Calling Sandburg’s detention an unconscionable act of censorship, Hughes would fight it, he wrote. From Wordnik.com. [Savage Peace] Reference
Summary: Sandburg was like a goddamned octopus in bed. From Wordnik.com. [New J/B Fic: Scavengers (PG)] Reference
Here's one of my favorite seasonal poems, by Carl Sandburg. From Wordnik.com. [Sound Politics: "Christmas trees are going back up at Sea-Tac airport."] Reference
I thought of a favorite Sandburg poem, with a new twist. From Wordnik.com. [When Cake Becomes a Crime] Reference
“On the one hand”: Sandburg, The Chicago Race Riots, 4. From Wordnik.com. [Savage Peace] Reference
Go to it, O jazzmen, Sandburg croons in the Chicago streets. From Wordnik.com. [norbert blei | be it beat « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground] Reference
“Day by day”: Letter, Carl Sandburg to his editor, Sam T. From Wordnik.com. [Savage Peace] Reference
Sandburg once christened Chicago "hog butcher for the world". From Wordnik.com. [Blind Obedience to the Canons of Capitalism:Of Sick Societies, American Dalits, and a Nation of Lady Macbeths] Reference
Many famous people lived there, including the Sandburg family. From Wordnik.com. [Lose Some...] Reference
Early last week, I wrote about Salinger, Saroyan, and Sandburg. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-01-01] Reference
Mental multivitamin (M-mv) in wrote Carl Sandburg about Chicago. From Wordnik.com. [02.04] Reference
Paul Rosenfeld72 is quite a person—he admires Sandburg though!. From Wordnik.com. [A Life in Letters] Reference
Finally he jerked his safety line to signal Sandburg for more slack. From Wordnik.com. [The Past Through Tomorrow]
Carl Sandburg: "Someday there will be a war, and no one will come" 1. From Wordnik.com. [Betty Williams - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Carl Sandburg once wrote that "the fog comes in on little cats feet.". From Wordnik.com. [Balkinization] Reference
“I have no criticism”: Mitgang, The Letters of Carl Sandburg, 328. From Wordnik.com. [Savage Peace] Reference
Here is an incomplete list of books and anthologies published by Sandburg. From Wordnik.com. [carl sandburg | father to son « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground] Reference
And Sandburg and Rice moved forward, and may pull a Gary Carter eventually. From Wordnik.com. [Heyman on Rose] Reference
His thick, snow-white hair hung down over his forehead, Carl Sandburg style. From Wordnik.com. [When the Bough Breaks] Reference
Among those caught in the wide net of domestic intelligence was Carl Sandburg. From Wordnik.com. [Savage Peace] Reference
It arrives, with all apologies to Carl Sandburg, like the fog, on little cat feet. From Wordnik.com. [03/04/2005] Reference
H.L. Mencken called Carl Sandburg “indubitably an American in every pulse-beat.”. From Wordnik.com. [carl sandburg | father to son « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground] Reference
But Sandburg was also right, when he said: "Our lives are like a candle in the wind.". From Wordnik.com. [Rebecca Sive: A Lesson for Those Who Would Lead America's Cities: Michael Scott Did Not Die in Vain] Reference
Thanks for the reminder of "the other Carl Sandburg," as Philip Yannella titled his book. From Wordnik.com. [Is That Legal?: If he Wrote it Today, It Might be called "Sand"] Reference
If Sandburg had known him, Chicago would have been less hogbutcher and more thoughtprimer. From Wordnik.com. [Studs and Me] Reference
So this guy starts to hit like a young Ryne Sandberg after hitting like an old Carl Sandburg. From Wordnik.com. [Baseball '97: Expect the unexpected] Reference
Mr. WILSON: Well, Sandburg wrote two separate works about Lincoln, which are nowadays combined. From Wordnik.com. [Honor's Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln] Reference
Or Fog by Carl Sandburg - a poem that fills us with the feeling of how it is to watch the weather. From Wordnik.com. [I Just Don't Get Poetry] Reference
I suppose that if Sandburg were writing today, he might write a poem like this and call it "Sand.". From Wordnik.com. [Is That Legal?: October 2006 Archives] Reference
Many of America's schools are like Sandburg -- outmoded, ill designed, unfit for the 21st century. From Wordnik.com. [Classrooms With Class--And Possibly Espresso Mac] Reference
In school we got a sunnier picture of Sandburg, celebrating American life, but he was more complicated than that. From Wordnik.com. [Is That Legal?: October 2006 Archives] Reference
The book is a collection of writing excerpts by the likes of Bertrand Russell, Rebecca West, Carl Sandburg and others. From Wordnik.com. [A Sad State of Affairs « So Many Books] Reference
Sandburg in the 1930s, and James G. Randall in the 1940s and 1950s enlarged and enriched our understanding of Lincoln's life. From Wordnik.com. [A Passive President?] Reference
Sandburg did change over time to become much more conservative, but the early radical poet and journalist still has plenty to say. From Wordnik.com. [Is That Legal?: If he Wrote it Today, It Might be called "Sand"] Reference
I guess I had good teachers (or less sunny ones) because, back in the '80s, Grass was my first taste of Sandburg, and it was in class. From Wordnik.com. [Is That Legal?: If he Wrote it Today, It Might be called "Sand"] Reference
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