116
I had sought it when the bough
4-240
I have always said I would go sometime in the autumn
A-2
I have always said I would go sometime in the Autumn
4-306
I have been picking cherries,
2-845; 4-180
I have seen colts rolling their eyes and turning to look
2-924
I have seen them like dancers in silver veils
2-1091
I have taken your shelter away
4-269
I have watched swallow's wings
4-181
I heard a gipsy's violin
2-363, 670
I heard a thrush when twilight came
2-357, 671
I know a spring these tragic years
3-108; 2-1131
I know the ledges where the hunted deer
2-878; 4-273
I know the place where gypsy wagons stood--
4-368
I like clear springs that keep on flowing
2-718; 4-200
I like to watch a ship come in to port,
2-213, 933
I made you a song of rain along the treetops
2-672
I ponder how affluent wistfulness
2-1029, 1030
I reach my hands to all the hands that sowed
2-598; 4-132
I remember a summer long ago
2-110, 616, 617, 618
I remember a summer long ago,
4-148
I remember how we stood
2-17, 714; 3-102, 124; 6-102; A-1, 10, 16, 25, 30
I remember them where I used to pass
2-451; 4-45
I saw a grown girl coming down
A-19
I saw it hanging on his porch one day--
2-935; 3-117
I shall remember the bugles
2-362, 673
I show men things they do not see,
4-187
I stand again in the field
2-18, 154, 572, 573; 3-123; 4-112
I stand before the winds upon the height
2-678
I would build myself a house
2-353, 674
If I were young again I would go back to the sea
2-415; 3-159; 4-21
If loudest, most persistent noise
2-449; 3-61
If men who love ships were to choose the last
4-199
If we could seek less blindly
2-964
If you ever intend to buy
3-174
If you have seen a cloud of white wings rise
2-546; 4-237
If you have watched the little foxes roll
2-601; 3-163
If you should come along the trail where I
2-378
If you were ever blessed enough to tap
4-228
In dappled grasses we have failed to find
4-241
In delicate reliefs, white figures held
22-Feb
In feathery new snow the footsteps fall
2-595; 4-129, 130
In him was something like an ox that went
4-182
In many lands, this autumn night,
2-1018, 1019
In Paris, where flower-faces
2-416, 417
In Spring mornings when plowmen whistle
4-265
In springtime I have seen them by the brook,
Apr-65
In storm, we wonder
2-160, 794
In what far corner of his land,
2-798; 3-107
In the jungle where idols stood--
4-325, 326
In the pastures with the grazing herd
2-508, 509, 510; 4-76
In the woods there was not a sound
2-389; 4-11
In these high pastures the first wild flower stars
2-780; 4-236
In wooded land he left so long ago,
4-241
In youth we seem to think the greatest pile
26-Feb
Into the gray sky, over me
2-1085; 4-364
Into the patched tramp steamer's hold
2-821
Invisible boundaries of a dream's unrest
2-906, 907, 908
It always hung upon the kitchen wall--
2-194, 377; 4-6
It finds its many forms in natural things---
2-506; 3-82
It had fluttered down from the nest
2-157, 729, 301
It happened in the night
2-Mar
It happened that the wind was blowing
2-172, 261, 947
It has not yet been reconciled
2-622; 4-149
It held more rainbows than the cloud
2-291, 409; 4-241
It is a lovely thing
2-60, 868
It is, no more, what must be done
2-582, 583; 4-120
It is not mine--this field of red clover--
4-114
It is not used much, any more--
2-450; 4-43
It is summer--but the birds
Feb-39
It is the perfect gem we cannot wear,
2-34; 3-53
It may not be the brightest
4-319
"It might have been a buffalo wallow,"
4-83, 182, 295
It seemed a waste of time to build
4-182; A-17
It seemed so lonely in the drifted field
2-232, 346, 538
It seemed the farm had grown around
4-261
It seemed to him that too much time was spent
4-152
It seems a little while ago
2-1014
It seems that a fox amuses
2-600
It stands at the edge of town.
