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Another World Instead
The Early Poems of William Stafford, 1937-1947
William Stafford; Edited by Fred Marchant
Graywolf Press Hardcover, April 2008
ISBN: 978-1-55597-497-8, ISBN10: 1-55597-497-X,
6 x 9 inches, 128 pages,
Hardcover, $24.00
Table of Contents
Biography
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Poetry
Poetry in English
"I stand and dream another world instead," wrote William Stafford in 1942. The other world he dreamed of was one of peace and freedom. Twenty-eight years old and a conscientious objector during World War II, William Stafford was assigned under penalty of law to work in Civilian Public Service camps, an internal exile within his own country. In this remarkable collection of poems, many of them never before published or long out of print, the first decade of Stafford's writing life is for the first time made available to readers. Edited by poet Fred Marchant, one of the first marine officers honorably discharged as a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War,
Another World Instead
tells the story of a committed pacifist living in a time of war and a writer beginning a major life in American poetry.
About the Author(s)
By
William Stafford
and
Fred Marchant
William Stafford
(1914–1993) was the author of more than fifty books, including
Traveling Through the Dark
, winner of the National Book Award, and
The Way It Is: New and Selected Poems
. He was appointed Poetry Consultant for the Library of Congress for 1971-1972, and in 1975 he was named Oregon Poet Laureate. He taught for many years at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon.
Fred Marchant
is a poet, teacher, and director of creative writing and the Poetry Center at Suffolk University in Boston. He is the author of four collections of poetry, including
Full Moon Boat
and
The Looking House
. He lives in Arlington, Massachusetts.
Table of Contents
Introduction by Fred Marchant
For Poems—'42 and '43
1937-1941
White Pigeons
To Schumann-Heink
Purpose
Subject and Background
Communication from a Wanderer
I. Report of Kansas in Winter
II. Report of the Nation Forest
III. Report of the Southeast
IV. Final Report
From the Sound of Peace
Discovery Home Town
Women of Kansas
Observation
1942-1945
At Roll Call
Event
A Vine
Buzzards over Arkansas
Inspirational Talk
Escape Artist
CO Park Project
Friend Sky
"Their voices were stilled . . ."
Exile [I]
Exile [II]
The Prisoner
Week End in Santa Barbara
Stranger
"Time fills the canyon . . ."
Los Prietos [I]
The Country of Thin Mountains
Dark-Browed Rough Pacifist
Director
Discovery [II]
Los Prietos [II]
The Way Men Walk
Night Sound
Rebels
Breath
Incident
Snow
CO's Work on Mountain Road
Dar Down, A River
"They say sound is the war . . ."
Search
Meditation
Tragedy
Walking at Night
"We call it the chaparral . . ."
Here, Now
Apology
Prison Camp
"While we sat on the lawn . . ."
"I was there when it happened . . ."
Family Statement
Current
Like Whitman
Easy
Nocturne [I]
"spoke about sacrifice . . ."
"Your tragedy before the ship goes down . . ."
"I do not know how that fine dust rises . . ."
More Than Bread
"Shall we have that singing . . ."
These Mornings
Speech from a Play
Nocturne [II]
Christmas Comes but Once a Year
Immediate
War Guilt
Fate
Devotion To a Gold Star Mother
At a Little Church
"You might as well put . . ."
"The One who said 'No violence' . . ."
Counsel
Fire in Lava Country
"It's an old story . . ."
We Kindred
Home
Little Sermon
Isaiah, ‘44
"They taught me to be hurt . . ."
A Posy
"They flawed when struck . . ."
Listening
Speech from the Big Play
One Place I Saw
Before the Big Storm
"Unto a great great deaf mountain . . ."
The Tall Animals
Footnote
Travel Report: 1945
All White
Chicago Bridge, Evening
"That land spoke . . ."
Listener
Flickerings
"I had forgotten the clown . . ."
The War Season
Translation from the Yaqui
Twelve Years Old
The Midgets of War
Mr. Conscience
Nine-Year’s Dream
"The first thing that grows . . ."
The Sound: Summer, 1945
Victory
"A note on solemn war . . ."
On Attending a Militaristic Church Service
Nine Years Old
CO Week End
"Over the Candle we looked at us . . ."
Assay
Review
Note
1946-1947
Return "I thought they shouldn't turn the light so low . . ."
Easy Art
"They listened to him say his creed . . ."
To Those among Us Who Will Be Wise, and Know
Deep Listening
"You dropped into my morning . . ."
Campanile
Two Bits Worth
"When I walked along the earth . . ."
So Long
Human Song
Occurrences
"All around the biggest bay . . ."
Demolition Project
Foundations
Home Town from the Flyer
"While one bird bears the noon . . ."
Like Ours
Humanity in the Service
The Arrow Maker
Muttered Creed
Country Boy at College—Postwar
Members of the Kingdom
Night Words
Smoke Trees
At the Salt Marsh
Those Few
Super Market
Possession
Veteran
"There in the deep room . . ."
Beginning of Hostilities
Two Kinds of Faith
"Your tears fell on my eyes . . ."
Who Blow
A Leader I Met
The Materials
Faint Message
Relic
Every Breakfast
Storm Warning
The Verdict
Graduate Work
Sub-urban
Postwar Niblets
Inside Engines
Too Big
Faith
Outside
The Myth of the Windblown Hair
The Right Thing
It Was This Way
Credentials
Walking Papers
Ruminations: Noon
Rebel Telling You
From the Back Row
Wind Gift
"A million explosions went out . . ."
[Coda: a Dedication]
Notes
Acknowledgments
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