- Blanche Shoemaker Wagstaff
Blanche Shoemaker Wagstaff (1888-1959) was an American poet. Born in
Manhattan , she spent much of her life inNew York City . Wagstaff began writing at age 7, and had sold her first poem, to "Town and Country", by age 16. She served for a time as the associate editor of "the International Magazine". ["The Lyric Year: One Hundred Poems". Page 314. M. Kennerly, 1912.] Her verse, which often dealt with sensual and classical themes, was anthologized inT.R. Smith 's 1921 erotic verse collection "Poetica Erotica". Her 1944 book, "the Beloved Son", was a life of Jesus intended for children. She was a close friend ofGeorge Sylvester Viereck (a fellow editor of "the International"), whose sensual, decadent verse mirrored Wagstaff's. She praised his work, although the two had a falling out over Viereck's support of Germany in the first World War, later reconciling in 1924.ViereckProject: Blanche Shoemaker Wagstaff. [http://viereckproject.wikispaces.com/Blanche+Shoemaker+Wagstaff] ]Notes
Bibliography
*"Atys, a Grecian Idyl, and Other Poems" (1909) [http://www.archive.org/details/atysagrecianidyl00wagsiala]
*"Eris: a Dramatic Allegory" (1914)
*"The Book of Love" (1917) [http://www.archive.org/details/bookoflove00wagsiala]
*"Quiet Waters" (1921) [http://www.archive.org/details/quietwaters00wagsrich]
*"Bob, the Spaniel: the True Story of a Springer" (1927)
*"Mortality and Other Poems" (1930)
*"The Beloved Son" (1944)
*"After the Flesh" (1953)
*"Sonnets to Parsifal" (1960)External links
* [http://viereckproject.wikispaces.com/Blanche+Shoemaker+Wagstaff Entry on Wagstaff at the ViereckProject]
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