2-185, 489; 4-67
It starts with golden-rod along the lane
2-615; 4-147
It turned aside from the main highway
2-543, 544
It turned aside from the main highway,
Apr-88
It used to be a day of wonder
2-1020; 4-333
It was a hard place to keep in order
3-177; 4-156
It was a rowboat, without an oar
2-438
It was a very large bronze key
2-702
It was as if an Indian princess stood
2-1125; 4-396
It was as if, through cold and snow,
2-588; 4-124
It was bound in plush, with a silver clasp
2-565; 4-108
It was not a petal
4-341
It was not like him to let stand
2-487; 4-66
It was not only stormy wind
3-122
It was some later time he went to hell--
2-257, 747, 748, 749; 4-224
It was there in the summer… Its circle of clover
2-165, 298, 746
It would not be easy to explain
2-719, 720; A-1, 14, 23
Its mows, still full of clover hay, retain
Feb-78
Its outlet had been damned to keep
4-182
Jed had been restless. Spring had come this year
Feb-76
Just a little stray dog that happened by
2-689; 3-121
Just the right touch of beauty needed here
4-379
Last night the howling blizzard circled him
2-955
Let them arch their proud necks
2-299
Let there be hills to climb,
2-655
Let there be kites again--
2-16, 724; 4-210; A-23
Let there be thought
2-691
Let winter stay--in the mind
2-725
Life has two ways of giving: from the one
2-187, 613; 4-145
Light flashes on a wing
2-53, 965, 966; 3-3
Like drowsy flowers of flame above the wall
2-629, 630; 4-155
Like ghost-ships rising from blue bays of sky,
2-1008
Little girls, through the blowing leaves
A-11
Long since, the gladness of this day has turned
2-391
Lost fairy ships at anchor
2-395
Meadow land is rich land-and deep enough to hold
Mar-45
Mirages build a mad abode
2-129, 286, 523
Mirages, contending with space,
2-119, 274, 723; 4-102
Mist clung between the hills as if to hide
3-130
Mock wildness leaps to morning, and they run
2-47, 494
More depth than this is needed for the hulls
2-419; 4-24
More energetic than discreet,
2-948
More than contending moods
2-828
Most people get in crowds of other people
2-735
Mountain snow is nearer the sky
2-128, 285, 781
Mountain water is never still
3-122
My boyhood on the farm records but three
4-239
My christmas tree is on a height
3-97, 113
My Christmas Tree is on a height
2-27, 787
My fathers tilled the soil
3-101
My neighbor's garden is so near
2-788
Neither a woman nor a man long poor
A-17
New foes are skulking in the dark
Mar-85
Night was a swoop of black wings
2-709; 4-195
No arguments can yet refute
2-554; 3-136
No better farm-hand could be found
2-178
No better farm-hand could be found,
Apr-33
No doubt as we grow older, many things
3-144
No drowsy wind or soothing rain
2-42, 967, 968; 3-64
No forges in Damascus shaped a blade
2-329; 4-338
No knight in shining armor went away
2-932; 4-288
No land was left him, with harvest done,
2-774
No longer can the heart be warmed
2-379
No one comes this way any more--
2-1123; 4-393
No one now believes in witches--
4-390
No other kite he ever made
4-221
No pattern caught from beauty is in vain.
2-212, 335, 727
No perfect name identifies this thing--
2-325
No quick rain, dropping a jeweled curtain
2-564
No soil shall ever be rich enough
2-167, 496
No soil shall ever be soft enough
2-304
No sudden change comes here beneath the dome
2-399
No to a temple dancer
2-806
No trails of driven cattle pattern here
2-127, 606; 4-141
Not all the harvesters bring in today
2-633, 634, 635; 4-159
Not as a pilgrim have I followed her,
2-100, 267, 978
Not for the head who fell that dreams may stand
3-126; A-5
Not having unknown before the smell of wood
4-200
Not mine the crowded gaiety of flowers
2-288, 436
Not one wind-slated cedar on its crag,
2-203; 4-218
Not plows--but many exploding shells
2-983
Now all the wild-eyed stallions of the wind
2-217, 413; 4-19, 20
