The collected poetry of Dorothy Parker
by Parker, Dorothy frey50
Published by : Random House (New York) , 1928 Physical details: 210 p.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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800 - 899 | 811 Par (Browse shelf) | Available | 20180 |
Includes Index
ENOUGH ROPE -- Threnody; The small hours; The false friends; The trifler; A very hort song; A well-worn story; Convalescent; The dark girl's rhyme; epitaph; Light of love; Wail; The satin dress; Somebody's song; Anecdote; Braggart; Epitaph for a darling lady; To a much too unfortunate lady; Paths; Hearthside; The new love; Rainy night; For a sad lady; Recurrence; Story of Mrs. W----; The dramatists; August; The white lady; I know I have been happiest; Testament; I shall come back; Condolence; The immortals; A portrait; Potrait of the artist; Chant for dark hours; Unfortunate coinidence; Inventory; Now at liberty; Commant; Plea; Pattern; De profundis; They part; Ballade of a great weariness; Resume; Renunciation; The veteran; Prophetic soul; Verse for a certain doc; Godspeed; Song of perfect propriety; Social note; One perfect rose; Ballade at thirty-five; The thin edge; Love song; Indian summer; Philosophy; For an unknown lady; The leal; Words of comfort to be scrateched on a mirror; Men; News item; Song of one of the girls;Lullaby; Faute De Mieux; Roundel; A certain lady; Obervation; Symptom recital; Rondeau Redouble; Fighting words; The choice; General review of the sex situation; Inscription for the ceiling of a bedroom; Pictures in the smoke; Nocturne; Interview; Experience; Neither bloody nor bowed; The burned child -- SUNSET GUN -- Godmother; Partial comfort; The red dress; Victoria; The counselor; Parable for a certain virgin; Bric-a-brac; Interior; Reuben's children; On cheating the fiddler; there was one; Incurable; Fable; the second oldest story; A pig's eye view of literature; The lives and times of John Keats, Percy Bysshe shelley, and George Gordon Noel, Lord Byron; A pig's eye view of literature (continued); Oscar Wilde; Harriet Beecher Stowe; D.G. Rossetti; Thomas Carlyle; Charles Dickens; Alexandre Dumas and his son; Alfred, Lord Tennyson; George Gissing; Walter Savage Landor;George Sand; Mortal Enemy; Penelope; Bohemia; The searched soul; The trusting heart; Thought for a sunshiny morning; The gentlest lady; The maid-servent at the inn; Fulfillment; Daylight saving; Surprise; On being a woman; Afternoon; A dream lies dead; the homebody; Second love; Fair weather; The whistling girl; Story; Frustration; Healed; Landscape; Post-graduate; For a favorite granddaughter; Liebestod; Dilemma; Theory; A fairly sad tale; The last question; Superfluous advice; But not forgotten; Two-volume novel; Pour prendre conge; For a lady who must write verse; Rhyme against living; Wisdom; Coda -- DEATH AND TAXES AND OTHER POEMS -- Prayer for a prayer; After a spanish proverb; The flaw in paganism; The danger of writing defiant verse; Distance; the evening primrose; Sanctuary; Cherry white; Salome's dancing-lesson; My own; Solace; Little words; Ornithology for beginners; Garden-spot; Tombstones in the starlight; I. The minor poet; II. The pretty lady; III. The very rich man; IV. The fisherwoman; V. The crusader VI. The actress; The little old lady in lavender silk; Vers Demode; Sonnet for the end of a sequence; The apple tree; Iseult of Brittany; "Star light, star bright--"; The sea; Guenevere at her fireside; Transition; Lines on reading too many poets; From a letter from lesbia; Ballade of unfortunate mammals; Purposely ungrammatical love song; Prayer for a new mother; Midnight; Ninon de lenclos, on her last birthday; Ultimatum; Of a woman, dead young; The willow; Sonnet on an alpine night; Ballade of a talked-off ear; Requiescat; Sweet violets; Prologue to a saga; Summary; Sight; The lady's reward; Prisoner; Temps perdu; Autumn valentine