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- Q17103031 subject Q7983047.
- Q17103031 subject Q8247529.
- Q17103031 subject Q8952525.
- Q17103031 abstract "Template:ForThe last new poem meant to be published in Hart Crane's life, "The Broken Tower" (1932) has been widely acknowledged as one of the best lyrics of Crane's last years, if not his career. In keeping with the varieties and difficulties of Crane criticism, the poem has been interpreted widely—as death ode, life ode, process poem, visionary poem, poem on failed vision—but its biographical impetus out of Crane's first heterosexual affair (with Peggy Cowley, estranged wife of Malcolm Cowley) is generally undisputed. Written early in the year, the poem was rejected by Poetry, and only appeared in print (in The New Republic) after Crane's famous suicide by water (compare his great homosexual love-cycle "Voyages").".
- Q17103031 wikiPageExternalLink additional_poems.htm.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q1329873.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q1458319.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q380723.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q7160643.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q7207482.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q7942475.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q7983047.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q8247529.
- Q17103031 wikiPageWikiLink Q8952525.
- Q17103031 comment "Template:ForThe last new poem meant to be published in Hart Crane's life, "The Broken Tower" (1932) has been widely acknowledged as one of the best lyrics of Crane's last years, if not his career.".
- Q17103031 label "The Broken Tower".