Now by this inland sea
4-200
Now foes are skulking in the dark
2-456
Now, for the last time, I gather
Feb-31
Now he remembers how he stirred from sleep
2-1040; 4-340
Now in some fairer land she may forger
2-607, 608, 230; 4-142, 143; A-22
Now in the time of harvest
2-808; 4-245
Now is a time when love must crowd
2-807; 3-119
Now its profusion has been neatly clipped
2-483
Now Jim is the proudest man in town--
2-697
Now like a blown scarf, waving
2-840
Now listen closely if you hope to hear
4-388
Now may your sabered beak
2-355, 452
Now more than ever we need
2-969; 3-112
Now rafters in the attic and the shed
2-401; 4-14
Now something in the breast
2-1112
Now that necessity has made
2-63; 3-89
Now that we cannot travel far
2-1050; 3-141
Now what had been a flat rock, lifting bare
14-Mar
Now, when so many flowers turn
2-632
Now with harvests golden in the sheaf
2-97, 236, 478
O doubt no longer that the soul survives
3-162
O Dreamer of Dreams, have you heard men say,
2-350, 809; 4-246
O first vast temple where
2-669
O little waif before my door,
2-873
O little, white, still son
2-351, 570
O restless spirit, roaming toward the sun
2-810
O sailing ship with the prow like the neck of a swan,
Apr-32
O spark, you winged from secret woodland forges
A-18
O Year of this Crusade to save the world
2-803
Oaks shouting back to the storm and breaking the hold
2-314, 1055
Of the wines of the South I have quaffed the best,
4-361
Old Carlos nods against the shaded wall
4-291
Old orchard boughs swing upward, free
2-559; 4-102
Old silhouettes against the years endure
2-941; 4-294
Old timbers that are mellowed through
4-225
On cliffs against the sky
2-256, 934; A-11
On dark boughs braving the metallic sky
2-228, 1124; 4-394, 395
On distant battle lines men look
2-804; 3-18
On the stone of the first-found caverns,
Apr-49
On these first days of spring he ponders signs
2-795
On this first vibrant night of faint perfume
2-917
Once I could see a golden leaf
Feb-77
Once, on a tropic voyage, he had passed
4-189; A-23
Once, their great herds flashed away with the wind,
2-146, 385; 4-9
Once, where these wigwams of the corn are tall,
2-858
One hears it at his lighted windowpane
4-119
One little grove of the flowering locust
2-590, 591, 592
One of them had no place to go
2-1045; 3-118
One spring, when the meadow brook had torn
4-380
One thing it is to grow from rock,
4-157
Only a little while ago
2-553; 4-98
Only the heart may know,
2-560; 4-105, 106
Only the Sun can mark
2-1007; 4-324
Out of that fury where the ocean breaks
2-836
Out of the smoke-blue field of timothy
2-441; 4-36; A-23
Over the ruins left there by armies of men,
2-392; 3-43
Paint is patched upon each side
4-343, 344, 345
Pale avalanches of the moonlight slide
2-117, 253, 773
Pale violet, on patches on the snow,
4-206
Palm-fringed and languorous with sunlight spread,
2-454; 3-152
Perhaps he chased the thistledown
2-99, 741; 4-219
Pines build a wall of darkness on the hill
2-118
Polaris is the north star now,
2-109, 1047; 4-273
Prim and exact for the exclusion
2-1093
Recently I have planted here,
2-61; 4-389
Reluctant as the late convivial bees
2-207, 332, 835
Remember, O Cities, that many cities as brave
2-879
Remembering how mint and tansy,
2-970
Rise like a golden spark
2-85, 265, 717; 3-104; 4-198, 214
Robin, you have stayed to long
2-1028; 3-140
Rough bark of trees the sunlight leans against,
2-202, 330, 685
See the hay-load billow high,
2-1075; 4-358
Seven grimy sparrows
2-981
Shadows, furtive and cool,
4-266
Shaggy lands I know that seem to lunge
2-888
Shaped through ages, it flamed
2-764; 3-73
Sharp-beaked and lean, with eyes that seemed to burn
2-373; 4-4
Shattered the pipes and the lute
2-928
She brought it to the hill-farm when she came
2-929, 930
She did not like the rag rug any more.
