• Source: 1911 in poetry
    • Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).


      Events


      c. April 8 – English poet Lascelles Abercrombie and his family move to live near Dymock in rural Gloucestershire, first of the Dymock poets
      c. August – Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky, who writes under the pen name "Guillaume Apollinaire", is suspected in the theft of the Mona Lisa from The Louvre museum in Paris and imprisoned for six days
      December 16 – The Copyright Act in the United Kingdom consolidates copyright law in the British Empire and confirms the six libraries in each of which a copy of every book published in the U.K. must be deposited by the publisher: the British Museum Library (London); the Bodleian Library (Oxford); the Advocates Library (Edinburgh); the National Library of Wales (Aberystwyth); Trinity College Dublin; and Cambridge University Library


      Works published in English




      = Canada

      =
      J. D. Logan, Songs of the Makers of Canada, and Other Homeland Lyrics
      Arthur Stringer, Irish Poems. New York: Mitchell Kennerley.


      = United Kingdom

      =
      Rupert Brooke, Poems 1911
      G. K. Chesterton, The Ballad of the White Horse
      Elizabeth Daryush, Charitesse
      E. V. Knox, The Brazen Lyre
      Patrick MacGill, Songs of a Navvy
      John Masefield, The Everlasting Mercy
      Harold Monro, Before Dawn (poems and impressions)
      Stephen Phillips, The New Inferno
      Ezra Pound, Canzoni, London; American author published in the United Kingdom
      Katharine Tynan, New Poems
      Anna Wickham, Songs of John Oland


      = United States

      =
      Franklin P. Adams, Tobogganing on Parnassus
      Ezra Pound, Canzoni, London; American author published in the United Kingdom
      George Sterling, The House of Orchids
      Sara Teasdale, Helen of Troy


      = Other in English

      =
      Victor Daley, Wine and Roses, posthumously published, Australia
      J. N. Gupta, The Life and Works of Romesh Chunder Dutt, (Dutt (1848–1920) is an Indian poet writing in English), published in New York and London this year


      Works published in other languages




      = France

      =
      Guillaume Apollinaire, pen name of Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky, Le Bestiaire ou Cortège d'Orphée, Paris: Deplanche; his first book of poetry (see also "Events" section, above)
      Paul Claudel:
      L'Otage, France
      Chemin de Croix
      Léon-Paul Fargue, Tancrède
      Francis Jammes, Les Géorgiques chrétiennes ("Christian Georgics"), three volumes, published from this year to 1912
      Oscar Vladislas de Lubicz-Milosz, also known as O. V. de L. Milosz, Les Éléments
      Saint-John Perse, Éloges, Paris: Editions de la Nouvelle Revue Française; France
      May Ziadeh, writing as Isis Copia, Fleurs de rêve, Lebanese-Palestinian poet writing in French


      = Indian subcontinent

      =
      Including all of the British colonies that later became India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal. Listed alphabetically by first name, regardless of surname:

      Devendranath Sen, Indian, Bengali-language poet:
      Golap Guccha
      Sisu Mangal
      Apurba Naibedya
      Gurajada Appa Rao, Lavanaraju Kala, Telugu-language narrative poem written in a new, four-line stanzaic form (surname: Gurajada)
      S. G. Narasimhachar, Presita Priya Samagama translation from the original English of The Hermit by Oliver Goldsmith, Indian, Kannada language
      Tirupati Venkata Kavulu, Pandavodyoga Vijayam, Telugu-language verse drama based on the Mahabharatha tales (surname: Tirupathi)


      = Other languages

      =
      Constantine P. Cavafy, Itaka and The Gods Abandon Antony, Greece
      José María Eguren, Simbólicas,, Peru
      Georg Heym, Der Krieg and Der ewige Tag, Germany
      Vicente Huidobro, Ecos del alma, Chile
      Else Lasker-Schüler, Meine Wunder, Germany


      Awards and honors




      = United States

      =
      American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Poetry: James Whitcomb Riley
      Nobel Prize for Literature: Count Maurice (Mooris) Polidore Marie Bernhard Maeterlinck, Belgian poet, playwright, and essayist


