Question

Random House censored 11 poems from this poet's collection The Double Axe and included a publisher's note to disavow its isolationism. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this poet, whose preface to The Double Axe defines his philosophy of “inhumanism” as “the rejection of human solipsism.” He praises the “patience of things” in a poem that states “we must unhumanize our views a little.”
ANSWER: Robinson Jeffers [or John Robinson Jeffers]
[10m] In another inhumanist poem, Jeffers claimed “I'd sooner, except the penalties, kill a man than” one of these creatures. A Ted Hughes poem is titled for one of these creatures “roosting.”
ANSWER: hawks [accept “Hurt Hawks” or “Hawk Roosting”; prompt on birds or avians]
[10e] Most of Jeffers's poetry is set on the central coast of this state. Lawrence Ferlinghetti founded the City Lights bookstore in this state.
ANSWER: California (The second poem mentioned in the first part of the bonus is “Carmel Point.”)
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Summary

2023 BHSU @ Berkeley03/18/2023Y313.33100%33%0%
2023 BHSU @ Maryland03/11/2023Y320.00100%67%33%
2023 BHSU @ Northwestern02/25/2023Y621.67100%67%50%
2023 BHSU @ Sheffield04/15/2023Y230.00100%100%100%
2023 BHSU @ Waterloo04/15/2023Y323.33100%100%33%
2023 BHSU @ Yale04/08/2023Y320.00100%67%33%

Data

Columbia BOlmo (Bonus) Bagelry001010
Watching Arthur Delot-Vilain at Chicago Open Made Me Like French People Againnats is supposed to mean you all have gone soft10101030
UG Championship Players (and Mazin)meet the new weird, same as the old weird0101020