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Madoff with the money / by Oppenheimer, Jerry.(CARDINAL)754090;
Machine generated contents note: Prologue. -- Chapter 1: Beginning of the End. -- Chapter 2: Growing Up A Madoff. -- Chapter 3: Bernie Hobnobs with the Wealthy, Strongarms some pals, and courts 'Josie College'. -- Chapter 4: From Queens to Alabama, Scamming Homeowners, and Hustling Stock. -- Chapter 5: Tying The Knot and Giving Uncle Sam The Business. -- Chapter 6: A Borscht Belt Summer Camp Sets the Stage for Bernie's Ponzi Scheme. -- Chapter 7: Moving On Up. -- Chapter 8: The bagel-baker becomes a financial guru, and the Mob boys from Rockford pay a visit. -- Chapter 9: "Whatever You Do, Kid, Never Invest a Penny in the Stock Market Because It's Run by Crooks and Sons-Of-Bitches". -- Chapter 10: A Madoff Speaks Out and an Empty Promise. -- Chapter 11: Mr. Outside vs. Mr. Inside vs. The SEC. -- Chapter 12: Life Inside the Madoff Piggy Bank, Flashing the Plastic and Losing the Farm. -- Chapter 13: A Family (And Sometimes an Office) Affair. -- Chapter 14: Another Arrest, and Blood Relatives Get Taken to the Cleaners. -- Epilogue: Day of Reckoning. -- Author's Note on Sourcing. -- Acknowledgements. -- Index."An intriguing look at Bernie Madoff the man, and his scamMadoff with the Money is a deeply disturbing portrait of Bernie Madoff based on dozens of exclusive, news-making interviews. From the values Madoff was taught growing up in the working class town of Laurelton, Queens to his high-life on Wall Street and the super-rich enclaves of Palm Beach and the French Riviera, bestselling author Jerry Oppenheimer follows the disgraced money manager's trail as he works his way up the social and economic ladder, and eventually scams his trusting clients in a $50 billion Ponzi scheme.Through Oppenheimer's in-depth reporting, you'll discover new revelations in this startling case, and become familiar with the trusting victims-ranging from non-profit Jewish charities to the likes of seemingly sophisticated individuals such as actress Jane Fonda who would "like to shake Madoff until his teeth fall out," the scion of the Baskin-Robbins ice cream empire who lost a bundle and was forced to rent out rooms in his house, and New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg. There's even Madoff's own sister-in-law and talk show host Larry King, who apparently didn't ask the right questions when he invested. All lost their much-needed life savings, while others saw fortunes small and large evaporate in the greedy financial operations of one of history's all-time charlatans.Madoff With the MoneyDelves into the details of the illusive man that lost investors billionsWeaves stories of Madoff's past with those of the present in an engaging and accessible styleExplores how the financial scam that Madoff ran cost individuals and institutions billions of dollarsOther titles by Oppenheimer: Toy Monster: The Big, Bad World of Mattel, and Just Desserts: Martha Stewart the Unauthorized BiographyWhile there may be other books on the Bernie Madoff debacle, none digs as deep or goes as far to uncover the truth behind the man, and his incredible scam"--Provided by publisher.
Subjects: Biographies.; Madoff, Bernard L.; Capitalists and financiers; Ponzi schemes;
Available copies: 6 / Total copies: 6
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Woman of the house / by Cherish the Ladies (Musical group)prf;
Produced by Phil Cunningham.Cherish the Ladies (Joanie Madden, flutes, whistles, vocals ; Mary Coogan, guitars, mandolins, banjo, banjitar ; Heidi Talbot, vocals ; Roisin Dillon, fiddle ; Mirella Murray, accordion) ; with guest musicians.Recorded principally at Cava Studios, Glasgow, Scotland, and the Carriage House, Stamford, Conn.Uncluttered, forward-looking yet tradition-based and unabashedly sentimental, Cherish the Ladies, in their tenth album, proves to be one of the finest ensembles of Celtic musicians on either side of the Atlantic.
