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Events
- July 14 — At the first public soiree at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich, Switzerland, Hugo Ball recited the first Dada manifesto (see text).
- October 6 — By some accounts, the Dada movement in art, poetry and literature coalesced by this date at the cabaret, where Ball, Emmy Hennings, Tristan Tzara, Hans Arp, Richard Huelsenbeck, Sophie Täuber and others discussed art and put on performances expressing their disgust with World War I and the interests they believed inspired it
- When Wallace Stevens' job as a lawyer for a New York City insurance company is abolished as a result of mergers, he joins the home office of Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company and moves to Hartford, where he will remain the rest of his life.[1]
Works published
- Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Sea Garden
- Robert Frost, Mountain Interval, including "Out, Out--"
- Antonio Machado, Campos de Castilla (revised edition)
- D. H. Lawrence, Amores
- Ezra Pound, Lustra
- Carl Sandburg, Chicago Poems
- Robert Service, Rhymes of a Red Cross Man
- Charles Hamilton Sorley, Marlborough and Other Poems
- William Butler Yeats, "Easter 1916", 1916 book Responsibilities and Other Poems
- Some Imagist Poets second anthology
Births
Deaths
- April 26 — Mário de Sá-Carneiro, novelist and poet
- May 31 — Gorch Fock, poet and novelist
- September 22 — Edward Wyndham Tennant, war poet
- October 7 — James Whitcomb Riley, poet
- October 25 — John Todhunter, 76, Irish poet and playwright
- November 14 — H. H. Munro ("Saki"), 45, English poet, short story writer, novelist and playwright
- November 27 — Emile Verhaeren, Symbolist poet
- date not known:
Killed in World War I
Awards and honors
Notes
- ^ Richardson, Joan. Wallace Stevens: The Early Years, 1879-1923, New York: Beech Tree Books, 1986, p. 445
See also
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