 |
Paul E. Tracy:
A Guide to His Papers
MSS 19
A Web
version of a finding aid first published
by Boise State University in 1992
Photo 420 |
Paul E. Tracy, Idaho author,
wrote hundreds of poems, stories, essays, and letters, during the course of a
writing career that spanned seven decades. His works received greatest critical
acceptance and national recognition in the 1920s and 30s, when they were
published in The Dial, The Frontier, Frontier and Midland,
and Poetry; after that, newspapers and magazines in the Pacific Northwest
were his primary outlets. All the while he supported himself and his family
through the plumbing trade. Paul Tracy grew up in Owyhee County, Idaho, in the
mining town of Silver City and on a ranch near Homedale. He attended the College
of Idaho and the University of Oregon; helped build Arrowrock Dam; served
overseas during World War I; lived for a while on the Oregon coast; and spent
the last forty years of his life in Caldwell, Idaho, near the desert and
mountains of his youth. He read the philosophers, both ancient and modern, and
many of his poems and stories explore questions of morality, religion, and
philosophy. But whether contemplative or simply descriptive, Tracy’s writings
have a distinct Western flavor. The rugged Owyhee Mountains and the blacksmiths,
miners, teamsters, and Chinese of Silver City all appear in his writings, as do
the ferries on the Snake River, the jackrabbits and coyotes of the desert, and
the horse, sheep, and cattle on the range. So do his wartime experiences, Arrowrock Dam, excursions into eastern Oregon, and even plumbing. Paul Tracy’s
favorite poems were published in 1968 by Caxton Printers in a book entitled Owyhee Horizons. He donated his papers, both published and unpublished, to
Boise State University Library in 1975, where they are preserved as part of the
Idaho Writers Archive.
Table of Contents
Biographical Sketch
Scope and Content
Note
Container Lists and Series Description
Series I :
Biographical Material and Family Papers
Series II :
Correspondence
Series III :
Writings
Series IV:
Published Writings
Series V: Diaries, Scrapbooks, Albums
Series VI:
Photographs
Title Listing:
Essays and Short Stories
Title Listing:
Poems
Bibliography:
Published
Works
Box
List
Paul E. Tracy’s papers consist of letters to
and from him, diaries, autobiographical reminiscences, drafts of poems, essays,
and stories, published versions of his work, scrapbooks, photos, and
memorabilia. The bulk of the collection dates after 1912, when he went to work
on Arrowrock Dam and began keeping a diary. There are several hundred letters in
the collection, though the largest portion of the papers, by far, consists of
multiple versions of his writings, both published and unpublished. Altogether
the collection fills approximately nine linear feet of shelf space.
The papers are divided into six series: 1)
Biographical material and family papers, 2) Correspondence, 3) Writings, 4)
Published writings, 5) Diaries, Scrapbooks, and Albums, and 6) Photographs.
Fuller descriptions of each series, together with box and folder lists, begin on
page 8 of this finding aid.
Much of the paper in the collection was highly
acidic and very brittle. These items have been photocopied onto acid-free paper,
and researchers are asked to use the copies. Other acidic papers have been
isolated from other items in the files by acid-free sheets. Researchers are
asked not to remove these intervening blank pages.
The papers of Paul E. Tracy were donated to
Boise State University Library by Mr. Tracy in 1975. Some letters Paul Tracy
wrote to Courtland Matthews were added to the collection by Mrs. Eleanor
Matthews in 1975 and 1976. Mr. Tracy did not transfer literary rights to his
papers to the university, so copyright to published an unpublished work by him
is retained by his heirs.
The papers of Paul E. Tracy are available for
research, by appointment, in the Special Collections Department of Boise State
University Library. Paul Tracy’s daughter, Lorna Tracy, donated a collection of
letters she wrote her father to the Boise State University Library in 1977. That
collection (Lorna Tracy collection, MSS 20) is not yet open to research.
Inclusive dates: 1875-1976
Collection size: ca. 9 ft.
Collection number: MSS 19
Copyright: Retained by heirs
Processed by: Don Haacke and
Leslie Pass
Alan
Virta, assisted by Rae Ann Herker
Series I: Biographical Material
And Family Papers
Paul Tracy’s typewritten
autobiographical reminiscences (Folders 2 to 14) are among the notable items in
Series I. Written for his children after his retirement, they contain detailed
recollections of his childhood in Silver City and Homedale, Idaho, construction
work on Arrowrock Dam, and his World War I experiences, especially service as a
squadron bandleader. His childhood reminiscences contain vivid recollections of
miners, teamsters, and Chinese of Silver City, family life and boyhood
adventures in Silver City and surrounding mountains, and life along the Snake
River around the turn of the century. Additional recollections of Owyhee County
life are found in Series III (Essays). Consult the bibliography for a listing.
Series I also contains obituaries and
other clippings about Paul Tracy (Folder 1), miscellaneous memorabilia,
typewritten excerpts from his mother’s girlhood diary (Folder 27) and clippings
about various members of the Tracy family (Folder 28). Folder 25 contains loose
items from a scrapbook relating to his book, Owyhee Horizons. The
scrapbook itself is in Box 13.
Box 1: Biographical Material and Family
Papers
Folder
1 Obituaries and Clippings: 1949-1976
2 Reminiscences: Silver City
3
: Silver City
4
: Silver City
5
: Silver City notes
6
: Succor Creek ranch
7
: Succor Creek ranch
8
: Oregon Trail
9
: Arrowrock Dam
10 :
World War I; Squadron band
11 :
Plumbing; Baker, Oregon
12 :
Marianne Moore
13
: Philosophical and reflective
14
: Miscellaneous sketches; Notes
15 Essay: “Precision and the Jobblesocket”
16 : “Influence of Books”
17 Clippings: “By the Way” columns by Pete Hackworth(1963-1972)
18 : Owyhee County and Snake River (1943-1973)
19 Memorabilia: College of Idaho (1909-1968)
20 : William J. Boone (1917-1966)
21 : World War I (1917-1940)
22 : University of Oregon (1926)
23
Miscellaneous diary pages and excerpt
24 Financial, legal, and membership papers: 1920-1970
25 Owyhee Horizons scrapbook: loose items
26 Homedale High School: Library donation: 1974
27 Tracy family: Diary Excerpts, Wilhelmina Hunck Tracy (1875-1876)
28 Tracy family: Clippings and memorabilia (1910-1975)
29 Tracy family: Christmas cards to
30 Luck family: Miscellaneous
Oversize Drawers: Memorabilia
Two issues (November and December 1918) of Out of
Control, newspaper of
First Pursuit Group (World War I)
Maps of Silver City
Series II: Correspondence
The
Correspondence files are divided into four subseries: Letters Written by Paul
Tracy; Letters Sent to Paul Tracy; Special files; and Family files. The first
two subseries are arranged chronologically; the special and family files are
arranged by correspondent.
