Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
- February 25 – English poet Ted Hughes and American poet Sylvia Plath meet in Cambridge, England.
- June 16 – Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath marry at the church of St George the Martyr, Holborn, London and spend the night at his flat at 18 Rugby Street.
- September 6 – American poet Richard Eberhart, having been sent by The New York Times to San Francisco to report on the poetry scene there, publishes this day an article in the New York Times Book Review titled "West Coast Rhythms" which helps call national attention to Allen Ginsberg's Howl as "the most remarkable poem of the young group" of poets who are becoming known as the spokesmen of the Beat Generation. On November 1, Howl and Other Poems, is published by City Lights Bookstore.
- The Lake Eden campus of Black Mountain College, the birthplace of the Black Mountain School of poetry, closes, although classes do not end until the spring of 1957, and the final issue of the Black Mountain Review is published in the fall of 1957.
- Quadrant magazine is founded in Australia by Richard Krygier, a Polish-Jewish refugee who had been active in social-democrat politics in Europe, and James McAuley, a Catholic poet.
- Northern Review, founded in 1945 from the merger of two small Canadian literary magazines, Preview and First Statement, publishes its last issue.
- Tamarack Review founded by Robert Weaver in Canada
Works published in English
Listed by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:
- Leonard Cohen, Let Us Compare Mythologies, Canada
- R. A. D. Ford, A Window on the North
- Louis Dudek, The Transparent Sea. Toronto: Contact Press, 1956.
- Eldon Grier, Poems
- Irving Layton, The Bull Calf and Other Poems. Toronto: Contact Press.
- Irving Layton, The Improved Binoculars: Selected Poems. Introduction by William Carlos Williams. Highlands, NC: Jonathan Williams.
- Irving Layton, Music on a Kazoo. Toronto: Contact Press.
- W.W.E. Ross, Experiment 1923-1929, Contact Press.
- Raymond Souster, The Selected Poems. Louis Dudek ed. Toronto: Contact Press.
- Raymond Souster ed. Poets 56: Ten Younger English-Canadians. Toronto: Contact Press.
- Wilfred Watson, Even Your Right Eye
- Robert Chapman and Jonathan Bennett, editors, An Anthology of New Zealand Verse, Oxford University Press
- D'Arcy Cresswell, The Voyage of the Hurunui : a Ballad, Christchurch: Caxton Press
- Charles Doyle, A Splinter of Glass
- Kingsley Amis, A Case of Samples: Poems 1946–1956
- Paul Dehn, For Love and Money
- J. P. Fletcher, Tally 300
- David Gascoyne, Night Thoughts
- John Holloway, The Minute and Longer Poems, Hessle, East Yorkshire: Marvell Press
- Christopher Logue, Devil, Maggot and Son
- Norman MacCaig, Riding Lights, London: Hogarth Press
- Edwin Muir, One Foot in Eden
- E. J. Scovell, The River Steamer, and Other Poems
- Fredegond Shove (died 1949), Poems
- John Ashbery, Some Trees
- John Berryman, Homage to Mistress Bradstreet, New York: Farrar, Straus & Cudahy
- Gwendolyn Brooks, Bronzeville Boys and Girls
- Witter Bynner, A Book of Lyrics
- Robert Creeley, If You
- Kenneth Fearing, New and Selected Poems
- Robert Fitzgerald, In the Rose of Time: Poems 1931–1956
- Allen Ginsberg, Howl
- Anne Morrow Lindbergh, The Unicorn, and Other Poems
- W. S. Merwin, Green with Beasts, New York: Knopf (reprinted as part of The First Four Books of Poems, 1975)
- Kenneth Rexroth (translator), 30 Spanish Poems of Love and Exile and (translator), 100 Poems from the Chinese
- Edna St. Vincent Millay, Collected Poems
- Marianne Moore, Like a Bulwark
- Gertrude Stein, Stanzas in meditation and Other Poems (1929–1933)
- Peter Viereck, The Persimmon Tree
- John Hall Wheelock, Poems Old and New
- Reed Whittemore, An American Takes a Walk
- Richard Wilbur, Things of This World: Poems, New York: Harcourt, Brace
- Tennessee Williams, In the Winter of Cities
Works published in other languages
Listed by language and often by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:
- Louis Aragon, Le Roman inachevé
- Aimé Césaire, Cahier d'un retour au pays natal, definitive, revised edition
- Pierre Jean Jouve, Lyrique
- Henri Michaux, Misérable miracle, about his experiences taking mescaline
- Jules Supervielle, L'Escalier
- Tristan Tzara, pen name of Sami Rosenstock, Le fruit permis
- W. Höllerer, editor, Transit, anthology, German
- Rupert Hirschenauer and Albrecht Weber, editors, Wege zum Gedicht, 2 volumes (second volume, on the ballad, in 1963), Germany, scholarship
- Walther Killy, Wandlungen des lyrischen Bildes
In each section, listed in alphabetical order by first name:
- Bhatt Damodar Kesavaji, pen name "Sudhansu", Alakhtano, Gujarati
- Dhirubhai Thaker, Arvacin Gujarati Shaityani Vikasrekha, a Gujarati-language history of that language's literature from 1850 to the post-independence period
