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1. "Flower o' the Peach" (short story), Trident 1, no. 27 (July 2, 1904):31-32. Putnam Museum.2. "Dies on Train Returning Home," Davenport Times (February 14, 1905).3. "The Founders" (poem), Davenport Democrat (October 22, 1905). Reprinted (March 25, 1943).4. [Thersites], "Diphtheria in Davenport," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 2 (December 1905): 5-6.5. "Socialists and Kindergartens," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 4 (February 1906): 7-11.6. [Thersites], "The Children vs The Library Board," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 4 (February 1906): 16-17.7. [Vesuvius], "Our Autocratic School Board," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 7 (May 1906): 13-14.8. [Thersites], "The Salvation of the Working Class," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 9 (July 1906): 8-10.9. [Thersites], "Why People Go to Brick Munro's," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 11 (September 1906): 1-4.10. "Recent Books," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 11 (September 1906): 19-20.11. "Waifs" (poem), McClure's 30, no. 5 (March 1908): 590.12. "Actaeon" (poem), Century 76, no. 76, (August 1908): 494.13. "Tamburlaine" (poem), Harper's 118, no. 2 (January 1909): 299.14. "Seeker," Harper's 118, no. 3 (February 1909): 440.15. "The Woman and the Poet," Mother Earth 4, no. 8 (October 1909): 251-55.NOTES:1. Floyd Dell, Homecoming (New York: Farrar, 1933). "He was irked by the narrow life of his own poor boyhood struggling to keep afloat above indigence in the cramped towns of Illinois and Iowa." Harlan Hatcher, Creating the Modern American Novel (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1935), 75.2. New York Times, October 14, 1925.3. Homecoming, 93.4. Ibid., 94.5. Harry Hansen, Midwest Portraits; A Book of Memories and Friendships (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1923): 209-10.6. Bookman 57, no. 1 (March 1923):66. See Louis J. Bragman, "The Case of Floyd Dell: A Study in the Psychology of Adolescence," Journal of American Psychiatry 93 (May 1937): 1401-11.7. Alden Whitman, New York Times, July 30, 1969.8. An American Testament (New York: Farrar, 1936), 243.9. Homecoming, 39.10. Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 31, 1961. Cleveland Public Library Archives.11. Homecoming, 17.12. Ibid.13. Moon-Calf (New York: Knopf, 1920), 176.14. Homecoming, 106. His mother saved these booklets and so did Marilla Freeman, who remembered "those very early verses, of which hand-illuminated copies may be found in my portfolio!" Personal Glimpses of Some Modern Poets (Cleveland: Drexel Institute: 1940), 2. Cleveland Public Library Archives.15. Davenport Democrat, March 25, 1943 reprinted the original poem of 1905.16. "Waifs," McClure's 30, no. 5 (March 1908):590; "Actaeon," Century 76, no. 4 (August 1908): 494; "Seeker," Harper's 118, no. 3 (February 1909): 440; "Tamburlaine," Harper's 118, no. 2 (January 1909): 299.17. John T. Flanagan, "A Decade of Middlewestern Autobiography," Centennial Review 26, no. 2 (Spring 1982): 123.18. Harry Hansen, "Davenport Boyhood," Palimpsest 37, no. 4 (April 1956):215.19. Homecoming, 133.20. Davenport Times, February 14, 1905.21. Davenport Times, October 7, 1933.22. Homecoming, 18. Gerhard Bach discusses the unique aspects of the Davenport socialists in "Susan Glaspell Revisited: A Workshop Report," Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter 6, no. 1 (Summer 1976):2-4. A public debate on socialism occurred in the spring of 1904. See Davenport Democrat May 31, 1904. See also Ernest Boyd, "A Literary Causerie," Independent 112, no. 9 (April 26, 1924): 230. John Chamberlain wrote that Dell was "a student of Marx, he yet betrays himself as having been wholly mid-West populist in his social philosophy .... He is a walking contradiction." New York Times, September 29, 1933. Dell describes Felix Fay as "the incorrigible Utopian." Moon-Calf, 287.23. Moon-Calf, 163.24. "Salutatory," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 1 (November 1905):2. J. C. Gibson was the editor.25. Moon-Calf, 218; Davenport Democrat. February 13, 1940.26. "Why People Go to Brick Munro's," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 11 (September 1906):2.27. Homecoming, 142.28. Ibid., 83. The same passage is used in Moon-Calf, 157.29. Moon-Calf, 394.30. Davenport Democrat, June 26, 1921.31. George Tanselle, "Sinclair Lewis and Floyd Dell: Two Views of the Midwest," Twentieth Century Literature 9, no. 4 (January 1964):175-84. A recent example of this confusion is an