Subjects: Celtic music.; Celtic music.; Folk music; Folk songs, English; Folk dance music;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Fuller E. Callaway: Portrait of a New South Citizen by Melton, Buckner F., Jr./ Melton, Carol Wilcox.;
"At eight years of age, he owned nothing but a nickel and a few spools of thread. Within a decade he had acquired his own store. By the time he was 30, he was a leading textile man in his town. Another dozen years and he had become a giant in the textile world, a major force in railroads and banking, and a trusted advisor to state and national leaders. This is the story of Fuller Earle Callaway, a man of inexhaustible energy, relentless drive, and visionary, calculated risk. In the generation following the devastation of the Civil War, Callaway became a personification of the New South. Embracing the revolution in Southern industry, transportation, and trade, he soon came to stand at the forefront of the South's modernization efforts. Known principally to history as a textile magnate, Callaway in fact was at heart a merchant, an expert in both retail and wholesale, with a gift for advertising as well as for buying and selling. He was also one of the South's leading authorities on railroads, gaining his experience through battles against the rail monopolies in venues ranging from the boardroom to the Supreme Court. Callaway was in addition a successful banker, spurred on by his need to capitalize his many business concerns in the face of an impoverished Southern economy. Fiercely independent and an opponent of the labor union movement sweeping turn of the century America, Callaway nevertheless was foremost among Progressive industrialists and became a noted advisor to Woodrow Wilson's administration. Here, too, is the story of LaGrange, the heart of Troup County, Georgia. Barely a generation removed from the frontier in the year of Callaway's birth, it became, through the efforts of Callaway and his generation, a showplace of Southern progress and industry"--
Subjects: Callaway, Fuller Earle, 1870-1928.; Businesspeople; Bankers;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Benjamin Franklin / by Van Doren, Carl,1885-1950.(CARDINAL)143927;
"General Bibliography": pages 785-788.(Con.) 13. Speaker (Postal matters : Virginia to New Hampshire ; The Indian war called the conspiracy of Pontiac ; Massacre of the Conestoga Indians ; Rioters ; Governor Penn hates Franklin ; To England with the petition) ; 14. Authority on America (Further hoaxes ; Musical theory ; Tumult over the stamp act in America ; Spokesman for British-American propaganda in favor of repeal ; Before the House of Commons ; The stamp act repealed) ; 15. Agent-General (Joseph Priestley ; Electrical kite ; John Pringle ; Baron Munchhausen ; Royal Society of Sciences at Gottingen ; English cousin Sally Franklin ; Colony agent for Georgia, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania ; Townshend Acts ; Plans for land speculation in Illinois ;(Con.) 18. End of an imperialist (Arthur Lee ... an enemy ; First Continental Congress ; Chatham ; Fothergill and David Barclay ; Dartmouth and Hyde ; Deborah Franklin dies ; Delegate to the second continental congress) -- Paris: 19. Postmaster-General (Franklin's son a loyalist ; Organizer of the American post office ; Chairman of the Pennsylvania committee of safety ; Proposed articles of confederation ; Elected to the Pennsylvania assembly ; French emissary in Philadelphia ; The mission to Canada ; Thomas Paine ; Correspondence with Lord Howe ; Conference on Staten Island ; Sails for France) ; 20. Commissioner (The policy of Vergennes ; The comedy of Beaumarchais ; Silas Deane and Arthur Lee ; Retreat to Passy ; Lafayette ; British spies ; Surrender of Burgoyne ;(Con.) 5. Philadelphian (Children : Francis Folger and Sarah ; Death of Francis ; Indentured servants ; Slaves ; First fire company in Philadelphia ; Churches ; Freemasons ; Manslaughter and scandal ; Founds the American Philosophical Society ; Franklin stove ; Magic squares ; Drinking songs ; Surreptitious writings) ; 6. Electrician (Experiments ; Electricity ; Lightning rod ; Experiment carried out in France ; Franklin flies his famous kite ; Elected to the Royal Society ; A weather bureau ; Ants and pigeons ; Farming ; Light waves ; First flexible catheter in America) ; Pennsylvanian (Organizes a volunteer militia ; Income ; Promotes the ...University of Pennsylvania ; The Pennsylvania Hospital : the first in America ; First American fire insurance company ; First American arctic expedition ; Rattle-snakes for convicts ; Paper money) ; 8. Intercolonial (Deputy Postmaster-General of North America ;(Con.) Fiction about British atrocities ; Thomas Grenville ; John Jay ; Jay's suspicions of Spain and France) ; 24. ...