contexture
Whenever discrete poetic ‘texts’ –etymologically something woven– are organized by their author (or coauthors) into a collection, they form what I shall call a ‘contexture,’ a larger whole fabricated from integral parts. In other words, Frost’s ‘poem’ that is the ‘book itself’ is the contexture of the twenty-five poems it contains.
(Fraistat 1985, 4)