2-867
She found a dress that matched her dreams at last--
2-796, 797
She had a shield of courage for the things
2-876; 4-272
She keeps her faith in tested things,
2-1016; 3-48
She kept the blinds down so it would not fade---
2-209, 838; 4-260
She moves through these rich patterns of the year,
2-1121
She never talked of wishing to go
4-191
She once wore red patches
2-1046; 3-80
She picked the reddest apple from the bowl
2-201, 502, 503
She reached the camp as spry as a cricket
2-381; 3-58
She sat by her kitchen window,
2-507
She started sending for them when a girl--
2-602; 4-135
She talked of famine where the yellow river
2-772
She tucks her flowers in their beds--
2-398; 4-13
She was little and gray and in a hurry
4-103
She was the first to come and last to go
2-902
Shoes that had guarded well his questing feet
2-1038, 1039; 3-21
Shop windows are full of bright new toys
2-1043
Since new necessity has made me turn
2-1027
Since no one claims the old house any more,
2-5, 662, 663; 3-67, 176; 4-174, 175; A-1
Since no one crosses the old bridge any more,
2-818
Since the first lone fire was started
2-80, 393
Since youth is all for gladness
2-360, 942
Since Youth is all for gladness,
A-18, 28
Skylarks sang over clash of spears on shields--
4-247
Small boys, through summer days about resigned
2-10; 3-75; A-1
Smoke climbs no longer here above the trees
2-422; 4-25
Snow water feeds it from the height--
2-281, 986
So brief a time the wings may glint
2-957; 3-71
So long we were forewarned
2-406
So much has passed or changed
Mar-41
So often trampled and so often plowed,
2-37, 434, 435
So quickly were the blossons drifted by,
4-61, 62
So slowly fell the shallow sea
2-648
So soon the fruit follows
2-74, 958; 4-301
Soft cloth, bland soap and water share
2-114, 880, 881, 882, 883; 4-275
Softly the night comes down
2-959; 4-302
Solomon had cedar ships to bear the gold of Ophir
2-461
Some guinea hens that wandered far afield
2-243
Some people who complained
2-939; 3-81
Some said the vine
2-1069, 1070
Some unseen maelstrom of rebellious air
2-89, 259, 1032
Some wild flowers, very inviting and blue,
2-865; 3-22
Someone had left the mailbox by the road
2-750; 3-127
Someone has broken the gourd at the spring
2-446, 447
Something about the autumn day,
2-176, 826; 4-255
Something about the orchard ground--
2-1001
Something that wakened to hunger
2-997
Something wild and sweet
2-1044; 4-342
Sometimes when the boy was troubled he would go
2-190, 457, 458; 4-48
Sometimes, with hush of snow about me now,
2-1114; 4-387
Somewhere among the impregnable rocks, his sleep
2-118, 273, 715, 716
Spring snow was the invader, cruel and still,
2-690; 4-188
Spring storms had blown the bird house away
2-665
Spring water feeds it from the height--
2-122
Stand facing these fabulous mansions of dawn, and under
2-468
Stand here with me upon this twilight hill
3-169
Stars are still bright in the spring
2-56, 938
Steel, hard to dent, once dented
A-24
Still many a dream must wait
3-137
Still many a dream must wait,
2-512
Stone wall, in the year of the longest drouth
2-996; 3-124
Stooped after years of leaning over books
2-246
Strange ports shall find her squat, patched shape no more,
4-346
Strange we are, for when we capture
2-501; 4-72
Striped like a stick of candy, it had hung
2-614; 4-146
Strong swimmers have returned
2-260
Suddenly, he had turned to look around
2-1078, 1079
Suddenly, jewelled eyes
A-7
…sweep to touch the Moon…
4-268
Swoop down from these black tumbling crags
4-334
That lightning led no symphonies
2-6; 4-166
That spring the heavy rains had filled
2-1100; 3-120
That summer when Miranda took her bed
2-659
The airy stir of one slow-falling leaf
2-95, 266, 411, 412
The armor of ants is bright in the sun.
A-5
The arrows of the wind are sharp
2-71, 971
The barn roof, sagged from vanished snows,
2-153, 370; 4-1
The barn was sweet with clover hay
A-15
The bell in that old tower, gaunt and gray,
2-628; 4-154
The birds it was meant to scare
2-910; 3-33
The bittersweet was not to sell
2-431; 4-29
The boughs that quivered with blossom weight
2-394, 321
The boy had started chopping wood;
2-43; 4-59
The boy was sent on an errand that day,
Apr-96
The bright-eyed flowers bound them
2-81; 3-91; 4-55
The brook had troubled him
3-166
The caveman, knowing that his heart
Apr-63
The child was afraid of the stairs
2-374; 4-5
The chipmunk's shining chisels left
2-931
The circle is contracted and the sky
2-644
The cities of America join their untiring force
2-479; 3-7
The cold spell had come early
Mar-92
The corn shut out the world
2-1106; 4-384
The cottage seemed old-fashioned and too small,
2-224; 9-50
The cows came early from the pasture
4-202
The coyote is a little wolf
2-730
The curtains of the haze, like amethyst
2-245
The dam he made to save the bottom lands
