Chronological Order
1804 Born in Salem , Massachusetts
1821 Entered Bowdoin College
1824 Graduation
1825 Came back to Salem
1828 Anonymously published
1842 Married with Sophia Peabody
moved to Concord
1850 Published
1852 Moved to Liverpoor and traveled around Europe.
1860 Returned t
(2) is the principle, the law which presides conspicuously over such composition, and, when obeyed, is the reason why a projective poem can come into being. It is this: FORM IS NEVER MORE THAN AN EXTENSION OF CONTENT. (Or so it got phrased by one, R. Creeley, and it makes absolute sense to me, with this possible corollary, that right form, in any given poem, is the only and exclusively possible e
One of the most important writers of the Southern literature of the United States.
Literary Experimentalist
Stream of consciousness
Fragmented chronology
Shifting point of view
Multiple narrative voices
Southern Gothic
feature grotesque scenes, violence and horror, distorted characters, melodrama, and sensationalism.
It begins with the death of Emily Grierson and starts to recall Emi
Ⅱ
Well, you are tougher than I thought.
Now when the wash with ice hangs taut
this morning of St. Valentine,
I see you strip the squeaking line,
your body weighed against the load,
and all my groans can do no good.
Because you are still beautiful,
though squared and stiffened by the pull
of what nine windy years have done.
You have three daughters,
Arthur Miller was born on Oct. 17, 1915, in New York City.
His father ran a small coat-manufacturing business; during the Depression it failed.
In 1932, after graduating from high school, Miller went to work in an auto-parts warehouse.
In 1944, the Broadway production of his The Man Who Had All the Luck opened and closed almost simultaneously, though it won a Theater Guild Awa