The Objectivist Press published George Oppen's first book Discrete
Series, a collection of thirty-one short poems with a preface by Ezra
Pound, in 1934. Four years earlier, the twenty-one-year-old poet had
sent an unbound sheaf of typewritten poems with the title 21 Poems
hand-written in pencil on the first page to the poet Louis Zukofsky, who
forwarded them on to Pound in Paris. These poems, suffused with Oppen's
love for his young bride Mary, as well as his love of sailing, are
strikingly different from what they'd eventually become in Discrete
Series. The scholar David B. Hobbs recently found 21 Poems buried in
Ezra Pound's papers at Yale's Beinecke Library, and they appear here as
a collection of their own for the first time.