1925 in poetry

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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature, including Irish or France.

Events

  • January – Ezra Pound returns to Rapallo, Italy from Sicily to settle permanently after a brief stay the year before.[1]
  • February 11 – Eli Siegel wins The Nation Poetry Prize for "Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana".[2][3][4][5]
  • February 21 – First issue of The New Yorker magazine is published.[6]
  • November 21 – First issue of McGill Fortnightly Review, a publication of Montreal Group of modernist poets and the first organ to feature modernist poetry, fiction, and literary criticism in Canada.
  • December 28 – Russian poet Sergei Yesenin (b. 1895) writes his farewell poem, "Goodbye, my friend, goodbye" (До свиданья, друг мой, до свиданья), in his own blood before hanging himself at the Angleterre Hotel in Leningrad.
  • T. S. Eliot leaves Lloyds Bank in London and joins the new publishing house of Faber and Gwyer.
  • An unofficial ban by Soviet authorities on poetry by Anna Akhmatova begins; she will be unable to publish until 1940.

Works published

Canada

India in English

  • Shyam Sunder Lal Chordia, Seeking and Other Poems (Poetry in English), Allahabad: The Indian Press [11]
  • M. U. Malkani and T. H. Advani, The Longing Lute (Poetry in English), Karachi: Kohinoor Printing Works [11]

United Kingdom

United States

Other in English

Works published in other languages

France

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:

Hindi

  • Jayashankar Prasad, Asu, Chayavadi poem on love and beauty[21]
  • Maithilisharan Gupta, Pancavati, a khanda kavya based on the Ram legend[21]
  • Mohan Lal Mahato Viyogi, Achuta, verses on social and political problems[21]

Telugu

  • Devulapalli Krishna Shastri, Krishna Paksham, a very prominent work of Telugu romantic literature[21]
  • Nanduri Venkata Subba Rao, Yenki Patalu[22] (another source spells the title as Enki patalu;[21] "The Songs of Yenki"), 35 lyrics in the language of common folk, on romantic love and the beauty of nature;[22] a prominent work of modern Telagu poetry about "Enki" or "Yenki", a devoted, simple, country woman of Andhra dedicated to her lover, Naidu Bava[21] "Yenki and her beloved Nayudu Bava have become living legends in modern Telugu literature", according to C. R. Sarma (the surname of the author is "Nanduri")[22]
  • Rayaprolu Subba Rao, Jada Kucculu, lyrics
  • Visvanatha Satyanarayana, Kinnerasani patalu (also rendered Kinnera Sani Patalu; a lyrical epic in seven cantos) and Kokilamma Pelli, two works published in the same volume[21]

Other Indian languages

Spanish language

Other languages

Awards and honors

Births

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

Deaths

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

See also

Notes

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