â closing lines of Rudyard Kipling's IfâÂÂ, first published this year
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
Works published in English
<div style="float:right; border:2px solid blue; padding:10px; margin:0 0 1em 1em; text-align:left; background:skyblue"> <br><div align="center">To an Athlete Dying Young<br>by A. E. Housman</div> <br>Smart lad, to slip betimes away <br>From fields where glory does not stay <br>And early though the laurel grows <br>It withers quicker than the rose. <br> <br>Eyes the shady night has shut <br>Cannot see the record cut, <br>And silence sounds no worse than cheers <br>After earth has stopped the ears: <br><small>-- Lines 9-16</small> </div>
- Hilaire Belloc:
- The Bad Child's Book of Beasts
- Verses and Sonnets
- Laurence Binyon, First Book of London Visions (see also Second Book of London Visions 1899)
- Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, publishing under the pen name "Anodos", Fancy's Following (see also Fancy's Guerdon 1897)
- Lord Alfred Douglas, Poems
- Ernest Dowson, Verses, including "Non Sum Qualis Eram"
- A. E. Housman, A Shropshire Lad, including "To an Athlete Dying Young", "Loveliest of Trees, the Cherry Now" and "When I Was One-and-Twenty"
- Laurence Housman, Green Arras
- Rudyard Kipling, The Seven Seas
- Alice Meynell, Other Poems
- Henry Newbolt, "Drake's Drum", published in the St. John's Gazette (first published in book form in Admirals All, and Other Verses 1897)
- John Cowper Powys, Odes, and Other Poems
- Arthur Quiller-Couch, Poems and Ballads
- Christina Rossetti, New Poems, edited by W. M. Rossetti
- Robert Louis Stevenson, Songs of Travel, and Other Verses
- Algernon Charles Swinburne, The Tale of Balen
- William Watson, The Purple East
Works published in other languages
- Nérée Beauchemin, Les floraisons matutinales; the author's first published collection; French language; Trois-Rivières, Canada
- José Santos Chocano, Azahares, Peru
- Richard Dehmel, Weib und Welt ("Woman and World"), German
- Narasinghrao, Hridayaveena containing khandakavyas, garbis (religious, ethical and romantic lyrics), and poems about nature and women (Indian, writing in Gujarati)
- Tekkan Yosano, Tozai namboku ("East-west, north-south"), tanka poetry, Japan
Awards and honors
Births
Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- January 26 â Walter D'Arcy Cresswell (died 1960), New Zealand
- February 26 â Andrei Zhdanov (died 1948), a Soviet official who persecuted poets, writers and artists under the Zhdanov doctrine
- May 9 â Austin Clarke (died 1974), Irish poet, playwright and judge
- August 27 â Kenji Miyazawa 宮沢 賢治 (died 1933), Japanese, early ShÃ
Âwa period poet and author of children's literature (surname: Miyazawa)
- September 22 â Uri Zvi Grinberg (died 1981), Jewish
- October 12 â Eugenio Montale (died 1981), Italian
- October 30 â Kostas Karyotakis (died 1928), Greek
- December 1 â Teiko Tomita (died 1990), Japanese-born American poet who wrote in Japanese
Deaths
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- January 8 â Paul Verlaine (born 1844), French
- March 20 â Alexander McLachlan (born 1818), Scottish-born Canadian
- March 21 â Elizabeth Otis Dannelly (born 1838), American writer of Southern poetry
- May 11 â Henry Cuyler Bunner (born 1855), American novelist and poet
- October 3 â William Morris (born 1834), English poet, writer, designer and socialist
- October 29 â Thomas Edward Brown (born 1830), Manx poet writing in English
- November 26
- Mathilde Blind (born 1841), German-born British poet writing in English
- Coventry Patmore (born 1823), English
See also
Notes