(Balloon ascension ; Plan for transatlantic mail packets adopted by France and England ; The society of the Cincinnati ; Mirabeau ; Luxury, property, criminal law, war, and privateering ; Treaty with Prussia ; Royal commission for the investigation of mesmerism ; Jefferson) -- The United States: 25. President of Pennsylvania (Elected ; Penal code amended ; Bank charter restored ; The state of Franklin (later Tennessee) ; Constitutional convention ; The great compromise ; Last speech ; The Wyoming settlers ; John Franklin ; Retirement) ; 26. ... (Franklin's will ; The Franklin's funds in Boston and Philadelphia ; Autobiography ; Undervalues the steamboat ; Benjamin Rush ; Crop insurance ; On the French revolution ; Last hoax ; On religion).(Con.) First visit to France ; Presented to Louis XV ; French scientists ; French economists ; David Hume ; Land speculation : the Grand Ohio Company ; The Vandalia colony ; Elected to the French academy of sciences) ; 16. In England (James Boswell ; Morning nudism ; Other daily habits ; Dinner with the King of Denmark ; Spelling reform ; Studies the Gulf Stream ; Introduces medicinal rhubarb, kohlrabi, and Scotch cabbage to America ; Notes on common colds ; Experiments on the effects of oil on rough water) ; 17. ... (American jokes ; Ministerial animosity towards Franklin ; Lord Dartmouth ; The Boston Tea Party ; The William Whately-John Temple duel in London ; Hearing before the Privy council) ;(Con.) Franco-American treaty ; John Adams ; Charles de Weissenstein ; Voltaire) ; 21. Minister plenipotentiary (United States consul-general ; Director of naval affairs in Europe ; John Paul Jones and the Bonhomme Richard ; Privateers ; Commissioner to negotiate peace with Great Britain ; Correspondence with Edmund Burke ; Surrender of Cornwallis) ; 22. Sage in France (Health in France ; Gout and stone ; Invents bifocal glasses ; French ladies ; Madame Brillon ; Franklin's French ; Proposes his grandson Temple as husband to Madame Brillon's daughter ; Madame Helvetius at Auteuil ; Abigail Adams is shocked ; Franklin and women generally ; The Freemasons in France ; His works in German and Italian) ; 23. Peacemaker (Vergennes the impresario of the war ; Conflict of interests between Spain and the United States ; Suggests the cession of Canada ;(Con.) Local mail delivery and the dead letter office ; Anticipates Malthus ; The theory of the frontier ; First American cartoon ; Albany congress ; Plan of union for the colonies ; British Empire ; The French and Indian war ; Braddock ; Deborah Franklin's grievances) ; 9. ...(Catherine Ray of Rhode Island) ; 10. Soldier (Militia bill ; Takes charge of the frontier ; Building stockades ; Fort Franklin ; The assembly chooses Franklin as agent to London) -- London: 12. Agent (First friends in London: Peter Collinson, William Strahan, John Fothergill ; Lodgings in Craven street ; The Penns ; Illness ; Cambridge ; Scotland ; University of St. Andrews ; Franklin's Canada pamphlet ; William Franklin's illegitimate son Temple ; Holland and Belgium ; Hoaxes ; Scientific letters to Polly Stevenson ; William Franklin made governor of New Jersey) ;Boston: 1. Father and son (Joshiah Franklin ; Abiah Folger Franklin ; Schooling) ; 2. Brother (New England Courant ; Parody ; Publisher) -- Philadelphia: 3. ...(New York and Philadelphia ; Boston ; First voyage to London ; Journal) ; 4. ...(Franklin and Meredith at the new printing-office ; Franklin's illegitimate son William ; Marriage to Deborah Read ; Pennsylvania Gazette ; Paper money ; Publisher of books ; Bookseller ; Subscription library ; Poor Richard ; Learns French, Italian, Spanish, Latin ; Philadelphische Zeitung : first foreign-language newspaper in America ; Postmaster of Philadelphia ; James Parker ; Nephews as partners ; David Hall ; Franklin's humorous epitaph) ;Describes the life of Benjamin Franklin as writer, printer, inventor, politician, diplomat, and statesman.Pulitzer Prize, Biography, 1939.