The first
letter in the collection written by Paul Tracy dates from 1898, when he was nine
years old. Most of his letters up until 1950 are originals he wrote to his
parents, sisters, brother, or to his fiancée, Dorothy Luck. There are few
letters to non-family members dated before the 1950s, except in the Special
files. After the mid-1950s Paul Tracy began making copies of outgoing letters,
and there are carbons of letters to literary editors, friends, and others, as
well as to family members after that date.
Included in
the Letters Written by Paul Tracy are more than 100 he wrote during his World
War I service. Dated December 1917 through July 1919, they were posted home to
his family and fiancée from training camps in the U.S. (chiefly Hempstead, Long
Island, and Kelly Field, San Antonio, Texas) and from France and Germany
(notably from Coblenz). These letters contain detailed descriptions of Army
life, wartime experiences, service during the Occupation, and the French and
German people, as well as his thoughts on war. Many of the letters were written
on highly acidic government issued stationery; researchers are asked to examine
photocopies instead of the originals.
The subseries
of Letters Sent to Paul Tracy contains letters from a variety of non-family
correspondents, including literary editors. There are rejection slips in these
files, sometimes with critical commentary on his poems. Occasionally Paul Tracy
wrote to prominent individuals and saved their responses. There are, for
example, brief notes from John Ciardi and Eddie Rickenbacker among the incoming
letters of 1968. Idaho author Ruth Gipson Plowhead is also represented by
several letters.
Several groups
of letters, both incoming and outgoing, were separated from the main body of
correspondence and established as Special files. One such group is a file of
letters Paul Tracy received in response to his letter to the editor in The
Christian Century Magazine, June 20, 1945
(Box 4, Folder 4). Other separated correspondents include William Judson Boone,
his professor and mentor from the College of Idaho; Ethel Romig Fuller, Portland
Oregonian poetry editor; poet Courtland Matthews; literary editors Harold
G. Merriam (The Frontier), Harriet Monroe (Poetry), and Marianne
Moore (The Dial); Boise State University professor Tom Trusky; and
Herbert Walther, of Plumbing and Heating Business Magazine. The letters
from Courtland Matthews and Marianne Moore, in particular, contain critical
commentary on Tracy’s writings. A group of letters about Owyhee Horizons
was assembled into a scrapbook by Tracy’s daughter Lorna. That scrapbook is
located in Series V, Box 13.
The last
subseries is the Family correspondence. These files contain letters written to
Paul Tracy and to others by his parents, Frank and Wilhelmina Tracy, brother
Walter, sisters Lela, Dorothea, and Marjorie, fiancée Dorothy Luck (one letter),
and son William Boone Tracy. They are arranged by letter writer. Many of his
brother Walter’s letters are those he wrote home during his World War I service
in Europe. The file of letters by son William B. Tracy includes many written
during his World War II service as an instructor and mechanic with the Army Air
Force’s glider program. Those letters document, from the point of view of a
participant, the Air Force’s attempts to utilize that type of craft in the early years of the
war. Also part of the series are miscellaneous letters of the Luck family (Box
5, Folder 10), chiefly Charles W. Luck, father of Dorothy Luck Tracy. One letter
in the Luck family file (dated 1922) expresses, with some poignancy, a father’s
feeling of loss on the death of his small son.
Letters Written by Paul Tracy
Box 2: Letters by
Paul Tracy
Folder 1
1898-1916
2
1917 (Jan-Aug)
3
1917 (Sept-Nov)
4
1917 (Dec)
5
1918 undated
6
1918 (Jan-Mar)
7
1918 (April)
8
1918 (May-June)
9
1918 (July-Oct)
10
1918 (Nov-Dec)
11
1919 (Jan-Feb)
12
1919 (March)
13
1919 (Apr-May)
14
1919 (June-Oct)
15
1919 (Nov-Dec)
16
1920 (Jan-Feb)
17
1920 (Mar-Dec)
Box 3: Letters by
Paul Tracy
Folder 1
1922-1929
2
1932-1934
3
1938-1959
4
1960-1967
5
1968-1969
6
1970-1972
7
1973-1975
8
undated
Letters Sent to Paul Tracy
Box 3: Letters to
Paul Tracy
Folder 9
1914-1930
10
1931-1938
11
1941-1950
12
1952-1959
13
1960
14
1961-1964
15
1965-1967
16
1968-1970
17
1971
18
1972-1975
19
undated
Special Correspondence Files
Box 4: Special Files
Folder 1 Boone,
William J. (From): 1910-1917
2
Boone, William J. (From): 1918-1934
3
Boone, William J. (To): 1917-1934
4
Christian Century letters: 1945
5
Fuller, Ethel Romig: 1940-1965
6
Matthews, Courtland (From): 1967
7
Matthews, Courtland (From): 1968-1973
8
Matthews, Courtland (To): 1954-1967
9
Matthews, Courtland (To): 1968-1969
10
Matthews, Courtland (To): 1970-1971
11
Matthews, Courtland (To): 1972-1975
12
Merriam, Harold G.: 1928-1971
13
Monroe, Harriet and Poetry: 1930-1967
14
Moore, Marianne: 1927-1969
15
Trusky, Tom: 1970-1975
16
Walther, Herbert: 1939-1940
Family Correspondence
Box 5: Family
Correspondence
Folder 1 Frank
E. Tracy
2 Wilhelmina Tracy: undated
3
Wilhelmina Tracy: 1916-1924
4 Walter F. Tracy: Postcards: 1914-1933
5 Walter F. Tracy: 1917-1945
6
Lela Tracy Whitmore: 1919-1970
7
Dorothea Tracy Snell: 1913-1923
8
Marjorie Tracy Laselle Orr: 1917-1924
9 Dorothy Luck Tracy: 1919
10
Luck Family: 1879-1935
11
William B. Tracy: 1941-1942
12
: 1943
13
: 1944 (Jan-June)
14
: 1944 (July-Dec)
15
: 1945-1972
Series III: Writings
Manuscript and
typescript versions of Paul E. Tracy’s poems, essays, and short stories are
arranged alphabetically by title in Series III, together with photocopies of
published versions if available. Also included are newsletters Tracy produced
for the Caldwell Rotary Club (Box 5, Folder 16), a column he wrote for the Boone
Memorial Presbyterian Church (Box 5, Folders 17-19), book reviews (Box 7, Folder
10), and other writings (Box 9). A typewritten compilation of early works (Box
9, Folder 12) includes several poems that appeared in the College of Idaho’s College Coyote during his student days. Papers and examinations written at
the University of Oregon are in Box 9, Folder 13.