2-624
The delicate tracery has turned
2-722; 4-207
The dog was only a puppy then
2-623; 3-28
The doubters of an age ago,
2-105, 271, 464; 4-53, 54
The Dreamer, who had taken all the years
2-249
The eagles have a vast in which to choose
2-279
The far-off, drowsy sound
2-316, 448; 4-39
The farmer's son had found
4-328, 329, 330
The field was still; row after row
2-305
The finest tent I ever found
2-1015; 4-331
The fireflies are cynics small
2-577
The first slow raindrop sliding down a leaf
2-571; 4-111
The fishing ships were anchored in the bay,
Apr-40
The flight of sparrows, epigrams before
2-343, 208, 943
The floods had passed and left the scars,
2-139, 437; 4-31
The forests are crowned with dawn
2-777
The frail arch of the airy bridge is caught
2-13; 4-58
The frail roots had groped here
2-123, 283, 1071
The frogs' crescendo rises with the moon
Apr-74
The frosts on meadow grass have not congealed
2-760
The glint of sun on wings, far off and high,
2-200, 328, 1006
The grass seems drifting by
2-132, 276, 710
The gray stone walls, impervious to weather
2-539
The half-curled leaf finds prematurely now
2-219, 952; 4-297
The hay was cut, and showed
2-364, 864
The heart had known before
2-50, 694, 695
The heights were not unfriendly--simply grim
2-555, 556; 4-99
The highway has a new bridge, straight and wide
2-192, 443
The hills seem closer, whether twilight comes
2-656, 657, 658; 4-173
The hired man showed him how to make
2-427; 3-35
The horse was sway-backed and old,
2-67; 3-182
The hot moist breath that tropic earth exhales
4-192
The houses were far between on the road,
4-151
The howl of wind through boughs and dead leaves flying
2-240
The inn is dust, in shifting sands;
2-23, 475
The intricate tunnels cave in beneath the heels
2-384; 4-8
The kitten crouched on the barndoor sill
2-704; 4-194
The larkspur may remind someone
2-28, 719; 3-50
The late bees come, with a dust of gold
4-373
The leaves are heavy laden with the sun;
Mar-63
The leaves were falling and winds came and went,
2-241
The lightning pollen, breathed upon by thunder,
2-359
The little house we built is plain
2-982; 3-19
The little spring flows clear again
4-215, 216; A-2, 19, 20
The man who built this little house of stone
2-987; 4-310
The maple leaves had turned
2-842
The maples blowing overhead
2-390; 3-40
The marching banners of the corn
2-54, 832; 3-24, 167; A-3
The melting road was long and still
4-193
The moon was silver over the silver willow
2-972
The moth of silence folds
2-91, 775; 4-235
The neighbors wondered why he bought the farm--
2-568; 9-47
The night is astir with dreams--
2-805
The night is sweet with flowers,
4-232
The old gate sags now and it will complain
2-820; 3-143
The old man sat in the sun,
Apr-42
The old man, when he died, had left two pairs
2-1063
The soil seems to be revived this year,
2-151, 800; 4-243
The only high hill, far and wide,
2-173, 310, 652
The only green here is the malachite
2-985; 4-309
The only motion in the sky
2-925; 3-88
The outside warmth, declining with the sun,
2-397
The paper lace has faded with the wreath
4-354
The pasture spring has flooded clear
2-990; 4-317
The people who have stayed the most
2-7; 4-348; A-1
The pet crow cawed its anger from the caves
2-102, 252, 515
The place first visioned is not always found
Apr-90
The place we bought--the house and grounds
2-428
The placid order of the lawn
2-387, 388; 4-10
The pocket knife he had was old--
2-851
The pointers, tense to tip of tail
4-179
The prairie, through its haze,
2-33, 180, 317, 1064
The prairie's hazy vastness stretched away
2-315, 837
The prone weight of the heat
2-159; 4-270
The prophet's warning and the sage's word
2-82, 522; 3-79
The puzzled cattle stood around
2-549
The rain had drived in the men
2-234, 1004; 3-62
The red geranium had begun
2-889; 4-276
The red squirrel in the old oak tree
2-631
The restless cattle wade
2-839
The rythmic stems of jade, below
2-1081; 4-363
The road through the wood was hard and rough
2-11; 4-212; A-1
The road to its sagging doors
2-824, 825
The road was dusty and the grass was gray
2-979
The road went lazily along the hill
2-356, 1068
The roses are dead in the garden
2-973
The secret seed that tingles in its clod
2-218, 333, 519
The shadow of a cloud moved on the grass
2-369, 537
The shadow of a reaper passes here
2-311; 3-105
The sky, and the drake's wing crumpled
4-230
The small worn case let in no light to fade,
4-234
The spring brook glistens under
2-169, 816; 4-248
The springs that summer were going dry
2-1058
The stream diminished and the mill-race filled
2-1083; 3-164
The stone mounts, ledge by ledge,
2-1051, 1052; 3-178
The storm had come up suddenly--a hush
2-1074; 3-140
The sudden twilight put dark shadow-cloaks
2-666
The sumac turns to flame that dances here