Subjects: Biographies.; Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790.;
Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 4
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The mind and faith of Justice Holmes; his speeches, essays, letters and judicial opinions / by Holmes, Oliver Wendell,Jr.,1841-1935.(CARDINAL)141349; Lerner, Max,1902-1992.(CARDINAL)148799;
"Note on the Holmes literature": pages 452-460.I. Campaigns of life and law : 1. A fighting faith: the Civil War : Autobiographical sketch (1861) ; The class of 1861: a poem (1864) ; Memorial day (1884) ; Harvard college in the war (1884) ; The Soldier's faith (1895) ; "Parts of the unimaginable whole" : "The class of '61": Fiftieth anniversary reunion (1911) -- 2. Law as calling, life as art : "Our mistress, the law" : Suffolk bar association dinner. "Your business as thinkers" : "The profession of the law" (1886). "The love of honor" : "On receiving the degree of doctor of laws," Yale University commencement (1886). The black spearheads of change : "Learning and science" (1895). A man and the universe : Speech at Brown University commencement (1897). "The test is battle": George Otis Shattuck : Answer to resolutions of the bar (1897). Life as joy, duty, end : Speech at a dinner given by the bar association of Boston (1900) -- 3. Law as civilization : "Masters and men": the gas-stokers; strike (1873) ; Selections from the common law (1881) : Liability and revenge (from lecture I) ; Punishment, morals and the external standard (from lecture II) ; Torts and social experience (from Lecture III and IV). The path of the law (1897) -- 4. Law as judgement: some Massachusetts judicial opinions : The legislature and the Weavers : Commonwealth v. Perry (1891). "Communism" in wood and coal : Advisory opinion of the justices (1892). Publication at peril : Hanson v. globe newspaper company (1893). The referendum and the woman voter : Advisory opinion of the justices (1894). Speaking without a permit : Commonwealth v. Davis (1895). Labor in the struggle for life : Vegelahn v. Guntner (1896). The closed shop and the wage fund : Plant v. Woods (1900). Death by molar or molecular motion : Storti v. commonwealth (1901) -- II. Supreme Court justice : 1. America as a going concern : The first Supreme Court case : Otis v. Parker (1903). Allowing play for the joints : Missouri, Kansas, and Tennessee Railroad v. May (1904). Herbert Spencer in New York bakeries : Lochner v. New York (1905). Liberty and the "yellow dog" contract : Adair v. U.S. (1908). Equal bargaining power for workers : Coppage v. Kansas (1915). "Experiments in insulated chambers": Truax v. Corrigan (1921). Paying for pain and mutilation : Arizona employers' liability cases (1919). "The product of ruined lives": Hammer v. Dagenhard (1918). A dogma among scrubwomen : Adkins v. Children's hospital (1923). The state and the great public needs : Noble State Bank v. Haskell (1911). Where police power ends : Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon (1922). Doctrinal fictions and state power : Tyson bros v. Banton (1927). "Pure usurpation and subtle fallacy" : Black and White Taxicab co. v. Brown and Yellow Taxicab co. (1928). The case of the poisoned pool : United Zinc Co. v. Britt (1922). Death at a railroad crossing : Baltimore and Ohio railroad co. v. Goodman (1927). Circus lithographs and originality : Bleistein v. Donaldson lithographing company (1903). "A page on copyright" : White-Smith music co. v. Apollo co. (1908). Music with meals : Herbert v. Shanley co. (1917). A great case and bad law : Northern securities company v. U.S. (1904). Commerce as a continuum : Swift and co. v. U.S. (1905). Social desires and Dr. Miles's medicines : Dr. Miles medical co. v. Park and sons co. (1911). Free trade in industrial information : American column and lumber co. v. U.S. (1921). Shoddy and the manifestly absurd : Weaver v. Palmer bros co. (1926). On legislative motive : Frost v. California (1926) ; Absentee control in drugstores : Louis K. Liggett co. v. Baldridge (1928). Tax law and the penumbra : Schlesinger v. Wisconsin (1925). "A line there must be" : Louisville gas co. v. Coleman (1928). No limit but the sky: Baldwin v. Missouri (1930). Judges as a privilege class : Evans v. Gore (1920). The governor and the labor leader : Moyer v. Peabody (1909). They created a nation, not a document : Missouri v. Holland (1920). Housing in wartime Washington: Block v. Hirsh (1921). Spiderwebs and presidential power : Myers v. U.S. (1926) -- 2. State power and free trade ideas : Clear and present danger : Schenck v. U.S. (1919). A speech by Eugene Debs : Debs v. U.S. (1919). Two leaflets and an experiment : Abrams v. U.S. (1919). The postmaster goes to war: Milwaukee social democratic publishing co. v. Burleson (1921). A common tongue and freedom of teaching : Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) ; Bartels v. Iowa (1923). "Every idea is an incitement" : Gitlow v. N.Y. (1925). "Freedom for the thought that we hate" : U.S. v. Schwimmer (1928). Negro disfranchisement in Texas : Nixon v. Herndon (1927). The judge and the editor : Toledo newspaper co. v. U.S. (1918). Peonage in Alabama : Bailey v. Alabama (1911). Trail by mob : Frank v. Mangum (1915). Justice as a mask : Moore v. Dempsey (1923). Malt Whisky and the external standard : Peck v. Tribune co. (1909). "Three generations of imbeciles" : Buck v. Bell (1927) ; The "dirty business" of wire tapping : Olmstead v. U.S. (1928) -- III. The savor of life : 1. Men and ideas : Montesquieu (1900) ; John Marshall (1901) ; John Chipman Gray (1917) ; Law and the court (1913) ; Ideals and doubts (1915) ; Natural law (1918) ; Law and social reform (1923) ; Opinions and champagnes (1920) ; A preface : To the collected legal papers (1920). -- 2. Letters : To William James ; To John C.H. Wu ; To Lady Pollock ; To Sir Frederick Pollock -- 3. Last words : "Gold to the sunset" (1932) ; The arrow in flames (1932) ; "Death plucks my ears" (1931).