This finding aid includes a complete list, by title, of Tracy’s essays and
stories that are in the collection, a similar list of poems, and a bibliography
of his published works, arranged by publication in which they appeared.
Box 5: Writings
Folder 16 The
Guided Missile (Caldwell Rotary Club newsletter):
1947
17 Paul’s Potpourri: undated
18 : 1963-1966
19 : 1967-1972
Box 6: Writings
Folder 1 Essays
and short stories: “Romans and Countrymen” by Archimedes (1948-1952)
2
Essays and short stories: Untitled
3
Essays and short stories: A
4
Essays and short stories: B
5
Essays and short stories: C
6
Essays and short stories: D
7
Essays and short stories: E
8
Essays and short stories: F
9
Essays and short stories: G
10
Essays and short stories: H
11
Essays and short stories: “The Hitch”
12
Essays and short stories: I
13
Essays and short stories: J
14
Essays and short stories: L
15
Essays and short stories: M
16
Essays and short stories: Muskrat tales
Box 7:
Writings
Folder 1 Essays
and short stories: N
2
Essays and short stories: O
3
Essays and short stories: P
4
Essays and short stories: R
5
Essays and short stories: S
6
Essays and short stories: Schweitzer, Albert
7
Essays and short stories: T
8
Essays and short stories: U-V
9
Essays and short stories: W-Y
10
Essays and short stories: Book reviews
11
Poems: A
12
Poems: B
Box 8: Writings
Folder 1 Poems:
C
2
Poems: D
3
Poems: E
4
Poems: F
5
Poems: G
6
Poems: H
7
Poems: I
8
Poems: J
9
Poems: K
10
Poems: L
11
Poems: M
12
Poems: N
13
Poems: O
Box 9: Writings
Folder 1 Poems:
P
2
Poems: Q
3
Poems: R
4
Poems: Sa-Sm
5
Poems: Sn-Sz
6
Poems: T
7
Poems: U-V
8
Poems: W
9
Poems: XYZ
10
Poems: Miscellanous drafts
11
Poems: Drafts with reviewers’ comments
12
Poems: Early poems, Typed compilation
13
College papers, essays and stories (University of Oregon) (1922-1926)
Series IV: Published Writings
Included in
this series are drafts and proofs of Tracy’s book, Owyhee Horizons;
mimeographed compilations of poems; typescripts of poems he was considering
publishing; copies of his books Owyhee Horizons and Sego and Sage;
and copies of periodicals in which poems of his appeared. These periodical
issues represent only a fraction of Tracy’s published work. For a fuller list of
his published poems, stories, and essays, consult the bibliography beginning
page 40 of this finding aid. Photocopies or tearsheets of works in their
published form generally will accompany the drafts and manuscripts in Series III
(Writings).
Box 10: Published
Writings
Folder 1 Owyhee
Horizons: Typescript
2
Owyhee Horizons: Revisions
3
Owyhee Horizons: Proof sheets
4
Owyhee Horizons: Drafts, 2nd collection
5
Owyhee Horizons: Drafts, 2nd collection
6
The Barrel
7
The Beaver
8
Comfort Me With Apples
9
The Coppered Archer
10
Grace Notes
11
Horned Toad
12
Sage Leaves and Buffalo Chips
13
Mimeographed poems
14
Verses under consideration
15
Verses under consideration
16
Miscellaneous
Box 11: Published
Writings
Owyhee Horizons: Verses
and Prose. Paperback
edition
Owyhee Horizons: Verses
and Prose. Presentation
copy to Marianne Moore (hardback)
Sego and Sage
Frontier and Midland,
Summer 1939 (Vol. 19, no. 4) containing poem “Goat Girl” on page 223
Muse and Mirror,
Summer 1931 (Vol. 6, no.2) containing poem “July Fourth” on page 10
Old Oregon, October
1927 (Vol. X, no.1) containing
poem “Old Villard” on page 15
Pleiades, Jan-Feb
1940 (Vol. 1, no 1) containing
poem “Oregon Trail Marker” on page 9
Poetry, March 1932
(Vol. 39, no.6) containing
poem “Cold” on page 306
Poetry, April 1933
(Vol.42, no.1) containing
poems “Road Gang” and “The Father” on pages 18-19
Scrapbook of clipped
essays and poems (chiefly “Romans and Countrymen” by Archimedes)
Series V: Diaries, Scrapbooks, Albums
Series V
contains items in book form, as well as other miscellaneous items. Paul Tracy’s
diaries begin in 1912, when he was working as a linesman on the construction of
Arrowrock Dam. The early diaries record his work experiences, life at the
College of Idaho, YMCA activities, and World War I service. One diary (November
1918-February 1919), kept on a small writing tablet, records much information
about his squadron’s band. The diaries kept in 1974 and 1975 are very detailed
records of his daily activities in the last years of his life.
This series
also contains yearbooks and magazines from the College of Idaho and University
of Oregon, World War I postcards and memorabilia, two photo albums, and a
scrapbook of letters Tracy received, chiefly about his book Owyhee Horizons.
Box 12: Diaries, etc.
Diary: 1912 Nov-1915
Apr (black book)
Diary: 1914
Dec-1916 (brown book)
Diary: 1916 Jan-1917
Apr (pages in envelope)
Diary: 1918 Jan-1918
May (purple book)
Diary: 1918 Jun-1918
Jul (tablet in envelope)
Diary: 1918 Nov-1919
Feb (tablet in envelope)
Diary:
1962 (green book)
Diary:
1963 (brown book)
Diary: 1974 Jan-1974
Jun (loose leaf binder)
Diary: 1974 Nov-1975
Feb (pages in envelope)
Diary: 1975
unorganized (pages in envelope)
Electrical data (U.S.
Reclamation service tablet, undated)
Travel log (yellow tablet,
undated)
Plumbers’ Union membership
book (1942)
Photo album: Ranch in Long
Valley, near McCall
Postcard albums: Angouleme
(in French)
: Koln am Rhein (in German)
: Der Rhein (in German)
Program booklet, Third
Army Carnival (Coblenz, 1919)
Audiotape cassette:
Interview with Sherman Mussell, mainly about sheep shearing and sheep raising
Box 13: Diaries, etc.
Owyhee Horizons scrapbook
of congratulatory letters
College of Idaho yearbooks
and publications:
Ye Renaissance
(1908)
The College
Coyote (June 1912)
The College
Coyote (April 1913)
The Trail
(1917)
The Trail
(1919)
“C of I” photo album
The Oregana (University of
Oregon yearbook, 1927)
Series VI: Photographs
The photos
that accompany the collection are numbered and divided into subject groupings,
indicated below. All the photos in this Series are loose photos. A small album
of photos of the Tracy ranch near McCall is located in Series V (Box 13), as is
a larger album of photos of the College of Idaho.
