Visual poetry
Found in 4884 Collections and/or Records:
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 37 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "that girl's eyes met his and her scarlet lips had his name on - the only thing to be done with a muse is love our poem of the pulses-- - you like it, that wild and soaring pulse and poke of love--surely you, - night - , and the time will come". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 41 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "Miss M rave Lady entertainment Lady Miss M the prospect he dreamt of - clasp a prospect to-night, - GRENVILLE, that night in his bed found a Piccadilly girl - cool - the moment to begin a diary. his memoranda moment". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 53 , 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "the gallery of a hundred years of a thousand is in every street - art in the street covered deep with pictures vivified". Includes part of a map cut out. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 58 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "at last in a bed the curves of the congruous joined Princess and priest - lingual let us come across large ruinous sprouting red luxuries - Compared with London, all shadowland ; and the numb who shuffled round work ville helpless - between the cheeks he emitted unciation by unciation the gradually eased delight". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 63 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "walls - ketry, and cullis were sent for and a dozen identified, he knew to be engaged - The agent carefully knew nothing; - of which four sped away into the level limitless land and camped in clearings, on the borders of shadow - Western Europe had changed - walls looked down on it, towers and guard-rooms,". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 71 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "We have been there; we have seen bourgeois pictures. So quettish and rudged - We saw rooms--galleries--full we know all about you; you laughing gnomis qually and noy - "My dear Prince Pooh!" retorted the Princess, laughing, as fine ladies nuine ympa rievan- uffer noy rievan". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 73 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "home, ridiculous. - thought ridiculous - here was a woman - a vision beyond the pale of shy ideas - sonry blic adula derstan ked". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 75 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads " the surprised book blushed - measuring signs of time he began to inspect earth he started musing on leaves - disturb a book - fuse the seen and never seen". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 76 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "picture a bedroom. see a girl Eve under the zing of the muse - see here is toge - under the flickering frock a dancing heart and under the watching photograph eyes that looked - picture The Feeling - under her dress came to his glancing the perfect piece of the world a woman's small well-poised eagerness." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 79 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "a child - success sucess confronted him with all the old intoxication, and the hollow music. prize the world, and the rich gulf days - alone in his bedroom a small mineral invalid". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 80 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "night rhythm darkness rose from his rhymes - batter my heart - in fragments of shadow - a rhythm thought". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 82 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "scenes out of an opera - Licht - First came quiet grass green scenery smiling. - Then Came wild ternated greens and nailed saints looked through brawling foliage, - then came a painted word - interval". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 85 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "three three - four - This silence vibrating--a heart echoing listen - toge playing toge - the life about him". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 88 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "Suddenly, to move to that greater ; and admired expense ; move - Suddenly moving amongst the art black fashion of Mayfair of Paris movements, - the art world smiled" This poem is about the financial excesses of the art market with an abstract expressionist image as the background. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 102 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "turn - turn - subject to subject lightly listened moral music ; with wonder, - the warm trees, listening - the moving butterfly listening - at the limits of lamp-lit time "Listen," the music turned" This poem is about the appreciation of music as an abstract form of expression. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 116 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 118 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "the lady's change. This man's trouble - toge and his fled friend, the lady ghost. - since I last saw you, a photograph ago - the cute cute art of the lady of coldness. - so much has happened so much has happened to king toge" -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 120 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "lonely boy sing the heart to a school-girl, sighing - the facts the only facts which genius, the slave of feeling works for - believe all feeling. The feelings are meaning.". -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 127 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "a velvet time to be in the middle of a book binding hope to love with glad study, and happy hnads--" -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
A Humument Sixth Revision Page 132 / Phillips, Tom., 2005 - 2011
The poem reads "to resume narrative lite - in the diary of a child - who should appear but Mr. glad and Mrs. hope" -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.