2-205, 410
The summer had been so good for hay
2-642, 643; 4-165
The sun had turned an angry glare
2-158, 550; 4-94
The swallow's flight cannot communicate
3-157
The tall grass moves in waves of light to the crest
2-649
The tall sweet grass seemed waving just to him--
2-759; 4-231
The tame ducks waddled through the crystle [sic] blur
2-1098
The tawny felt that made the crown had learned how mountains stand,
2-960
The tenant is burning the marsh today--
2-170, 756, 757, 758
The three hens dusting by a sun-splashed door
2-765; 3-65
The tide comes silently, first spreading thin
2-1023
The urge to action spread with the alarm…
2-1120
The visitors, in the easy chairs,
2-578; 3-74
The wagon creaks with weight of golden ears,
2-226, 345, 1062
The wagons come at sunset from the fields,
2-1077; 4-359
The waves beats at the breast
2-488
The white floss has been given
2-1095; 4-371
The wild rose petals drifted down,
4-369
The willows drop the yellow leaves
2-922; 9-120
The windows of my house are high--
2-1109; 4-385
The wood was so old that I thought
2-349, 828
The woodlot stood on the only hill
2-682
The World was hungry and War gave the Earth
2-242
The world comes to a few
2-1067; 3-109
The years may keep sun-patterned walls,
2-166, 307, 609
Their dolls were new and would go to sleep--
2-866
Their rivalry brgan, when county fairs
2-567
Their wings have flashed with sails against the dawn
2-625; 4-153
There come so many strains of broken music
2-367
There is a legend of a lake of gold
2-705
There is defeat where death gives anodyne
2-526
There is likely to be a shortage of string
2-976; 3-83
There it was when he came,
2-1101; 4-372
There seemed to be no question in his mind
2-703
There was a house I chanced to know
3-156
There was a house I used to know
2-726
There's no hiding in the glare of the desert--
A-17
These are the cool green islands
2-853
These are the foes of all mankind--
2-989; 4-316
These are the fruits that seem to be
2-619
These are the swiftest sparks that fly
Feb-44
These are the voyages that started out
4-357
These are the water left by floods or rain
2-59, 1048
These berries glow like embers in the cold
2-430
These fragrances with dreams remain:
4-332
These I have asked not, but these I have:
3-122
These little gnarled trees grow on ledges
Mar-47
These moments from our hands escape
2-70, 1017
These nostrums were concocted for the ills
2-861, 862
These ramparts of the soaring stone
2-418
These roots are not like cedar roots flung wide
2-893; 3-107
These tiny bird tracks in the snow
2-469; 3-183
These tiny wings, like gossamer,
2-668
These warnings are familiar on the ways
2-887
These white blooms that seemed wings about to fly
2-678
These wings are never swift
2-62, 444
They build neat houses of their own
2-575
They came through the pale light
2-275; 4-321
They come through the pale light
2-120, 1002, 1003
They fluff their feathers on the seasoned beams
Mar-60
They fluff their feathers, on the seasoned beams
2-847, 848
They found the cave a year ago,
2-459, 460
They found the hollow tree when bees
2-424
They had been fishing, three fields away,
2-1108; 3-32
They had found the cave a year ago
A-27
They had found the cave a year ago,
31-Mar
They had planted the little apple tree
2-386
They had to move again; the owner said
23-Apr
They hang limply now in the soft dusk
2-68, 1026
They haunt strange, lonely water-fronts--these men
Sep-48
They have been far, who sit with quiet faces
2-680, 681; 4-186
They have roped him at last and brought him in from the sage,
2-1103, 1104; 4-377
They heard him shuffling through the maple leaves
A-17
They keep the things we thought we should not miss
4-254
They leave their beds of matted grass to browse
2-455; 4-47
They load the clouds of Summer now
2-640; 4-164
They moved her wheel-chair near
2-482
They planned to fish through the ice that day,
27-Mar
They planned to fish through the ice that day--
2-465
They rise on wobbly legs and lean
2-869; 3-165
They said the heights of cold majestic stone
Feb-35
They still remember that his smile had seemed
2-206; 4-285
They still will boast this year
3-181
They stirred the summer dusk for me
2-627
They strip the husk from the gold
2-504, 505; 4-73
They swagger with an arrogant disdain
2-493; 4-69, 70
They wear the jewels of silence like a crown;
4-144
They were the best draft horses of the days
2-843; 3-116
This bridge of timbers aged in sun
4-392
This brown clenched bit of earth
2-152, 300, 484
This coverlet passed down from year to year
2-225; 4-92, 93
This dark, slow water covers earth denied
3-151
This furious parcel of feathers and sinews and bones,
4-37; A-9
This gray land has rebelled at last
Apr-44
This is a fruit the jungle hangs in gold
2-752; 4-226, 227
This is a place that we have known before.
