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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France). Events - Notorious American poetaster Julia A. Moore publishes her second collection, A Few Choice Words to the Public, but unlike her bestseller of 1876, The Sweet Singer of Michigan Salutes the Public, it finds few buyers. Moore gave her second public reading and singing performance late this year at a Grand Rapids opera house. She began by admitting her poetry was "partly full of mistakes" and that "literary is a work very hard to do". After the poetry and the laughter and jeering in response was over, Moore ended the show by telling the audience:
Her husband eventually forbade her from publishing any more poetry and in 1882 moved the family north. Works published in English - Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, Proteus and Amadeus[1]
- Robert Browning, La Saisiaz; The Two Poets of Croisic[1]
- Robert Buchanan, Poetical Works[1]
- Coventry Patmore:
- Amelia; Tamerton Church-Tower (Tamerton Church-Tower first published 1853)[1]
- The Unknown Eros, and Other Odes, first, shorter edition was published anonymously in 1877[1]
- Algernon Charles Swinburne, Poems and Ballads, Second Series (see also First Series 1866, Third Series 1889)[1]
- John Addington Symonds:
- Many Moods[1]
- Shelley, biography[1]
- Oscar Wilde, Ravenna[1]
Other - Chilichutnee, Social Scraps and Satires, Bombay; India, Indian poetry in English[6]
- Toru Dutt, A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields: Verse Translations and Poems, Bhowanipur: Saptahik Sambad Press, second, enlarged edition (first edition, Bhowanipur, Calcutta: B. M. Bose 1876; another edition: London: Kegan Paul 1880); India, Indian poetry in English[6]
Works published in other languages Awards and honors Births Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: - January 4 A. E. Coppard (died 1957), English poet and short story writer
- January 6 Carl Sandburg (died 1967), American poet and historian
- January 14 Victor Segalen (died 1919), French naval doctor, professor of medicine in China, ethnographer, archeologist, writer, poet, explorer, art-theorist, linguist and literary critic
- March 3 Edward Thomas (died 1917) one of the best-known English poets of World War I, died in action at Arras
- April 3 Hiraide Sh (died 1914), Japanese, late Meiji period novelist, poet, and lawyer; represented defendant in the High Treason Incident; a co-founder of the literary journal Subaru
- May 24 Mary Grant Bruce (died 1958), Australian
- June 1 John Edward Masefield (died 1967), English poet and writer, Poet Laureate, 1930 1967
- June 8 William Stanley Braithwaite (died 1962), American
- July 29 Don Marquis (died 1937), American poet, artist, newspaper columnist, humorist, playwright and author best known for creating the characters "Archy" and "Mehitabel"
- August 17 Oliver St. John Gogarty (died 1957, Irish poet, writer, physician and ear surgeon, one of the most prominent Dublin wits, political figure of the Irish Free State, and now best known as the inspiration for Buck Mulligan in James Joyce's novel Ulysses
- September 9 Adelaide Crapsey (died 1914), American
- October 2 Wilfrid Wilson Gibson (died 1962), British poet, associated with World War I but also the author of much later work
- October 13 Patrick Joseph Hartigan [John O'Brien] (died 1952), Australian Roman Catholic priest and poet
- November 27 Jatindramohan Bagchi (died 1948), Bengali poet
- December 7 Akiko Yosano pen-name of Yosano Shiyo (died 1942), late Meiji period, Taish period and early Showa period poet, pioneering feminist, pacifist and social reformer; one of the most famous, and most controversial, post-classical woman poets of Japan
- date not known Vallathol Narayana Menon (died 1958), Indian, Malayalam-language poet[8]
Deaths William Cullen Bryant, from a lithograph published in 1876 Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: Also: See also References
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