Box 14: Photos
smaller than 5 x 7 inches
1-30 Paul E. Tracy
31-53 Dorothy Luck Tracy (wife)
54-63 William Boone Tracy (son)
63-87
Lorna Tracy (daughter)
88-122
Tracy family
123-155
Arrowrock Dam
156-202
College of Idaho
203-232
Long Valley
233-267
Miscellaneous
268-286
Silver City, Succor Creek, Owyhee County
287-371
World War I
372-418
World War I postcards
501-505
Tracy family
Unnumbered Negatives,
Tracy home in Caldwell, 1957
Unnumbered Negatives,
Lorna Tracy graduation
Unnumbered Negatives,
Gliders
Unnumbered Negatives,
Miscellaneous
Box 15: Photos 5 x 7
or larger
419-426 Paul
E. Tracy
427-430
Dorothy Luck Tracy (wife)
431
Cat
432-438
Tracy family groups
439
Silver City
440-441
Emile John, Hole-in-the-Ground, Owyhee River
442-444
World War I bands
445
Nampa High School, Class of 1904
446
Hunck family
Essays And Short Stories
These are the
titles of the essays and short stories in Series III, Boxes 6 and 7. Most are in
typescript form, and some are represented by variant drafts. Many of the essays
relate to Owyhee County topics, including mining, ranching, local history,
personalities, and Tracy’s boyhood in Silver City and Homedale. Those essays are
identified by the words “Owyhee County” (in parentheses) after the title. Essays
about Tracy’s World War I experiences and Long Valley, Idaho, are also
identified. Short stories were not labeled because in most cases the locales
were not specified. Many of them, however, were drawn from Tracy’s experiences
and knowledge of Owyhee County and Long Valley.
All in a Day’s Work.
(Owyhee County)
American Alphabet.
Ancient Regime.
Another Homedale First.
(Owyhee County)
An Apology.
Apostle Paul on the Peer
Grays.
Athenian Way of Life.
Atrocity Stories, Past and
Present.
Bedtime Stories From
Moccasin Island.
Bedtime Story From a
Fall-Out Shelter.
Bees and Alfalfa Blossom.
Begger’s Ticks.
Being a Boy in Silver.
(Owyhee County)
The Bell. (Long Valley)
Black Tigeer.
Blackie Pinneo.
The Bluejay.
Bookmark.
Bottleneck in the Bedtime
Story Business.
Boyhood Abundance.
(Owyhee County)
Buckaroo Felix. (Owyhee
County)
Butter Cooler.
The Call.
Calvin.
The Case of the Missing
Spoons.
Cat Box.
Charge.
Charge Given the
Congregation.
Charley. (Owyhee County)
Charley Morris,
Prospector. (Owyhee County)
Cheroots.
Christmas on Moccasin
Island.
Cigarettes and Lung
Cancer.
Cleanliness Akin to
Godliness.
The Clouds--and How we are
Living Them up in Idaho.
Coblenz Lutzell. (World
War I)
Compleat Prospector.
Cost of War in Spiritual
Values.
Coming Out of It.
Conflagration In Jordan.
Coronary Compensations.
The Cur.
The Cure.
Death Comes to the
Coppice.
Death Comes to the Quaking
Aspen.
Desert Dialog.
The Diabetic Bows His Head.
Diabetes, the Sneaky
Disease.
Diamonds Down the Drain.
The Discovery.
Do Something.
Do the Ki-Oats Evah Ketch
Youah Chickens? (Owyhee County)
Don’t be an S.E.
Dredge. (Owyhee County)
The Driver.
Early Episode along the
Bruneau.
Elk Hunters.
The Escape.
Everly, Linesman.
A Few Potatoes.
Flight From Hell’s Canyon.
Flood Control and Flannel.
The Flying Squirrel and
Frank Lloyd Wright.
Frederick Remington.
Fuel.
Funeral.
The Game of Garbage.
The Gold Dredge. (Owyhee
County)
Gold Remption Plan to
Date. (Owyhee County)
The Green Mailbox.
(Owyhee County)
Guns In My Life. (Owyhee
County)
Hard Winter.
Harness.
The Harnessmaker.
Hats off to Eddie.
The Haystack Pitch.
He Got Over It.
He Who Will Have a Cake.
He Would Not Go.
The Hegira.
Hell’s Canyon.
Henry.
High Water in Succor
Creek. (Owyhee County)
The Hitch. (Long Valley)
Homedale’s First Baseball
Team. (Owyhee County)
Homedale’s First Nine.
(Owyhee County)
Hook In the Hand-Line.
How to Become a
Prospector.
How to Ride the Broncho.
(Published in The Frontier)
I Call ‘Em.
Idaho, the State Allure.
The Indian Grave.
Jake Mussell was Doughty
Pioneer. (Owyhee County)
The Jobble Socketman.
J.F.K.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
John Rode. (Owyhee
County)
John Rode, Stockman.
(Owyhee County)
Judge J.T. Patch. (Owyhee
County)
Last Night’s Dream.
Lava Rock Interlude.
The Leak.
A Lesson In Grammar.
Let There Be Light.
Leviathan.
The Liar.
Library Story.
Life in These United
States.
Listening Post.
Little Drops of Water.
Living on the Right Side
of the Tracks.
The Livery Stables.
A Loose Connection.
The Long Rifle.
Man On Horseback. (Owyhee
County)
Memo To Governor Smylie.
Memorial to Paul Murphy.
Minthorn.
Mister Bradshaw. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Kaggai. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Landbeck. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Mussell. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Myler. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Napton. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Tracy. (Owyhee
County)
Mister Van Curtis,
Blacksmith. (Owyhee County)
Misuse of Fixtures Results
only in Trouble for Owners.
Modern Plumbing Series.
Mooching for Salmon.
More about Hell’s Canyon.
Murphy.
Must China Turn to Force?
My Career As a
Capitalist. (Owyhee County)
My Day.
My Pet Peeve.
My Sneeze.
A Myth.
Nazareth, 1957.
New Approach.
The New Country By Better
Roads. (Owyhee County)
No Little Girl.
Not as an Hireling. (Long
Valley)
Not Enough Baths.
Notify the Papers.
The Old Man.
Old Man Stull. (Owyhee
County)
An Old Plumber Looks at
the New Poet.
The Old Rebel.
Old Red. (Published in The Dial and Owyhee Horizons)
Old Roads.
Old Stockman Leaves World
of Confusion. [John Rode] (Owyhee County)
On a Certain Habit in a
Hospital.
One Big Moment. (World War
I)
Operation Vermes.
Oregon, An Adequate State.
The Oregon Trail and
Homedale. (Owyhee County)
Out of the Frying Pan.
An Outstanding Man.
Over Here.
