• Thumbnail for Harriet Monroe
    Harriet Monroe (December 23, 1860 – September 26, 1936) was an American editor, scholar, literary critic, poet, and patron of the arts. She was the founding...
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  • Thumbnail for Poetry Foundation
    founded in 1941. The magazine, itself, was established in 1912 by Harriet Monroe. Monroe was its first publisher and editor until her death in 1936. The...
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  • journals in the English-speaking world. Founded by poet and arts columnist Harriet Monroe, who built it into an influential publication, it is now published by...
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  • Thumbnail for John Wellborn Root
    Monroe (sister of Harriet Monroe). Their son John Wellborn Root Jr. also practiced in Chicago as an architect. Root's sister-in-law, Harriet Monroe,...
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  • Thumbnail for Chicago (poem)
    Milwaukee's Socialist mayor. Harriet Monroe, a fellow resident of Chicago, had founded the magazine Poetry in 1912. Monroe liked and encouraged Sandburg's...
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  • Thumbnail for The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
    Poetry: A Magazine of Verse and recommended to the magazine's founder, Harriet Monroe, that Poetry publish "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock", extolling...
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  • Cannell met Pound in Paris in 1913. Pound sent some of Cannell's poems to Harriet Monroe. Back in London, Pound took Cannell and Kitty to visit Yeats and found...
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  • Michelson (1880–1953) was an American, imagist poet closely associated with Harriet Monroe and Poetry magazine. Michelson was a childhood immigrant to America...
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  • Louis, ed. (1919), Modern American Poetry, Harcourt, Brace and Howe. Harriet Monroe, the editor of Poetry who first published several of the poems that...
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  • Thumbnail for Hart Crane
    Williams, E. E. Cummings, Sherwood Anderson, Kenneth Burke, Waldo Frank, Harriet Monroe, Marianne Moore, and Gertrude Stein. He was also an acquaintance of...
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  • Thumbnail for Harriet Earhart Monroe
    Harriet Earhart Monroe (August 21, 1842 – July 17, 1927) was an American lecturer, educator, writer, and traveling producer of religious stage plays. She...
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  • Thumbnail for Robert Frost
    madness." In sharp contrast, the founding publisher and editor of Poetry, Harriet Monroe, emphasized the folksy New England persona and characters in Frost's...
    54 KB (5,968 words) - 13:19, 30 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ezra Pound
    a language to use, but even a language to think in." In August 1912 Harriet Monroe hired Pound as foreign correspondent of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse...
    196 KB (24,701 words) - 23:37, 12 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for E. E. Cummings
    Guggenheim Fellowship (1933) Shelley Memorial Award for Poetry (1945) Harriet Monroe Prize from Poetry magazine (1950) Fellowship of American Academy of...
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  • Reznikoff's death.[citation needed] When Louis Zukofsky was asked by Harriet Monroe to provide an introduction to what became known as the Objectivist issue...
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  • developed because Harriet Monroe insisted on a group name for the February 1931 issue of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, which Monroe had allowed Zukofsky...
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  • Thumbnail for Vachel Lindsay
    "he had to send money home to keep his pockets empty". On his return, Harriet Monroe published in Poetry magazine first his poem "General William Booth Enters...
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  • year by W. H. Auden) for Girl with a Wine Glass. In 1947 he won the Harriet Monroe Memorial Prize for Girls and Birds and various other poems. Later Moore...
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  • Thumbnail for Harriet Tubman
    Harriet Tubman (born Araminta Ross, c. March 1822 – March 10, 1913) was an American abolitionist and social activist. After escaping slavery, Tubman made...
    74 KB (9,712 words) - 19:57, 11 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mary MacLane
    parodied, or answered MacLane were Mark Twain, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Harriet Monroe, lawyer Clarence Darrow, Ring Lardner Jr., Sherwood Anderson and Daniel...
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  • after several of Davidman's poems were published in Poetry, editor Harriet Monroe asked her to work for the magazine as reader and editor. Davidman resigned...
    27 KB (3,342 words) - 18:02, 23 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Swami Vivekananda
    Sandwich, William James, Josiah Royce, Robert G. Ingersoll, Lord Kelvin, Harriet Monroe, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Sarah Bernhardt, Nikola Tesla, Emma Calvé and...
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  • Thumbnail for Chicago Poems
    Socialist mayor. Harriet Monroe, a fellow resident of Chicago, had recently founded the magazine Poetry at around this time. Monroe liked and encouraged...
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  • Thumbnail for Harmonium (poetry collection)
    public domain poems was completed by Librivox in 2007. Poet and editor Harriet Monroe, who founded Poetry magazine in 1912, wrote in 1924, [T]here was never...
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  • Thumbnail for Wallace Stevens
    Americans were out of work, searching through trash cans for food." Harriet Monroe, reviewing Harmonium for Poetry, wrote: "The delight which one breathes...
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  • Thumbnail for T. S. Eliot
    1915, Ezra Pound, overseas editor of Poetry magazine, recommended to Harriet Monroe, the magazine's founder, that she should publish "The Love Song of J...
    98 KB (11,683 words) - 21:02, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Chicago
    would become the influential Poetry magazine was founded in 1912 by Harriet Monroe, who was working as an art critic for the Chicago Tribune. The magazine...
    252 KB (22,375 words) - 16:33, 10 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Harriet Beecher Stowe
    Harriet Elisabeth Beecher Stowe (/stoʊ/; June 14, 1811 – July 1, 1896) was an American author and abolitionist. She came from the religious Beecher family...
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  • Thumbnail for Tsuga mertensiana
    mertensiana at Wikispecies Mountain Hemlock from "An Appreciation," by Harriet Monroe, Sierra Club Bulletin, 1916. California Legacy Project. Interactive...
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  • Thumbnail for Harriet Lane
    Harriet Rebecca Lane Johnston (May 9, 1830 – July 3, 1903) acted as first lady of the United States during the administration of her uncle, lifelong bachelor...
    15 KB (1,732 words) - 11:11, 13 July 2024