It would be hard to find a nicer copy of this February 1930 number of Poetry (Chicago). See photo #2 for complete contents. 

Some highlights here include: 

Horace Gregory opens the issue with four poems. 

Yvor Winters pens a long essay (8 pages) in review of Robinson Jeffers' new volume, Dear Judas. Much here on the still evolving state of Jeffers' philosophy as reflected in his new work. This is an important analysis of Jeffers' work at this date by a perceptive poet and critic. 

Editor Harriet Monroe pens another long essay on new works by D.H. Lawrence following the publication of his verse volume Pansies and of his Collected Poems. Another important essay. Little did Miss Monroe know that Lawrence had just a matter of days to live when she published this February issue. 

Bertha Ten Eyck James offers a review essay of African American poet Countee Cullen's new book, The Black Christ and Other Poems. 

Other poems and prose here by English poet A.S.J. Tessimond, Margaret Mead (who is described as a "young New York poet"), Grace Hoffman White, Morton Dauwen Zabel, and others. 

See photo #2 for more contents.