![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEia1tQtlc-ZCWQc50c5Ru1WzZ9yKFOYPIJ80HA_v0OWf_S4GLLalKjWgya5E6rsPmvDGlMn0UNN5Qg7qatcMzYzMEnpR9rRFQKr8bZ1VXwVofKXQEmvzzGZnc4Cr8ilu_9dIeKT/s400/DownloadedFile.jpeg)
My first published article was on WCW. A paper I wrote during the first quarter of Graduate School on the same poet (a different paper) argued that his poems were rhetorical speech acts of a certain urgency. I contrasted some poems with a fairly hectoring, didactic tone, ("Let me tell you, my townsfolk, how to do things right") with the implicit rhetoric of the poem "The Jungle." I was contesting the standard view that Williams just presented static, motionless visual images, a view that I had never agreed with even when I was 14-years old. It bugged the hell out of me that people read Williams in the Selected Poems rather than in the Collected.
I could still write this paper now. I remember the main points and even some of the bibliography I used. I remember going to the library and looking in the rare book room at the original periodical publication of "The Jungle." It was different! I felt like a a real scholar, knowing the poem had variants.
I think this paper might have been actually better than the one I published, which was written a year later.
[This pretty much duplicates another post I wrote a while back. Oh well.]
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