Over the Top. (World War
I)
Owyhee, County of
Contrasts. (Owyhee County)
Owyhee County Pioneer.
[Jacob Mussell] (Owyhee County)
Owyhee Interlude. (Owyhee
County)
Parable of the Sower.
The Passing Pedestrian.
Pet Peeves: The Plumber’s.
Plumber in Lebanon.
The Plumber and the Poet.
A Plumber Looks at a Poet.
The Poet and the Plumber.
The Producers Public
Market.
Progress. (Long Valley)
Prophet Without Honor.
Prospector Story.
The Race.
Radio Script.
The R.A.F.
Red Benton.
Red Burns the Light Ahead.
Report From the Weiser.
A Return to Normalcy.
Rock Hound.
Sandy and the Inevitabe.
Scarface Charley. (Owyhee
County)
Scarface Charley,
Buckaroo. (Owyhee County)
Sell Your Shirt and Buy a
Book.
A Senior Citizen Says.
Serious Thinker.
Sewage Disposal.
Shooting the Wapids.
Shupe Story.
Side-Effect of Golfing.
Silver City Re-Visited,
Oct. 1958. (Owyhee County)
Smiles.
Snake Mistake.
Snow.
The Soft Sell.
Some Call it
Homesteading. (Owyhee County)
Some Real “Fly” Fishing.
Some Day.
South Kimball Street.
(Owyhee County)
Spuds.
Sputnik’s Five Year Plan.
The Spy.
Stable in Silver. (Owyhee
County)
A Stick and a Half.
The Stranger.
Study of Poet and Plumber.
Sugar Brim Blues or From
Cradle to Cradle.
Talk on V-E Day.
Then Came the Catastrophic
End of the World!
These Days.
The Thinker.
This Is America.
Three Minutes on Father’s
Day.
Three Minutes on Prayer.
Tires.
To Repair Plumbing.
Today’s Parable.
Trade Dollar Revisited.
(Owyhee County)
Trips With Thurlow.
Two Ghosts Walk at
Christmas.
An Unforgettable
Character. [Charlie Morris] (Owyhee County)
The Vacation of Mustapha.
(by Robert J. Burdette)
The Vision of Philo the
Hermit.
Whales.
What Animal? What?
(Owyhee County)
What Was It?
What You Need.
We Mail the Box.
Wheel and the River.
Who is it?
Who is Neighbor?
The Wolf and the
Sheep-Skin.
Woman on Horseback.
The Word Was Jake.
Words I Like.
The Writer.
The Year I Spent With the
Iroquois.
Young Vaquero.
Poems
These are
titles of the poems by Paul E. Tracy in Series III, Boxes 7 to 9. Most are
represented by variant drafts, both handwritten and typewritten. Poems published
in Tracy’s books Owyhee Horizons and Sego and Sage are so
indicated (OH and SS), as are other places of publication when known. Fuller
citations for published poems are given in the Bibliography section of this
finding aid beginning on page 40. The publication information was derived from
Tracy’s correspondence, notes, and copies of published poems, as well as the
reprint permission page of Owyhee Horizons.
Ab Gordon.
Above Owyhee Dam.
Abraham Today.
Afloat.
Africa.
African Genesis.
After Lewis Carroll.
Agate Hunter.
The Airplane Comes to the
Owyhee Breaks.
Airplane Salvage;
Coulomiers, France, 1918.
Albert Schweitzer.
All I Recall.
Altar.
The Ambitious Band.
America Speaks.
Anvil Ringing.
Appreciation, or S.P.
Echoes. (Unidentified clipping)
April 1, 1966.
Apostle Paul on the Peer
Group.
Arachne. (OH, Medford
Mail-Tribune)
Arrowrock Dam. (OH,
Northwest Verse)
Arrowrock Dam Chant.
As A Reed.
Ascent.
Asphalt Verse.
Attilla the Hun.
Aunt Mary Remembers. (OH,
Driftwood)
Baffled Teacher.
Balance. (Tulsa Poetry
Quarterly)
Balancing Act.
Ballad.
Ballad, For the Young
Rider.
The Band Concert.
(Unidentified clipping)
Barefoot.
The Barrell. (SS,
Cold-Drill)
Basalt Cone.
Be Still.
Beaver.
Bed Tarp (OH, Frontier
and Midland)
Beggar’s Ticks.
Big Freeze-Up.
The Big Tape.
Bird Song.
Bivouac.
Black Chaps.
The Blind Wife. (OH,
Driftwood)
Blindness.
Box Social.
Bread.
Breakfast.
Brother Leaf.
Buckeroo.
Buckeroo Felix. (see
also Felix, Buckeroo)
The Buckeroo Speaks.
Buffaloes.
Bulletin From Malheur.
Bulletin From Trembley
Creek.
Bulletins.
Burn, Bush, Burn.
Burning Bush.
Burnt River.
Burrowing Owl.
Butter-cooler, Frontier
Model.
Cabbage at 3 a.m.
Cabin Fever.
Cactus Blossom. (SS)
The Call.
Cameo.
Camp Tender. (SS)
Canal Builders 1905.
The Capitalist.
(Driftwood)
Capitalists.
Carleton’s Ranch.
Cascade Spirit.
Cascade Verdict. (Medford
Mail-Tribune)
Celebration.
Celilo.
Celilo Falls.
Chant of the Placer
Miners.
Cheat Fire.
The Chicken.
Chronic Case.
Circuit Rider. (OH,
Frontier)
Citizen Jewett.
Clean-up.
Closed Eyes.
Cloudburst.
Cockle Burrs.
Coffee Mill. (Driftwood)
Coils.
Cold. (OH, Poetry)
Colombey Les Belles.
Committee Report.
Compass.
Concert at Dawn.
Concert Echoes.
Conductor Crane.
Confrontation.
Construction.
Consummate Holdup!
Conversion.
Continuing Cold. (SS)
Cool It, Man, Cool It.
Coppered Archer. (OH,
Christian Century)
Coronary.
Correspondence.
Cosmic Signal.
Conversion. (SS)
Coulomiers.
County.
County Fair.
County Malheur. (OH,
Oregonian)
County Seat.
The Cow.
Cow Woman. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
Cowlitz.
Coyote.
Coyote Skeleton.
Coyote Among Watermelon.
The Crash Detail.
The Cripple. (SS,
Unidentified clipping)
Crop Duster. (OH,
Clackamas County News)
Cruise. (Oregonian)
The Cruising Hawk.
Culture Hits the Crick.
Dairy Woman.
Dark Stephen.
Dawn Concert.
Day Above Durkee.
Dead End.
Death In the Afternoon.
December Prayer.
Deer Hunter.
De Lamar Mill. (OH,
Oregonian)
Democracy.
Departure.
Desert.
Desert Dialog.