      Births


      Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

      January 1 – Audrey Wurdemann (died 1960), American poet, youngest winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
      January 7 – Faiz Ahmed Faiz (died 1984), Pakistani poet
      February 1 – Robert Gittings (died 1992), English writer, biographer, radio producer, playwright and poet
      February 8 – Elizabeth Bishop (died 1979), American poet, Pulitzer Prize winner
      February 13 – Faiz Ahmad Faiz (died 1984), Indian, Urdu-language poet, teacher, army officer, journalist, trade unionist and broadcaster
      February 16 – Hal Porter (died 1984), Australian writer, novelist, playwright and poet
      February 28 – Amir Hamzah (died 1946), Indonesian poet styled a national hero
      March 1 – Ian Mudie (died 1976), Australian
      April 7 – Hervé Bazin, full name: Jean-Pierre Hervé-Bazin (died 1966), French novelist and poet
      May 2 – Ben Belitt (died 2003), American poet
      May 13 – N. V. Krishna Warrier (died 1989), Indian, Malayalam-language poet, critic and scholar who introduces new types of long narrative poems and satires; editor of weekly Mathrubhumi; director of Kerala Bhasa Institute
      May 29 – Leah Goldberg (died 1970), Israeli poet writing in Hebrew
      June 11 – Josephine Miles (died 1985), American poet and literary critic
      June 17 – Allen Curnow (died 2001), New Zealand poet
      June 20 – Sufia Kamal (died 1999), Bengali poet, writer, organizer, feminist and activist
      June 28 – Clem Christesen (died 2003), Australian poet, founding editor of Meanjin
      June 30 – Czesław Miłosz (died 2004), Polish poet, prose writer and translator.
      July 12 – Umashankar Joshi (died 1988), Indian, Gujarati-language novelist, poet, critic, short-story writer, playwright, travel writer and academic
      July 19 – Mervyn Peake (died 1968), writer, artist, illustrator and poet
      August 25 – J. V. Cunningham (died 1985), American poet, literary critic and teacher
      September 3 – Ernst Meister (died 1979), German
      September 9
      Paul Goodman (died 1972), American poet
      Ale Ahmad Suroor (died 2002), Indian Urdu-language poet
      October 11 – Changampuzha Krishna Pillai (died 1948), Indian, Malayalam-language poet and translator
      October 13 – Millosh Gjergj Nikolla ('Migjeni') (died 1938), Albanian poet and writer
      October 26 – Sorley Maclean (died 1996), Scottish poet
      October 28 – Patrice de La Tour du Pin (died 1975), French
      November 2 – Odysseus Elytis (died 1996), Greek
      November 5 – Vailoppilli Sreedhara Menon (died 1985), Indian, Malayalam-language poet
      November 23 – William Hart-Smith (died 1990), Australian
      December 13 – Kenneth Patchen (died 1972) American poet and novelist
      Also:
      Robert Clark (died 2004), Indian-born Australian
      Sreedhara Menon, Vailoppillil (died 1985), Indian, Malayalam-language poet
      Samsher Bahadur Singh (died 1993), Indian, Hindi-language poet, essayist and artist
      Tenneti Suri (died in 1959), Indian, Telugu-language poet, novelist, translator and journalist


      Deaths


      Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

      January 15 – Carolina Coronado (born 1820), Spanish Romantic poet, member of Hermandad Lírica
      February 22 – Frances Harper (born 1825), African-American abolitionist, poet and author
      April 11 – Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall (born 1835), English civil servant, literary historian and poet
      May 29 – W. S. Gilbert (born 1836), English comic poet and librettist
      July 16 – Amelia Denis de Icaza (born 1836), Panamanian romantic poet in Nicaragua
      August 7 – Elizabeth Akers Allen (born 1832), American author, journalist and poet
      December 29 – Rosamund Marriott Watson, writing as Graham R. Tomson (born 1860), English poet
      Also:
      Jwala Prasad Barq (born 1863), Indian, Urdu-languagepoet and translator
      Eknath Ganesh Bhandare (born 1863), Indian, Marathi-language poet, translator and station-master
      Abdul Ahad Nadim (born 1840), Indian, Urdu-language poet, writer of "nats" (devotional lyrics addressed to the Prophet) in the traditional variety of the Kashmiri '"Vatsun"


      See also



      Poetry
      List of years in poetry
      Silver Age of Russian Poetry
      Acmeist poetry movement in Russian poetry
      Dymock poets
      Ego-Futurism movement in Russian poetry
      Expressionism movement in German poetry
      Young Poland (Polish: Młoda Polska) modernist period in Polish arts and literature


      Notes

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: