Sneha Girap (Editor)

Samuel French Morse

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Name
  
Samuel Morse

Role
  
Poet

Died
  
1985


Books
  
Wallace Stevens Checklist and Bibliography of Stevens Criticism, The changes

Education
  
Boston University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University

Samuel French Morse (1916–1985) was an American poet and teacher. The Samuel French Morse Poetry Prize from 1983–2009, was for a first or second book of poems by a U.S. poet, a $1000 cash award, and publication of the winning manuscript by Northeastern University Press/UPNE.

Contents

Life

Samuel French Morse was born in Salem, Massachusetts. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1936 and from Harvard University in 1938, and from Boston University in 1952.

From 1962 until 1985, he taught at Northeastern University.

He married Jane, and they summered at Hancock, Maine. His first book, Time of Year, had a preface by Wallace Stevens.

Awards

He won the Emily Clark Balch and the Arthur Davison Ficke prizes for poetry.

Works

  • "Place and Time" (PDF). A Friendly Visit, Poems for Robert Frost (Chapbook 5). 7: 36–37. Summer 1957. 
  • Poetry

  • Time of Year: A First Book of Poems. The Cummington press. 1943. 
  • The Scattered Causes: Poems. A. Swallow. 1955. 
  • The changes. A. Swallow. 1964. 
  • All in a Suitcase. Illustrated by Barbara Cooney. Little, Brown. 1966. 
  • The Sequences. Northeastern University. 1978. 
  • Guy Rotella, ed. (1995). Collected Poems. National Poetry Foundation. ISBN 978-0-943373-34-8. 
  • Criticism

  • SAMUEL FRENCH MORSE (October 3, 1954). "A Poet Who Speaks the Poem as It Is". The New York Times. 
  • Biography

  • Samuel French Morse (1970). Wallace Stevens Life As Poetry. Pegasus. 
  • Reviews

    Mr. Morse doesn't answer these questions. Probably, they can't be answered, like "Is my thought a memory, not alive?" or "Is the spot on the floor, there, wine or blood/And whichever it may be, is it mine?" But his book does belong on that short, distinguished shelf including the collected poems, Holly Stevens's "Letters of Wallace Stevens" and Helen Hennessy Vendler's "On Extended Wings: Wallace Stevens' Longer Poems." And, who knows, maybe "They will get it straight one day at the Sorbonne./We shall return at twilight from the lecture/Pleased that the irrational is rational. . ." And Wallace Stevens "will have stopped revolving except in crystal." I hope not.

    References

    Samuel French Morse Wikipedia