David Morton

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David H. Morton (February 21, 1886 – June 13, 1957) was an American poet.[1]

Born in Elkton, Kentucky, he graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1909.[2][3] After a decade of newspaper work, starting at the Louisville Courier-Journal, he became a teacher in the high school at Morristown, New Jersey.[4] Beginning in 1924, he taught at Amherst College.[3]

His work appeared in Harper's Magazine.[5] He is noted for having written a fan letter to Dashiell Hammett.[6]

Awards

Works

Poetry

Criticism

  • David Morton (1929). The renaissance of Irish poetry: 1880-1930. I. Washburn. 

Editor

  • David Morton, ed. (1970). Shorter Modern Poems, 1900-1931. Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 978-0-8369-6152-2. 
  • David Morton, ed. (1929). Amherst Undergraduate Verse 1929. The Poetry Society of Amherst College. 

Anthologies

  • Louis Untermeyer, ed. (1921). "Symbols; Old Ships". Modern American poetry. Harcourt, Brace and company. 

Reviews

What is there in David Morton's verse that seems to save it, that intervenes in moments of irritation with its punctional urbanity? There is not an original line in it. Not one cry, one intense expression comes from it; one vision that the poet has kept from his privileged dreaming, which can draw the mind an inch out of even the shallowest rut.[8]

References

Sources

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