From the Book - 1st U.S. ed.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
From the Book - 1st Harvest ed.
Inventions of the March hare: Convictions (curtain raiser)
First caprice in North Cambridge
Fourth caprice in Montparnasse
Second caprice in North Cambridge
Mandarins: Stands there, complete
Two ladies of uncertain age
Still one more thought for pen and ink!
Easter: Sensations of April: Little negro girl who lives across the alley
Goldfish (essence of summer magazines): Always the August evenings come
Embarquement pour Cythere
On every sultry afternoon
Among the debris of the year
Suite Clownesque : Across the painted colonnades
Each with a skirt just down to the ancle
If you're walking down the avenue
In the last contortions of the dance
Love song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Little passion: from "An agony in the garret"
While you were absent in the lavatory
First debate between the body and soul
Bacchus and Ariadne: 2nd debate between body and soul
Smoke that gathers blue and sinks
He said: this universe is very clever
Oh little voices of the throats of men
Love song of St. Sebastian
Do I know how I feel? Do I know what I think?
Hidden under the heron's wing
In silent corridors of death
Appendix A: Poems excised from the notebook: Triumph of bullshit
Ballade pour la grosse Lulu
Fragments: There was a jolly tinker came across the sea (Columbo and Bolo verses)
Appendix B: Text- as it stood in the Notebook or the loose leaves- of Humouresque (published 1910) and of the poems (here in the order of the volume) in Prufrock and other observations (1917): Humouresque (after J. Laforgue)
Love song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Rhapsody on a windy night
Appendix C: text of the poems in Poems (1919), Ara Vos Prec (1920), and Poems (1920): Gerontion
Burbank with a Baedeker: Bleistein with a cigar
Mr. Eliot's sunday morning service
Sweeney among the nightingales
Appendix D: Influence and influences: TSE on the situation of poetry circa 1910
TSE on debts, including that to Dante
TSE on the borrowing of writers from themselves
TSE on the Elizabethans and Jacobeans
TSE on the poets of the nineties
TSE on Arthur Symons, symbolist movement in literature, and on France and the French symbolists
TSE on Bergson and Bradley.