2-790, 791, 792
This is a tapestry that fades
2-30, 769
This is a time when sacrifice
2-524; 3-84
This is immensity the soul may hold
2-678
This is not only a willow whistle
2-740; 4-383
This is the background for the silver plunge
2-189, 324, 778
This is the first spring I have seen
2-877; 3-138
This is the gold for which
2-521; 4-80
This is the kind of honey that the bees
3-11; 4-374
This is the time between
4-311
This is the trail the small brown deer
2-701
This is the very autumn of my dreams…
2-396
This is the way that Summer went--
4-262
This little feather was pressed
2-711, 712; 4-196
This nacred globe in perfect luster keeps
2-841
This place we bought-- the house and grounds
26-Apr
This place will always be
2-569; 4-109, 110
This sinister shape that once could thunder
2-115, 676, 677; 4-185
This staunch little hosue,
2-901
This strange mobility in darkness, bound
2-339
This was no proud ship pushing waves aside,
9-Mar
This was not like a swing, upon a limb,
2-621; 3-134
This was not soft ground where a little tree
2-141; 4-50, 51
This was their choice--at the edge
2-72, 653; 4-171, 172
This water was too dark to show
2-854
Though all the other stars
2-476; 4-60
Though the cave man carved in stone
2-974, 975; 3-63; 4-304; A-9
Three boughs today against the sky
2-294
Three cedars, slanted to distance
2-637
Three days I have seen him alone
2-734
Three shelves of jars in shining rows
Mar-44
Three years, on Sundays, he had come to dine
2-199, 915; 4-284
Through nights when skies became a quiet sea
2-134, 292, 1011
Through steaming jungles that the mists festoon,
2-197; 4-104
Through what slow-creviced stone
2-133, 892; 4-277
Through whispersof the path I took
4-274
Through windows opened to the night
Mar-46
Thrust in silver of the brook,
2-470
Time after time I find in tales of travel,
5-Mar
Time after time, I find in tales of travel--
2-525
Time moves with coral climbing from the deep
2-1024, 1025
Time's sickle moon is cold and bright
3-1; 4-290
Times there are
4-292, 293
Trees keep the sound of water in their leaves
2-38; 4-350
Two birds from bits of chaos, now
4-241
Two deep-worn ruts are all that show
3-Apr
Two sisters, thin and straight as stalks
2-98, 467; 4-56, 57, 214
Two windows in her little room looked down
2-518; 9-46
Under the tents of cedar trees
3-148
Under wide driven wings of cloud, and under
3-122; 4-27, 28
Unless your wistful memory recalls
A-1, 23
Unlighted for so long, the lantern hung
2-707, 708; 3-115
Up, up, into unlimitable spaces
Apr-46
Upon the farm, now many years ago,
2-490; 4-68
Upon this flinted slope the weathered stake
2-860
Upon this window-pane
2-542; 4-85, 86, 87
Vines drip their fated gems of poison-dew
2-338
Vines scale the walls, on the grim mountain height,
2-216, 337, 477
Warm light from the high windows
2-612
Warm light from the windows
Mar-90
Warning of autumn, shadows stirred
3-106
Watch for a while, if you will,
2-49, 763, 995
We are enough of one day and its needs,
2-327, 855
We burn the leaves again--
2-73, 1084
We came upon the old bridge in the snow--
2-319, 817; 4-249, 250
We can kneel now on the sand
2-9; 4-320
We come upon their far-off mellow sound
2-227; 4-75
We do not lose the Summer when it goes
2-604, 605; 4-140
We do not say farewell when morning goes
12-Feb
We found him tossing on his bed
2-527
We found it after he had gone away--
2-211; 4-89
We found the witch grass here
2-1119
We give thanks for the riches in
4-158
We had been a little afraid of him
2-453; 3-29
We had gotten down on our knees
4-134
We had moved into a stanch old house.
3-173
We had moved into a stanch old house…
2-872
We had stopped at the spring, on the hill,
2-517
We learn to listen at discarded shells
2-684
We look up suddenly to find
2-420, 421
We may not know how they withstood
2-138, 290, 1060
We saw it getting redder day by day
2-650
We scorned them when the brighter throats
2-980
We seek them under jungles where the sun
2-93, 263, 743
We shall come back from staring down
2-46, 721
We shall return, when ears no more
2-728
We store in it, year after year,
2-762, 763
We trapped them from the happy tree
2-770
We turned into the lane and heard
2-977
We went to a circuis in the town
3-49, 168; A-3, 12
We wonder that so little ground
2-150, 823; 4-251
Weed stems are changed to leaning crystal towers,
2-951; 4-296
Weigh each nut before you carry
2-992; 4-318
"Well, what did the fellow have to say?"
