Vol. 29 No. 3 1962 - page 476

There is nothing quite like it anywhere else:
Poetry
has
had lDlltators, but has so far survived them all. It is an American
Institution. To poetry-readers abroad it
is
still the magazine to
which we look first, to make us aware of whatever new poetic talent
appears in the
U.S.A.
"
T.
s.
ELIOT
A
creative instrument in the development of the
poetry of our time...."
ARC H I B A L D MAC LEI S H
Without
Poetry
the poem like the wild pigeon would
have remained among us no more than an official memory."
WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAJdS
Abnegation et integrite sont les vertus foncieres qui
legitiment son eclectisme. Elle remplit, avec ferveur, une fonction
qui lui est propre et ou il semble bien qu'elle soit irremplac;able...."
ST. JOHN PERSE
Unique among all magazines which have supported
poets, in being representative over a great many years of the best,
and simply the best, poems being written."
STEPHEN SPENDER
Poetry
has a tradition unrivalled by any similar jour–
nal of our time, and was the first mouthpiece of poems which have
turned the course of our literature."
v
ERN 0 N W A T KIN S
Its vitality is as great, and its usefulness
is
greater than
it has ever been. . . ."
ALL E N
TAT E
~~OETRY
1018 N STATE ST., CHICAGO
v
r""
EDITED BY HENRY RAGO •
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