Mostly People / / Jeannette Nichols.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Rutgers University Press Archive eBook-Package Pre-2000
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:New Brunswick, NJ : : Rutgers University Press, , [1966]
©1966
Year of Publication:1966
Edition:Reprint 2022
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (96 p.)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • CONTENTS
  • A PEACOCK, BLACK SWAN AND NOW THESE GULLS
  • DIKE DIVING
  • BLACKBERRIES
  • A ZEST, AN ACHE, AN ITCH
  • MY FATHER TOURED THE SOUTH
  • FAST RUN IN THE JUNKYARD
  • THE ABSOLUTE OF RUNNING
  • LOPING WEST AT TWENTY-ONE
  • ONE DAY
  • DISCOVERING, A PHOTOGRAPH
  • FACE IN THE WINDOW
  • BLUE
  • FIRST LESSON
  • OUT THERE
  • NOW, TWO
  • SOMEONE DYING
  • ONCE WE ATE ROSES
  • KINGDOMS
  • ARTIST AS RHINOCEROS
  • MOSTLY PEOPLE
  • ONE THING LEADS TO ANOTHER AND
  • SIMULTANEOUS INCH
  • THE RETURN
  • WONDER'S SHOES
  • BLISS SLEEPS
  • WOMAN OF BROWN SKIN
  • F I SH MAN
  • ANY TIME, ANY PLACE
  • LADY OF HONORS
  • THE SAME LADY
  • THE LIGHT AND THE SADNESS
  • GIRL IN A GREEN DRESS
  • HIS WORLD A PIÑATA
  • THE TREES IN HIS HEAD
  • MR. NO-EARS
  • A KIND OF LOVE
  • THREE FLIGHT S UP IN ROME
  • SOMEONE GONE AWAY DOWNSTAIRS
  • ASYLUM FIRE
  • IVORY TOWER
  • TRUTH HAS A SINGING
  • PICASSO
  • TO RICO LEBRUN AND ANGER AT BUCHENWALD
  • WISHBONE
  • A MAN I KNOW
  • MY HALF OF THE APPLE
  • FIGURINE
  • WARNING
  • WHAT GOT AWAY
  • HAPPY BIRTHDAY
  • MIRROR
  • YOUR HARDS, YOUR EDGES
  • WHAT I AM ABOUT
  • NOTHING
  • I TALK OF YOU IN CITIES
  • MUCH TOO SANE
  • TALES TOLD BY TEXTURES
  • THE EYES OF THE PHOTOGRAPHER
  • DREAM: THE EYES DOWN THERE
  • HORSES OF STONE
  • RELATIONSHIPS
  • NO ONE HERE BUT US
  • KNEELING BY THE WINDOW
  • WHO'S AFRAID
  • THE QUESTION
  • FOUND: A SLIP OF ALMOST WHITE PAPER
  • DARKNESS MAKES US EQUAL
  • HEAR
  • PROMISE TO AN UNCONCEIVED CHILD: SOME MONTH, MY SON, SOME YEAR
  • TWO REASONS FOR THE PHANTOM CHILD
  • A POEM OF AND