Subjects: Constitutional law; Law; Law.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Dearest Jeanie, dearest Jack : courtship letters of Jane Smedberg and John Wilkes, 1853-1854 / by Wilkes, Jane Renwick,1827-1913,author.; Wilkes, John,1827-1908,author.; Bumgarner, Shelia,editor,transcriber.; O'Connor, John,1989-editor.; Charlotte Mecklenburg Library (N.C.),issuing body.;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 288-311)"Transcribed engagement letters of Jane Renwick Smedberg and John 'Jack' Wilkes. Jane Smedberg was the daughter of a wealthy New York Merchant. John Wilkes was the son of a U.S. Navy Rear Admiral and an officer in the U.S. Navy. He was one of the earliest graduates of the United States Naval Academy (USNA). The couple settled in Charlotte during the mid-1800s and became members of the city's white elite class. John was involved in gold mining, flour milling, iron works, and banking. Jane was a noted philanthropist, donating money for the creation of St. Peter's Hospital (a forerunner of Atrium Health) and Good Samaritan Hospital (no longer extant). Good Samaritan or 'Good Sam' was the first private hospital in North Carolina for Black residents. They were both active members of St. Peter's Episcopal Church. Both were also active participants in the war effort on behalf of the Confederate States of America"--Adapted from digital record
Subjects: Personal correspondence.; Love letters.; Wilkes, John, 1827-1908; Wilkes, Jane Renwick, 1827-1913;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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American angels [sound recording] : songs of hope, redemption, & glory. by Anonymous 4 (Musical group),performer.;
Anonymous 4.Recorded May 12-15, 2003, Skywalker Sound, Marin Co., Calif.A vivid portrait of the roots of Anglo-American sacred music, including 18th-century psalmody from New England, 19th-century shape-note songs from the rural South, and some of the longest-lived and best-loved gospel songs. (Cf. container)
Subjects: Folk music; Gospel music.; Hymns, English; Psalms (Music); Sacred songs, Unaccompanied.; Sacred vocal ensembles, Unaccompanied.; Sacred vocal music; Sacred vocal music;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The last outlaws : the desperate final days of the Dalton Gang / by Clavin, Tom,1954-author.;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-253) and index.Author's note -- Prologue -- Act I: the Daltons. Mayhem in Minnesota ; Midwest manhunt ; Dalton descendants ; "This catastrophic contest" ; The judge and his hangman ; A heroic Dalton death ; They got their man ; Deputy Daltons ; Beyond the law ; Reunion in California -- Act II: the gang. Railroad robbers ; The searchers ; The Wharton train ; "He got me too" ; A dispute with Doolin ; "Cesspool of abominations" ; Red Rock robbery ; Two hundred shots -- Act III: the lawmen. A king's ransom ; The Danish deputy ; A Dodge City man ; Closing in -- Act IV: the shoot-out. A town in its time ; "The last tick" ; "A flash of lightning" ; Bloody work begins ; Saying their prayers ; "Death alley" ; A ghastly scene -- Act V: the desperadoes. Broken brother ; Lead flies in Ingalls ; More badges than bandits ; A doomed Dalton ; End of their days ; The last desperado -- Epilogue."The Last Outlaws is the thrilling true story of the last of the great gang of outlaws. The Dalton Gang consisted of four brothers and their rotating cast of accomplices who saw themselves as descended from the legendary James Gang. They soon became legends themselves, beginning their career as common horse thieves, before graduating to robbing banks and trains. On October 5, 1892, the Dalton Gang attempted the most brazen heist of that era: robbing two banks in broad daylight in Coffeyville, Kansas, simultaneously. The gang was made up of Grat, Bob and Emmett Dalton; Bill Power and Dick Broadwell. As the gang crossed the plaza to enter the two banks, the Daltons were recognized by townspeople, who raised the alarm. Citizens armed themselves with weapons from nearby hardware stores and were ready for the gang when they tried to leave the banks. The ensuing gun battle was a firefight of epic proportions. When the smoke cleared eight men were dead including Grat and Bob Dalton, Bill Power and Dick Broadwell. For the first time ever, the full story of the Dalton Gang's life of crime, culminating in this violent heist, are chronicled in detail--the final act of the Wild West, its last bloody gasp."--
