Marianne Moore General correspondence

ArchivalResource

Marianne Moore General correspondence

1901-1972

Letters to Moore and originals and retained copies of letters from her. Partial list of prominent correspondents include W.H. Auden, Djuna Barnes, Jacques Barzun, Sylvia Beach, Cecil Beaton, Laura Benâet, WilliamRose Benâet, Elizabeth Bishop, Louise Bogan, Bryher, Kenneth Burke, Malcolm Cowley, Louise Crane, e.e. cummings, Babette Deutsch, T.S. Eliot, Allen Ginsberg, H.D., Donald Hall, Malvina Hoffman, Henrietta Fort Holland, Langston Hughes, Randall Jarrell, Kathrine Jones, Hugh Kenner, Jeffrey Kindley, Harry Levin, Lester Littlefield, George Platt Lynes, Archibald MacLeish, Louis Macneice, Harriet Monroe, Chester Page, George Plimpton, Katherine Anne Porter, Ezra Pound, Theodore Roethke, Muriel Rukeyser, George Saintsbury, May Sarton, Maurice Sendak, Mary Craig Shoemaker, Edith Sitwell, Osbert Sitwell, Stephen Spender, Wallace Stevens, William Targ, Allen Tate, Scofield Thayer, Mark Van Doren, Hildegarde L. Watson, James Sibley Watson, Monroe Wheeler, Oscar Williams, William Carlos Williams, Edmund Wilson, Yvor Winters, and Morton Dauwen Zabel.

82 boxes

eng, Latn

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 11677288

Rosenbach Museum & Library

Related Entities

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Sitwell, Edith Louisa, Dame, 1887-1964

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sv8gzz (person)

Edith Sitwell was born on September 7, 1887 in Scarborough, England to Sir George Reresby Sitwell, fourth Baronet, and Lady Ida Emily Augusta Denison. In 1913, one of her earliest poems, “Drowned Suns”, was published in The Daily Mirror. Three years later, Sitwell began editing Wheels, an anthology of new verse that sparked controversy among conservative critics. In the 1920s, Sitwell and her two brothers, Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell, became known for their avant-garde literary work. Sitwell ...