Desert Drama. (SS,
Driftwood)
Desert Malheur.
Desert Owyhee.
Desert Recipe.
The Deserted.
Detached.
Deterrent Tiger.
Detour.
Diabetic.
Dialog (Medford
Mail-Tribune, Oregonian)
Diggers.
Dinner in the Desert.
Discourse.
Disciple Moderne.
The Dispenser Happening.
Ditch Rider.
Dooley Mountain.
(Unidentified clipping)
The Dredge.
The Dredge Tender.
The Driver.
Driver Tests.
Drum Again, Ponies.
The Duck. (Northwest
Verse) (see also Surf Duck)
Each Year.
Early Settler. (SS)
Easter.
Echo.
Echo From a Tub.
Echoes From the Owyhee.
Ecology Apology to William
Wordsworth.
Ecological Outburst From
the Snake.
Edgecliff Drive.
An Elder’s Lament.
The Elevated.
Emmaus.
Encounter.
Endlessly Falling.
Endlessly Tumbling.
English Poet, 1941.
Entertainment.
Epitaph. (OH)
Epitaph.
Esthete Bootlegger.
Even Greasewood then…
An Evening With History.
Everyone.
Exam.
Exam Time.
Existentialist. (OH,
Christian Century, Idaho’s Poetry: A Centennial Anthology, News-Tribune)
The Father. (OH, Poetry)
Felix, Buckeroo.
(Driftwood)
Fenders.
Ferryboat. (OH, Medford
Mail-Tribune, News-Tribune)
Ferryboats.
Fire!
Fires Three.
Fish Hook Fervor.
(Unidentified clipping)
First Call.
A Fisherman Faces 1960.
The Flake.
Flights.
Florida Mountain.
(Medford Mail-Tribune)
Followers.
Footloose.
The Ford.
Forgive, Lord.
Forward Look.
Fragmented Psalm 20 for
1975.
Free Hand Drawing.
Freeze-up.
From Puddles…..
Galluses. (Driftwood)
Garage Petition at Dawn.
George Cooksey.
The Glory Departed.
Goals.
Goat Girl. (OH; Netted
Gems of Verse)
Gold Dredge.
Golf Cart.
Grandpa Packrat.
Grasscatcher Blues.
Grasscatcher Groans.
Greasewood.
Greasewood Prima Donna.
(SS)
The Great Refusal.
The Greedy Gull.
Grip.
Ground Owl.
Grudge Fight at Coblenz.
Guests. (Driftwood)
The Gunny Sack.
(Cold-Drill)
Habbakkuk.
Habbakkuk, 1952.
Haikku.
Halley’s Comet.
Hang In There, Brother.
A Happening.
Hard Winter.
Harness Maker.
Harvest.
Harvest 1969.
Harvest Moon.
Hay Makers.
He Fit Box!
He Wanted to Run Wild.
The Heart Bowed Down.
(College Coyote)
The Heights.
Help Help.
Herder. (OH, Driftwood)
Hermit.
The High Line.
Hillside Cycle.
History is a Mud Flat.
The Hold-Up.
Holiday.
Homestead Son.
Homo Cycle.
Hong Kong Flu.
Hooked.
The Hope.
Hopeful Atom.
Horned Toad. (Frontier)
Horny Toad.
Horse Thieves.
Horsemeat. (Frontier) (see
also Wild Horses)
Hospital.
Hospital Bed.
Hospital Case.
Hospital Terminal Case.
The Hostler. (SS)
Hot Solder.
How Do I Know?
Hunger.
Hunter Finals.
Hunting License.
Hunting Song.
Hymn for Hunter.
I Fit Box!
I Hear America Singing.
I Saw a Blackbird.
I Send You Sage Leaves. (see
Sage Leaves)
I Sing of Two Worlds.
I Tellie You Boy.
I Thirst…
Icarus.
Icicles.
Idaho.
Idaho Abundance.
Idaho Canvas.
Idaho Desert.
Ike.
In Ancient Time.
In Silver City. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
Incident on Pine Creek.
Indifference.
Indian Grave.
Indian Mound.
Inquiry.
Interrogation. (OH,
Medford Mail-Tribune)
Intruder.
Intrusion.
Isn’t or Ain’t
Jaques In the Air.
Jerks.
John 3:14-15.
John the Baptist.
Jordan Valley Dawn. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
July Fourth. (Muse &
Mirror)
July Fourth At the Falls,
’53.
Juniper.
Juntura Farmer and Burns’
“wee, sleekit, cowerin’, tim’rous beastie”
Kamikaze Crystal.
The Kildeer. (College
Coyote)
The Kitchen Sink.
(Unidentified clipping)
Klatawa. (Unidentified
clipping from an Oregon newspaper)
Klein Pliers.
Lament.
Lament of the Goose
Hunter.
Lament From the Snake
River.
Landbeck.
Lava Butte.
Leaksmith Lament.
Lent 1961.
Leslie Canyon.
Leslie Gulch.
Lesson From the Snake.
Let There Be Light.
Letter to a G.I. in
Vietnam. (Driftwood)
Library.
The Light.
The Light Burns Red.
Lines by an Owyhee
Outlander.
Lines to a Hippie.
Linesman. (OH)
Linesman to His Helper.
Listen.
The Long Road Home.
Look Around.
Looking Ahead.
Love Can Change All.
Lulls.
Machinery.
MacKenzie.
Magpie. (SS)
Mail Stage. (OH, SS,
Cold-Drill, Medford Mail-Tribune)
Malaise.
Malchus. (OH, Driftwood)
Malheur. (Oregonian)
Malheur Boom.
Malheur Buckeroo among the
Late Models.
Malheur Dawn.
Malheur Dusk. (OH,
New-Tribune, Oregonian)
Malheur Ranch.
Man, Slow up!
Map Rock.
Marooned.
Martha’s Christmas. (OH,
Oregonian)
Martha’s Willow.
(Oregonian)
Matthew 8:14. (The Pulpit)
Maturity. (Driftwood)
May.
Me?
Me—or Him!
The Meadow Lark’s Song.
(Unidentified clipping)
Meditations of a Botanist.
(College Coyote)
Meeting at Froman’s Ferry.
Menu Change.
Merganser. (OH, Driftwood)
Methusaleh.
The Miner.
Mining Camp Smithy.
Mining Town Smithy.
Minor Melody.
The Mistake.
Mister Stull.
Moccasin Track.
Modern Man.
Modern Stephen.
Mole?
More in Seventy-four.
Morning.
Morton.
Moses.
Motorize It!
The Mountain.
Mountain Cloudburst. (OH,
Oregonian)
Mountain Goats.
Murphey’s Hat.
Museum Piece. (SS)
Museum Tiger.
Musicians.
My Ike.
My Town.
