Marianne Moore (1887-1972) is an American poet and considered one of the most influential poets of the Modernist Movement, taking her place among other literary greats of the early 20th century as T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, H.D. and William Carlos Williams. Her style is at once formal and sprawling, precise yet encyclopedic, ironic yet at times tender, and always witty and pushing the boundaries of form and meaning. A lifelong baseball fan and long-suffering lover of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Moore is celebrated by both St. Louis, which claims her as a Missouri native, and New York City, where she eventually settled, as poetry’s grand dame.
Marianne Moore (1887-1972) is an American poet and considered one of the most influential poets of the Modernist Movement, taking her place among other literary greats of the early 20th century as T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, H.D. and William Carlos Williams. Her style is at once formal and sprawling, precise yet encyclopedic, ironic yet at times tender, and always witty and pushing the boundaries of form and meaning. A lifelong baseball fan and long-suffering lover of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Moore is celebrated by both St. Louis, which claims her as a Missouri native, and New York City, where she eventually settled, as poetry’s grand dame.
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