Jump to content

Wallace Stevens: Revision history


For any version listed below, click on its date to view it. For more help, see Help:Page history and Help:Edit summary. (cur) = difference from current version, (prev) = difference from preceding version, m = minor edit, → = section edit, ← = automatic edit summary

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)

21 September 2024

11 September 2024

9 July 2024

8 July 2024

  • curprev 22:3222:32, 8 July 2024 Charlie Faust talk contribs 58,869 bytes −39 added ':' to 'Wallace Stevens: Imagination and Faith'; removed commas around 'Milton Bates' as he is not Stevens's only biographer; replaced 'book dealing with his insurance executive career' with 'The Wallace Stevens Case' undo
  • curprev 13:4913:49, 8 July 2024 Charlie Faust talk contribs 58,908 bytes +34 nixed Oxford commas, changed title of second collection from 'The Idea of Order at Key West' to 'Ideas of Order'; changed 'Biography of Wallace Stevens' to 'The Whole Harmonium', as that is the title. added links to F. O. Mathiessen, The New York Times. 'throughout his years and many visits to New York City Stevens was in the habit of visiting St. Patrick's Cathedral for meditative purposes while in New York'; nixed last part. de-italicized Monroe (my bad), added links to Dante, Milton undo

1 July 2024

11 June 2024

8 June 2024

  • curprev 14:3214:32, 8 June 2024 Charlie Faust talk contribs 58,880 bytes −30 Late 20th century: 'The Comedian as the Letter C', etc.' should be in quotation marks, as they are poems. undo
  • curprev 14:2514:25, 8 June 2024 Charlie Faust talk contribs 58,910 bytes +450 moved 'Sunday Morning', 'The Snow Man', and 'Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird', published in 'Harmonium', to sentence on that book. 'His second period occurred in the 11 years immediately preceding'; changed to 'commenced with 'Ideas of Order' (1933)'. 'the release of his 'Collected Poems' in 1954, a year before his death. That volume won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955.' Changed to 'His Collected Poems (1954) won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955.' undo

2 June 2024

31 May 2024

7 April 2024

15 March 2024

9 March 2024

29 January 2024

28 January 2024

18 December 2023

13 December 2023

11 December 2023

17 September 2023

11 September 2023

26 August 2023

24 August 2023

23 August 2023

21 August 2023

12 August 2023

31 July 2023

12 July 2023

23 April 2023

7 April 2023

13 March 2023

5 March 2023

1 March 2023

26 January 2023

27 December 2022

26 December 2022

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)