- Natvarlal Kuberdas Pandya 'Ushnas', Nepathye, longer poems based on new interpretations of mythological characters; Gujarati
- Suresh Joshi, Upjati, Indian, Gujarati language
- C. Mahadevappa, translation from the English of Percy Bysshe Shelley's The Defence of Poetry
- Channaveera Kanavi, Dipadhari, with some lyrics in the navodaya style, others in the navya; poetry known as Samanvaya Kavya in Kannada poetry because it attempted to synthesize the two types of subject matter: both the beauty of nature, folk traditions, mysticism, and humanism of the one form and the stark contemporary realism of the other
- Yarmunja Ramachandra, Vidaya, the author's only book of poems, published posthumously after his death at age 22
Other Indian languages
- Harekrushna Mahadab, Chayapathara Yatri, Oriya
- Kunvar Narayan (also spelled in English as Kunwar Narain), Cakravyuha (has also been transliterated into English as Chakravyooh), New Delhi: Radhakrishan Prakashan, ; Hindi-language
- Parsram Rohra, Sargam, Sindhi
- Sankha Ghosh, Dinguli Ratguli, the author's first book of poems, Bengali
Spanish language
Other languages
- Miron BiaÃ
Âoszewski's first book: Obroty rzeczy, Poland
- Zbigniew Herbert's first book: Struna Ã
ÂwiatÃ
Âa, Poland
- Harry Martinson, Aniara, Swedish
- Eugenio Montale, La bufera e altro ("The Storm and Other Things"), a first edition of 1,000 copies, Venice: Neri Pozza; second, larger edition published in 1957, Milan: Arnaldo Mondadore Editore; Italy
- Nizar Qabbani, Poems (ÃÂõçæï), Syrian poet writing in Arabic
- Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Stantsiia Zima (áÃÂðýÃÂøàÃÂøüð, "Zima Station", translated as "Winter Station"), Soviet Union
Awards and honors
Births
Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- January 1 – John O'Donohue (died 2008), Irish poet, author, priest, and philosopher
- January 21 – Ian McMillan, English poet
- March 11 – Jean "Binta" Breeze (died 2021), Jamaican dub poet
- April 7 – Dionisio D. Martinez, Cuban-born poet who grows up speaking Spanish, raised first in Spain, then in the United States
- May 9 – Henri Cole, Japanese-born American poet
- May 22 – Lucie Brock-Broido (died 2018), American poet
- August 15 – Henry Normal, born Pete Carroll, English performance poet and television comedy producer
- August 21 – Julia Darling (died 2005), English fiction writer, poet and dramatist
- September 26 – Mick Imlah (died 2009), Scottish-born poet
- October 7 – Diane Ackerman, American poet and naturalist
- October 30 – Annie Finch, American poet, librettist and theorist
- December 8 – Michael C. Burgess, English poet
- Also:
- Bai Hua, Chinese poet
- Jim Daniels, American poet, writer and academic
- Forrest Gander, American poet, essayist and translator
- Amy Gerstler, American poet
- Lachlan Mackinnon, Scottish-born poet and critic
- Amir Or, Israeli poet
Deaths
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- January 31 – A. A. Milne, 74 (born 1882), English author of children's books and children's poetry
- March 11 – Aleksanteri Aava, 72 (born 1883), Finnish poet
- March 23 – Mitsuko Shiga Ã¥ÂÂè³ÂÃ¥Â
ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, pen name of Mitsu Ota (born 1885), Japanese, TaishÃ
 and ShÃ
Âwa period tanka poet, a woman
- March 30 – Edmund Clerihew Bentley, 80 (born 1875), popular English novelist and humorist and inventor of the clerihew, an irregular form of humorous verse on biographical topics
- April 2 – KÃ
ÂtarÃ
 Takamura é«ÂæÂ åÂ
Â太é (born 1883), Japanese poet and sculptor; son of sculptor Takamura KÃ
Âun
- May 11 – Takashi Matsumoto æÂ¾æÂ‹ÂÂãÂÂã (born 1906), Japanese, ShÃ
Âwa period professional haiku poet in the Shippo-kai haiku circle, then, starting in 1929, in the Hototogisu group that also included Kawabata Bosha; founded a literary magazine, Fue ("Flute"), in 1946
- May 15 – Arthur Talmage Abernethy (born 1872), American poet, journalist, theologian, minister; North Carolina Poet Laureate 1948âÂÂ53
- June 22 – Walter de la Mare, 83 (born 1873), English poet, short story writer and author of children's books
- July 7 – Gottfried Benn (born 1886), German expressionist poet; buried in Dahlem Waldfriedhof, Berlin
- July 8 – Giovanni Papini, 75 (born 1881), Italian poet, essayist, journalist, literary critic, and novelist
- July 11 – Dorothy Wellesley, 70, English socialite, author, poet and literary editor
- August 31 – Percy MacKaye, 81 (born 1875), American playwright and poet
- September 7 – Frank Oliver Call (born 1878), Canadian poet and academic
- November 21 – Aizu Yaichi (ä¼Âæ´¥ Ã¥Â
«ä¸Â) (born 1881), Japanese poet, calligrapher and historian (Surname: Aizu)
- December 10 – David Shimoni, 66, (born 1891), Israeli poet and writer
See also
Notes