Subjects: Biographies.; Dalton family.; Dalton Gang.; Outlaws; Outlaws;
Available copies: 36 / Total copies: 37
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The complete poems, 1927-1979 / by Bishop, Elizabeth,1911-1979.(CARDINAL)140922;
Publisher's Note -- North & South -- the Map -- the Imaginary Iceberg -- Casabianca -- the Colder the Air -- Wading at Wellfleet -- Chemin De Fer -- the Gentleman of Shalott -- Large Bad Picture -- from the Country to the City -- the Man-moth -- Love Lies Sleeping -- a Miracle for Breakfast -- the Weed -- the Unbeliever -- the Monument -- Paris, 7a.m. -- Quai D'orleans -- Sleeping on the Ceiling -- Sleeping Standing up -- Cirque D'hiver -- Florida -- Jeronimo's House -- Roosters -- Seascape -- Little Exercise -- the Fish -- Late Air -- Cootchie -- Songs for the Colored Singer -- Anaphora -- a Cold Spring -- over 2,000 Illustrations and a Complete Concordance -- the Bight -- a Summer's Dream -- at the Fishhouses -- Cape Breton -- View of the Capitol from the Library of Congress -- Insomnia -- the Prodigal -- Faustina, or Rock Roses -- Varick Street -- Four Poems: I/conversation ; Ii/rain towards the Morning ; Iii/while Someone Telephones ; Iv/ O Breath -- Letter to N.y. -- Argument -- Invitation to Miss Marianne Moore -- the Shampoo -- -- Questions of Travel -- Brazil -- Arrival at Santos -- Brazil, January 1, 1502 -- Questions of Travel -- Squatter's Children -- Manuelzinho -- Electrical Storm -- Song for the Rainy Season -- the Armadillo -- the Riverman -- Twelfth Morning; or What You Will -- the Burglar of Babylon -- -- Elsewhere -- Manners -- Sestina -- First Death in Nova Scotia -- Filling Station -- Sunday, 4 A.m. -- Sandpiper -- from Trollope's Journal -- Visits to St. Elizabeths -- -- Uncollected Works -- [1969] -- -- Rainy Season; Sub-tropics -- Giant Toad -- Strayed Crab -- Giant Snail -- the Hanging Mouse -- Some Dreams They Forgot -- Song -- House Guest -- Trouvee -- Going to the Bakery -- under the Window: Ouro Preto -- -- Geography Iii -- in the Waiting Room -- Crusoe in England -- Night City -- the Moose -- 12 O'clock News -- Poem -- One Art -- the End of March -- Five Flights up -- -- New Poems -- [1979] -- -- Santarem -- New Haven -- Pink Dog -- Sonnet -- -- Uncollected Poems -- Pleasure Seas -- the Mountain -- the Wit -- Exchanging Hats -- a Norther-key West -- Occasional Poems -- Britannia Rules the Waves -- Lullaby for the Cat -- to Be Written on the Mirror in Whitewash -- Sunday at Key West -- Thank-you Note -- Lines Written in the Fannie Farmer Cookbook -- -- Poems Written in Youth -- behind Stowe -- to a Tree -- Thunder -- Sonnet -- Imber Nocturnus -- for C.w.b. -- the Wave -- a Word with You -- the Flood -- Hymn to the Virgin -- Three Sonnets for the Eyes -- Three Valentines -- the Reprimand -- -- Translations -- from the Portuguese -- -- Manuel Bandeira: My Last Poem -- Brazilian Tragedy -- Joao Cabral De Melo Neto: from "Death and Life of a Severino" -- Joaquim Cardoza: Cemetery of Childhood -- Elegy for Maria Alves -- Carlos Drummond De Andrade: Seven-sided Person -- Don't Kill Yourself -- Travelling in the Family -- the Table -- Infancy -- in the Middle of the Road -- Family Portrait -- Vinicius De Moraes: Sonnet of Intimacy -- Annonymous: Four Sambas -- Rio De Janeiro -- Kick Him Out of Office -- Marshal, Illustrous Marshal -- Come, My Mulata -- Max Jacob: Rainbow -- Patience of an Angel -- Banks -- Hell Is Graduated -- -- from the Spanish -- Octavio Paz: the Key of Water -- along Galeana Street -- the Grove -- January First -- Objects & Apparitions -- -- Indexes -- Index of Titles ; Index of First Lines.
Subjects: Poetry.; American poetry.;
Available copies: 12 / Total copies: 12
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