Nature in Balance.
Nay-Sayer.
News.
Night.
1942.
Non-Breakthrough.
Not Clods Alone.
November.
Now!
Number 1079043.
October.
Octogenarian.
Offering. (Medford
Mail-Tribune)
Old Charley.
Old Cow Hand. (Driftwood)
Old Gardener.
Old Geezer.
The Old Man.
Old Man Among Implements.
Old Stage Driver.
Old Timer.
Old Villard. (Old Oregon)
An Old Woman Remembers.
Old Wrangler.
Omar on the Murphy.
(College Coyote)
On Finding a Dying Beaver.
(Intermountain Observer)
On the Bottom.
Once.
Open Season.
Opening Day.
The Order.
Oregon Dawn. (Oregonian)
Oregon Trail Marker.
(Driftwood, Pleiades)
Our Guns Speak.
Out of Silence.
Out of the Depths.
Overland Stage.
Overnight Guests.
Owl.
Owyhee Breaks.
Owyhee County.
Owyhee Dusk.
Owyhee Horizons. (OH,
Oregonian)
Owyhee Re-Visited.
Owyhee Spring Song. (OH,
News-Tribune, Statewide)
Ox Shoe.
The Packrat.
Panorama.
Parable of Progress.
Parting. (Driftwood)
The Passage.
Patriarch.
Paul’s Petition.
Pavement Pieces.
Peasant.
Pendulum. (OH, Driftwood)
Petition.
Pheasant Hunter.
Philosophy Major.
Pigs In Silver.
Pine Creek Prospector.
(SS)
The Pioneer on Aesthetics.
(OH, Frontier)
The Pious Plumber.
Placer Miner. (OH,
Oregonian)
The Plumber. (OH,
Northwest Verse, Poetry)
Plumber Bill.
A Plumber Bows His Head.
A Plumber Opens His Door.
Plumber’s Lament.
Poem for Pooh.
Poems are Grace Notes (SS)
Poems From the Pavement.
Poet and Plumber Overture.
Point Creek.
Pointer.
Poison Oak.
Prayer…
Primer.
A Primer for Plumbers.
Progress on the Move.
Prophet.
Prospector. (Oregonian,
Unidentified clipping)
Proud of My Church.
Psaltery with Suds.
(Medford Mail-Tribune)
The Public Market.
(Unidentified clipping)
Puget Panarama.
Pushbutton War.
Quicksand.
Quiet, Hospital Zone.
(Driftwood)
Rabbit Brush.
The Rampage.
Rattlesnake.
Realist.
Reading British Poet, J.S.
Red Dredge.
Red Trail.
Reflective Coyote in a
Watermelon Patch.
Reflections Fronting a
W.C.
The Release. (Driftwood)
Rembercourt.
Renewal.
Requiem for a Chicken
Thief. (SS)
Research on Rock Flat.
(Medford Mail-Tribune)
Retainer. (SS)
The Return. (Driftwood)
Rewards. (Unidentified
clipping)
Riders.
Road Gang. (OH, Poetry)
Rock Hound.
Round Trip.
Rubber Nautilus.
Ruby Yacht.
Runoff.
Sabertooth Tiger.
Sage.
Sage Hen. (Driftwood,
Oregonian)
Sage Land.
Sage Leaves. (OH,
Christian Science Monitor, News-Tribune)
Sage Tick.
Sample Verse.
Sappho Phones the
Urologist.
Saturday Review.
Say Goodbye.
Scarface Charley.
(Frontier)
Scarface Was Not Home.
The Scrub. (College
Coyote)
The Sea Lion.
The Seed.
Seer and Snake. A Desert
Dialog (Medford Mail-Tribune)
Sego Serenity.
Senior Citizen.
Senior Song.
Sheepherder.
Shoestring Ranch. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
Shoshone Falls. (Medford
Mail-Tribune)
Sickness.
Silence Becomes the Old.
Siletz Bay.
Silver City.
Silver City 1863-1963.
Silver City 1896.
(Cold-Drill)
Silver City 1898.
Silver City Blacksmith.
Silver City Re-Visited.
Simile. (College Coyote)
Simon the Cyrenian Speaks.
Skips.
Smithy.
The Snake and Adam.
Snake Mistake.
Snake Pit.
Snake River.
Snap Poo.
Snowflake. (SS)
Snowflakes.
Soapsud Rhapsody.
Soil Pipe Sonnets.
Solo.
Soloists.
Solos.
Some Class! (College
Coyote)
Song.
The Song Ye Need.
Songs of Civilization.
The Sonic Boom.
Sonnet to a Linesman.
(Medford Mail-Tribune)
Spectators.
Spectators All.
Spectres Meet Froman’s
Ferry.
Spider.
Spring Comes to the
Zealot.
Spring Fingers the Zealot.
Spring Song.
Stage Driver.
Stage Driver’s Return.
Star.
Steamshovel.
Steelhead Fisherman.
The Stock Yard’s Mule.
(College Coyote)
Stop-light Prayer.
Storm.
Student.
Succor Creek Canyon.
(Oregonian)
Succor Creed Stanzas.
Such.
Sucker Creek.
Summit Meeting.
The Sun.
Sunlight.
Super Mugger.
Supplication From the
Street.
Surf Duck. (OH) (see
also The Duck)
Surf Rider.
Survival.
Suspect.
Sweet Clover Seed.
(Unidentified clipping)
The Taming.
Teamster and His World.
Teamsters.
Tears.
Technician Talks.
Terminal Case.
Thirst.
Thirty Years.
This Coming Christmas.
Thoughts Reading Silkin.
Thoughts While Reading.
Thoughts While Strolling
in My Orchard.
Thousand Roads.
Three A.M.
Three Fingers Butte. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
Three Songs of
Civilization.
Threnody.
Thumb.
Thursday at the Stock
Yards.
Thursday Night at the
Union Stock Yards.
Thursday Stock Yards. (SS)
Time.
Time Like a Tape.
To a Ground Hog.
To a Pipeline.
To a Teacher, H-T-.
To a Walter Closet.
To Diva, Not Yet in
Heaven.
To Lay Her Young.
(Unidentified clipping)
To My School.
Today’s Saul.
Topics.
Tracy’s Four Gaits. (SS)
Trails.
Transmission Line.
(Driftwood)
Travelogue.
Trembly Creek.
Triolet.
Trouble Shooter.
Truck Driver.
Tuba Solo.
The TWA Ghosts.
Twentieth Century Saul.
The Two Magpies.
Vapor Trail.
Vespers.
Via Telstar.
Vietnam.
Viper Crisis.
Vision in 1966.
The Visitor.
Vocational Coward.
The Walking Club. (College
Coyote)
War.
Warmth.
Warning.
Was This Trip Necessary?
