Tulips and Chimneys explained

Tulips and Chimneys
Author:E. E. Cummings
Publisher:Thomas Seltzer
Pub Date:1923
Pages:125
Oclc:906167871

Tulips and Chimneys is the first collection of poetry by E. E. Cummings, published in 1923.

Description

This collection is the first dedicated exclusively to Cummings's poetry;[1] his work had been published previously alongside others' in Eight Harvard Poets.

Though most now know the title to be Tulips & Chimneys (with an ampersand), Cummings's original title request was disregarded by the publisher Thomas Seltzer, who changed the ampersand to the word "and."[1] Eventually, the book would come to be published together with the collection "&", under Cummings's original title.

Tulips and Chimneys features, among others, the poems "All in green went my love riding", "Thy fingers make early flowers of", "Buffalo Bill's",[2] and "Puella Mea". The original manuscript contained 152 poems of which only 86 appeared in this volume. 41 of the other poems later appeared in XLI Poems, and the balance (along with 34 new poems) were privately printed by the author in the simply named "&" in 1925.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/e-e-cummings E E Cummings
  2. Web site: WebCite query result . webcitation.org . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091023205617/http://geocities.com/SoHo/8454/60.htm . October 23, 2009 .