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VOL. IV NO. II

Poetry

A Magazine of Verse

Edited by Harriet Monroe

MAY, 1914

NishikigiErnest Fenollosa
Translation of a Japanese Noh Drama
The RainbirdBliss Carman
PoemsSkipwith Cannell
Ikons—The Blind Man—The Dwarf Speaks—Epilogue to the Crows.
PoemsWilliam Butler Yeats
To a Friend Whose Work Has Come to Nothing—Paudeen—To a Shade—When Helen Lived—Beggar to Beggar Cried—The Witch—The Peacock—Running to Paradise—The Player Queen—To a Child Dancing in the Wind—The Magi—A Coat.
Editorial Comments
The Enemies We Have Made—The Later Yeats—Reviews—Notes.

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Prominent among numbers for the year 1914 are Des Imagistes, an anthology of the Imagists’ movement in England, including Pound, Hueffer, Aldington, Flint and others; essays by Ellen Key; a play by Frank Wedekind; collects and prose pieces by Horace Traubel; and The Doina, translations by Maurice Aisen of Roumanian folksongs. The main purpose of the GLEBE is to bring to light the really fine work of unknown men. These will appear throughout the year.

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Under a Fool’s Cap: Songs

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Amphora: A Collection of Prose and Verse chosen by the Editor of The Bibelot

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The Little Review

MARGARET C. ANDERSON, Editor

A New Literary Journal Published
Monthly in Chicago

The March issue contains:

A Letter by John Galsworthy
Five Japanese Prints (Poems)Arthur Davison Ficke
The Prophet of a New CultureGeorge Burman Foster
How a Little Girl DancedNicholas Vachel Lindsay
A Remarkable Nietzschean DramaDeWitt C. Wing
The Lost JoyFloyd Dell
“The Dark Flower” and the “Moralists”The Editor
The Meaning of BergsonismLlewellyn Jones
The New NoteSherwood Anderson
Tagore as a DynamicGeorge Soule
Rahel Varnhagen: FeministMargery Currey
Paderewski and the New Gods, Rupert Brooke’s Poetry, Ethel Sidgwick’s “Succession,” Letters of William Vaughn Moody, etc.

A vital, unacademic review devoted to appreciation and creative interpretation, full of the pulse and power of live writers.

25 Cents a Copy. $2.50 a Year

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Transcriber’s Notes

Advertisements were collected at the end of the text.

The original spelling was mostly preserved. A few obvious typographical errors were silently corrected. All other changes are listed here (before/after):