Adelaide Crapsey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adelaide Crapsey (September 9, 1878 – October 8, 1914) was an American poet. Born in Brooklyn, New York, she was raised in Rochester, New York, daughter of Episcopal priest Algernon Sidney Crapsey, w...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelaide_Crapsey
A short biography of Adelaide Crapsey; catalogue of papers, scrapbooks, correspondence, and manuscripts house at UR Library's Department of Rare Books and Special Collections. Appropriate resource for scholars. ... Adelaide Crapsey (1878-1914) was born in Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of Algernon Sidney Crapsey and...
www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=838
Selectd Works by poet Adelaide Crapsey ... The Lonely Death ... Adelaide Crapsey; Saranac Lake; November, 1913...
theotherpages.org/poems/crapsey1.html theotherpages.org/poems/crapsey1.html
ADELAIDE CRAPSEY (1878-1914) This is a photograph of Adelaide Crapsey at Saranac Lake, in the winter of 1914. I found it in the photograph album of Arthur Crapsey, her nephew.
www.karenalkalay-gut.com/crap.htm
The strange name "Adelaide Crapsey" was first introduced into my lexicon when I was a graduate student at the University of Rochester in the sixties. She was a local poet, and the name came to mean to me all that seemed provincial and pretentious in my home town of Rochester and all that was trivial in women poets.
karenalkalay-gut.com/crapsey.htm karenalkalay-gut.com/crapsey.htm
An index of poems by Adelaide Crapsey. ... Adelaide Crapsey: Bibliography - A bibliography of the works of Adelaide Crapsey; includes a list of critical resources.
www.poetry-archive.com/c/crapsey_adelaide.html www.poetry-archive.com/c/crapsey_adelaide.html
Adelaide Crapsey was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1878, but she lived most of her life in Rochester, New York . Her father, Reverend AlgernonSidney Crapsey, was an Episcopalian clergyman. He was transferred to a chirch in Rochester, which was the reason for their move.
faculty.millikin.edu/~rbrooks/MApoetry/acrapsey.html faculty.millikin.edu/~rbrooks/MApoetry/acrapsey.html
These four poems provide examples of cinquains. ... I know; Not these my hands; And yet I think there was; A woman like me once had hands; Like these. ... Just now, Out of the strange; Still dusk...as strange, as still... A white moth flew. Why am I grown; So cold?
www.poeticbyway.com/xcrapsey.htm www.poeticbyway.com/xcrapsey.htm
Adelaide Crapsey (1878-1914) was not the first English-language poet to appropriate models from translation of the classical poetry of Japan, but for a time she was among the most famous for having done so.
themargins.net/anth/1910-1919/crapsey.html themargins.net/anth/1910-1919/crapsey.html