2-43; 4-150
What brambles did you run through
2-1035
What children of the snowstorm fashioned you
2-361, 1094
What flood had cut the way I do not know,
Mar-55
What have we taken and what is the cost
2-875
What if all Beauty stays--and only men
2-1086
What is that creepig shadow where the glooms
2-678
What is this strife and worry all about,
2-1065, 1066; 3-154, 155, 172; A-8
What puzzles me, regarding moths and lights,
2-776
What tide, pulled back on leashes of the moon,
2-916
What would you do with words? Use them as notes
2-1090
When Abner Johnson died at fifty-nine,
2-248
When, after harvest, the drouth comes
2-1054
When children pile bright blocks with care
2-445
When fragrant fires of autumn smoulder
2-164, 647; 4-168
When he was a boy he used to follow
2-181, 312, 742; 4-220
When I see a great ledge undermined by water
2-678, 679
When night came on the desert,
2-135, 698
When pasture brooks began to race
2-566; 3-23
When she was willed the great house on the hill
2-222; 4-155
When someone uses this old phrase--
4-115
When the boy outgrew his early stage
Apr-79
When the cows come home along
4-366
When these flushed apple-cheeks can give no more
A-15
When we return to some old bridge we crossed
2-819; 3-86
Where are the peddlers of Paris?--
Feb-69
Where floods had bellowed through the bottom land
2-193; 4-203, 204
Where floods had bellowed through the bottom land,
4-205
Where have I seen your face before?
2-833
Where men worked, trying hard to please
2-112, 540; 4-84
Where once he saw the amber eyes
2-177; 3-123
Where stars have glowed in water, brightness stays
2-29; 4-367
Where tawny cliffs sprawl with their rippled manes
2-352, 534
Where the clouds were mirrored in the river
2-884
Where the covered wagons went
2-660, 661, 520; 3-68, 146
Where torrents plowed their furrows
4-252, 253
Where will the new poets come from?
2-15, 831
While an old Age drops its dross
2-859
While Man may crouch before the fires
2-829, 830; 4-257
Who dreams, and feels too soon
4-305
Who enters here is wise to leave outside
2-683
Who fashions in his mind the only world
3-150
Who has not loved a woman, with
2-1097
Who is this sudden prince who goes
2-579; 4-117
Who, looking on this cliff, this lonely thing
2-481
Who presses an ear to the night
4-244
Who set these lofty cottonwoods to form
2-198, 1107
Who thinks he found a better way
2-371; 4-2
Who wove these threads of fading light-to fade-
2-96, 235, 1012, 1013
Why do I think of cedar trees
Apr-52
Wild ducks are fliying north
Mar-95
Wild ducks were flying north
2-849
Wild geese again in the night,
4-381
Wind and the shifting sand along the street,
2-145; 3-110
Winds, blow no longer on this day.
2-1110
Winds tilt the battered hat
4-283
Winds whirl the leaves along the rutted lane
2-651; 4-170
Wings into sunset, wings
2-94, 270, 1113; 4-97
With flirt of tail, and bright malicious eyes,
2-514; 4-77, 78
With planting done, the sailor turned away,
Apr-71
With planting done, the sailor turned away--
2-495
With work to do he has no time to dream
2-1059
Without our memories, however brave
2-596
Words have no boundaries in which confined
2-32, 1127; 3-39
You are as faint as ripples on a brook
2-137, 558; 4-101
You are but absent from assembled ranks
2-83, 1033
You are now about to meet
2-686, 687, 688; 3-54
You are so young we cannot tell you yet
2-548; 3-69
You cannot find this place on any maps--
2-926, 927
You catch a tantalizing scent that blows
3-180
You had two old shoes--now there's one!
2-516; 3-56
You happen upon them--like lovely things
2-155; 4-378
You have a door
2-88, 237, 1129
You have lost a petal or two
4-375, 376
You have lost all that made you
4-335
You may have seen them, by adobe walls,
2-143; 4-41
You see a flash of russet or gray
2-991; 3-26
You were a towering headland, green and cool,
4-336; A-13
You were unquenched at wayside wells
2-1036
Your fluffed white feathers I had lost
3-122
Your light had winked with starlight on the sea
2-1031; 4-337
Youth pictures you as a boisterous fellow
2-754
Title
Glenn Ward Dresbach Papers
Status
Completed
Author
Samuel Sizer
Date
March 1970
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