article by Park Goist, "Community and Self in the Midwest Town: Floyd Dell's Moon-Calf," Midamerica 2 (1975):88-92.32. "Flower o' the Peach" Trident 1, no. 27 (July 2, 1904):31-32. The title for his first short story is at first glance quite puzzling. It seems unlikely that he was attempting to refer to the oriental metaphor of the "flower bud" as sexual awakening. See Charles Humana and Wang Wu, Chinese Sex Secrets; A Look Behind the Screen (New York: Gallery Books, 1984), pp. 18, 29, passim. A more likely meaning is the Iowa folk saying that if you pick the flower of a fruit, then you won't be able to eat it as a developed apple or peach. If this folk saying of Andrew, Iowa, is applied to the story, the Christian missionary should have waited for his convert to personally accept the new religion of Christianity, instead of pressuring the young Chinese boy, and eventually losing him to traditional beliefs.33. "The Woman and the Poet," Mother Earth 4, no. 8 (October 1909):251-55. This was one of several stories that he wrote in 1908 but the only one selected for Emma Goldman's magazine.34. "Jessica Screams," The Smart Set 39, no. 4 (April 1913):113-20.35. It is curious that Dell did not pursue short fiction. Perhaps this is an indication of the incredible strength of his self-image of misunderstood poet.36. Homecoming, 137-38.37. Ibid., ix. The blurring of autobiography and novel genres in the writing of E. L. Doctorow is discussed by Robert Towers, New York Times Book Review 32, no. 29 (December 14, 1985):23-25. Doctorow's latest novel, World's Fair, bears striking resemblance to Dell's first novel.38. Floyd Dell, "The Difference between Life and Fiction," New Republic 30, no. 7 (April 12, 1922): 7. Reprinted in Men and Books, ed. Malcolm S. MacLean and Elisabeth Holmes (New York: Richard R. Smith, Inc., 1930), 156-60.39. Chicago Daily News, October 27, 1920.40. New York Times Book Review (December 12, 1920): 20; Arturo Giovannitti, Liberator 3, no. 12 (December 1920): 26.41. "The Problem of the Sensitive Soul," Freeman 2, no. 43 (January 5, 1921): 403.42. "Moon-Calf," New Republic 25, no. 2 (December 8, 1920): 49.43. Robert M. Coates, "Old Home Week," New Yorker 7, no. 37 (October 31, 1931): 71-72.44. Mason City Globe-Gazette, November 25, 1933. Henry Hook, secretary of the Davenport Area Foundation, recalls that she was the newspaper's society editor for almost 40 years "who loved literature and limericks more than the dull chores of doing weddings, engagements." Letter to the Author, January 4, 1986.45. Donald R. Murphy, "The Wives and Mistresses of Floyd Dell," Des Moines Register, January 7, 1934.46. John T. Flanagan, "A Letter from Floyd Dell," American Literature 45, no. 3 (November 1973): 446.47. "Recent Books," Tri-City Workers Magazine 1, no. 11 (September 1906): 19.48. "Floyd Dell," Bookman 57, no. 1 (March 1923): 65.49. See Bernard Duffy, The Chicago Renaissance in American Letters (East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1954); George Tanselle, "Faun at the Barricades: The Life and Work of Floyd Dell," Northwestern University, Ph.D., 1959, 88-104; Cynthia Schmidt, "Socialist-Feminism: Max Eastman, Floyd Dell, and Crystal Eastman," Marquette University, Ph.D., 1983.50. Bernard Smith, Forces in American Criticism; A Study in the History of American Literary Thought (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1939), 296. His romantic attachment to psychological ideas is discussed by Leslie Fishbein, "Floyd Dell: The Impact of Freud and Marx on a Radical Mind," Psychoanalytic Review 63, no. 2 (1976): 267-89.51. Davenport Times, January 12, 1905.52. Homecoming, 92.53. Homecoming, 202.54. Homecoming, 175.55. Homecoming, 202.56. Davenport Times, April 16, 1912.57. Floyd Dell, The Angel Intrudes (New York: Egment Arens, 1918) and King Arthur's Socks and Other Village Plays (New York: Knopf, 1922). See Robert E. Humphrey, Children of Fantasy: The First Rebels of Greenwich Village (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1978).58. Hutchins Hapgood, "The Instinct to Conform," New Republic 77, no. 3 (November 29, 1933): 80.59. Robert Sarlos, Jig Cook and the Provincetown Players: Theatre in Ferment (Amherst: University of Massachusetts, 1982). See also Arnold Goldman, "The Culture of the Provincetown Players," Journal of American Studies 12 (December 1978):291-310. Dell kept working on plays, writing a popular Broadway hit A Little Accident (1927). This was made into a Gary Cooper comedy, Casanova Brown (1944).60. "Floyd Dell," Bookman 53, no. 3 (May 1921): 245.61. New York Times, September 29, 1933.62. Homecoming, 107. 2b1af7f3a8