Wayworn.
Welcome Change!
Welder.
West Wind. (OH,
News-Tribune, Oregonian)
Westerners. (OH, Frontier,
News-Tribune)
What You Need.
Where, Oh Snake?
Where Once the Turtle
Dove.
White Pass.
Who Is His Neighbor?
Wild Goats.
Wild Horses. (OH,
News-Tribune, Idaho Statesman) (see also Horsemeat)
Wilder.
Windmill Tower.
Window.
Wings. (Driftwood)
Winter 1955.
Winter Holiday.
Winter in Owyhee.
The Women.
Women’s Hair.
Worship.
The Worshipper. (Driftwood,
Presbyterian Life)
The Wrinkled World.
Xenophan’s Cavalry.
The “Y”.
Ye Sweet Hat.
Ye Tick.
The Yield. (OH)
Your Ears Please.
Yucca Flat.
Zealot and His Tree.
Bibliography Of Published Poems, Essays, and Stories
Listed below
are poems and other writings by Paul E. Tracy published in journals, magazines,
newspapers, and anthologies. Publications information was derived from Tracy’s
correspondence, notes, and copies of published poems, as well as the reprint
permissions page of his book, Owyhee Horizons. Some of the bibliographic
citations are incomplete, as may be the list itself, particularly in the
category of poems published in local newspapers. Stories and essays are so
identified after the title in this list; works not so labeled are poems.
The Christian
Century (Chicago, Ill.)
Coppered
Archer. February 17, 1954 (Vol.71, no.7, page 201)
Existentialist. April 8, 1959 (Vol.76, no.14, page 418)
The Christian
Science Monitor (Boston, Mass.)
I Send You
Sage Leaves. September 12, 1967 (Page 8)
Published
later as Sage Leaves.
Clackamas County
News (Estacadda, Oregon)
Crop Duster.
July 18, 1968
Cold-Drill
(Boise State University)
The Barrel.
1971-1972 (Section Two: Page 2)
The Gunny
Sack. 1972-1973 (Page 32)
Mail Stage.
1975-1976 (Page 78)
Silver City
1896. 1970-1971 (Page 23)
The College Coyote
(College of Idaho, Caldwell)
A typewritten
compilation of these poems is contained in the collection, Box 9, Folder 12.
The Crammer
(essay). March 1911 (Vol.1, no.6)
The Heart
Bowed Down. October 15, 1911 (Vol.2, no.1)
The Kildeer.
January 31, 1917 (Vol.7, no.7)
Meditations of
a Botanist. November 1910 (Vol.1, no.2)
The New Poetry
(essay). March 14, 1917 (Literary supplement Vol.1, no.1)
Omar on the
Murphy. May 23, 1917 (Literary supplement Vol.1, no.2)
The Scrub.
December 16, 1916 (Vol.7, no.5)
A Simile.
January 15, 1912 (Vol.2, no.4)
Some Class!
March 1911 (Vol.1, no.6)
The Stock
Yard’s Mule. November 16, 1916 (Vol.7, no.3)
The Walking
Club. May 1911 (Vol.1, no.8)
(Untitled)
March 14, 1917 (Vol.7, no.10)
The Dial
(Chicago, Ill).
Old Red (short
story). December 1927 (Vol.83, pages 464-468)
Driftwood
(Grants Pass, Ore.; Woodburn, Ore.) (Edited by George
S. Whittaker)
Aunt Mary
Remembers.
The Blind
Wife. Autumn 1962 (Vol. 1, no.4, page 16)
The
Capitalist. Summer & Fall 1972 (Vol. 11, no.2, page 17)
Coffee Mill.
Winter 1967-68 (Vol. 7, no.1, page 19)
Desert
Drama. Autumn 1968 (Vol. 7, no.4, page 1)
Felix,
Buckaroo. Summer and Autumn 1971 (Vol. 10, no.3, page 8)
Galluses.
Winter 1972-1973 (Vol. 11, no.3, page 25)
Guests.
Winter 1964-1965 (Vol. 4, no.1, page 4)
Herder.
Homo Cycle.
Letter to a GI
in Vietnam. Spring 1968 (Vol. 7, no.2, page 21)
Malchus (John
18:10). Winter 1966-1967 (Vol. 6, no.1, page 19)
Maturity.
Autumn 1967 (Vol. 6, no.4, page 3)
Merganser.
Autumn 1964 (Vol. 3, no.4, page 19)
Old Cow Hand.
Summer 1962 (Vol. 1, no.3, page 20)
Oregon Trail
Marker. Winter 1962-63 (Vol. 2, no.1, page 14)
Parting.
Autumn 1969 (Vol. 8, no.4, page 7)
Pendulum.
Quiet:
Hospital Zone.
The
Release. Spring 1969 (Vol. 8, no.2, page 10)
The Return.
Summer 1963 (Vol. 2, no.3, page 20)
Sage Hen.
Spring 1972 (Vol. 11, no.1, page 8)
Transmission
Line. Spring & Summer 1974 (Vol. 12, no.3, page 16)
Wings.
Winter 1969-70 (Vol. 9, no.1, page 22)
The
Worshipper. Summer 1966 (Vol. 5, no.3, page 12)
The Frontier
(University of Montana, Missoula)
Circuit
Rider. January 1933 (Vol. 13, no.2, page 92)
Horned Toad.
May 1930 (Vol. 10, no.4, page 331)
Horsemeat.
November 1930 (Vol. 11, no.1, page 73)
How to Ride
the Broncho (essay). March 1930 (Vol.10, no.3, pages 237-238)
Linesman.
May 1932 (Vol.12, no.4, page 328)
The Pioneer on
Esthetics. March 1931 (Vol.11, no.3, page 269)
Scarface
Charley. January 1930 (Vol.10, no.2, page 142)
Westerners.
May 1931 (Vol.11, no.4, page 376)
The Frontier and
Midland (University of Montana, Missoula)
Bed Tarp.
November 1933 (Vol. 14, no.1, page 48)
Goat Girl.
Summer 1939 (Vol. 19, no.4, page 223)
Idaho Statesman
(Boise, Idaho)
Silver City,
1863-1963. (undated clipping)
Wild Horses.
(undated clipping)
Idaho’s Poetry: A
Centennial Anthology. Edited by Ronald E. McFarland and William
Studebaker. Moscow: University of Idaho Press. 1988
Existentialist. Page 126
Intermountain
Observer (Boise, Idaho)
On Finding a
Dying Beaver. April 15, 1972
Medford Mail-Tribune
(Medford, Ore.)
These poems
appeared in the “Poets’ Corner” column edited by Arnold Eugene Jenny.
Arachne.
Cascade
Verdict. September 6, 1970
Dialog.
April 18, 1971
Ferryboat.
Flor |