From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] Events
- September 3 — 19-year-old John Gillespie Magee, Jr., American poet and aviator, flew a high-altitude test flight in a Spitfire V and afterwards wrote "High Flight" about the experience, on December 11 he dies while serving in the Royal Canadian Air Force, which he had joined before the United States had officially entered World War II
- The Antioch Review founded
- Basil Bunting joins the RAF and is eventually sent to Iran as an intelligence officer and a translator during World War II.
- December — In siege-bound Leningrad, Yakov Druskin, ill and starving, and Maria Malich, the second wife of Danil Kharms, trudge across the city to Kharms' bombed-out apartment building and collect a trunk full of manuscripts. They hide the manuscripts through the 1940s and 1950s, even bringing them to Siberia, then covertly show them to others in the 1960s. Their actions save much of Kharms' work for posterity as well as that of fellow poet Alexander Vvedensky (of whom only about a quarter of his output survives)[1]
[edit] Works published
- G. S. Fraser, The Fatal Landscape and Other Poems
- Federico García Lorca, Diván del Tamarit (Spanish for "The Diván of Tamarit", written in 1936, published posthumously this year
- W. H. Auden, New Year Letters (or The Double Man)
- T. S. Eliot, The Dry Salvages, published in New English Weekly
- Carl Rakosi, Selected Poems
- John Crowe Ransom, The New Criticism
- Charles Reznikoff, Going To and Fro and Walking Up and Down, self-published
- The White Horseman poetry anthology in Britain, featuring poets in the New Apocalyptics movement
- William Carlos Williams, The Broken Span
- Louis Zukofsky, 55 Poems
[edit] Awards and honors
[edit] Births
[edit] Deaths
- August 7 — Rabindranath Tagore, 80, a Bengali poet, Brahmo Samaj (syncretic Hindu monotheist) philosopher, visual artist, playwright, composer, and novelist whose works reshaped Bengali literature and music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (1913 winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature)
- August 30 — Jiri Orten
- November 18 — Émile Nelligan, poet
- date not known:
- Aline Kilmer
- Alexander Vvedensky, Russian poet with formidable influence on "unofficial" and avant-garde art during and after the times of the Soviet Union; arrested under suspicion of planning treason and shipped off to a labor camp, he died of dysentery on the way (for the fate of his poetry, see Events section above)
- ^ [1] Epstien, Thomas, "Vvedensky in Love", article in The New Arcadia Review "published by the Boston College Honors Program", Volume II, 2004, accessed December 8, 2006
[edit] See also