E. E. Cummings
October 14, 2012
On this date in 1894, (Edward Estlin) E.E. Cummings
was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His father, Edward Cummings, was a
Unitarian minister. Cummings graduated magna cum laude in Greek and
English from Harvard in 1915 and earned his Master's there the following
year. He volunteered to serve in France in 1917 as part of an ambulance
group. He and a pacifist friend were falsely imprisoned for treason for
four months in a French detention camp, which inspired his successful,
anti-authoritarian novel, The Enormous Room (1922). His first book of poetry, Tulips and Chimneys
(1923), was also a success. For many years Cummings' work schedule
involved painting in the afternoons and writing in the evenings.
Although he wrote love poetry in some depth, he is known for his
iconoclastic, satiric and playful attacks on the establishment, as well
as for his use of the lower case. Cummings was married three times; the
third and last marriage was happy. Cummings was awarded the Guggenheim
Fellowship in 1951. The collected edition of his works, Poems, 1923-54,
was published in 1954. He was awarded the Bolingen Prize in 1958 and a
2-year grant of $15,000 from the Ford Foundation in 1959. D. 1962.
the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls
are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds
(also, with the church's protestant blessings
daughters, unscented shapeless spirited)
they believe in Christ and Longfellow, both dead
— E.E. Cummings, excerpt, "the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls," Tulips and Chimneys, 1923
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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