American Decades
A Poet's Life: Seventy Years in a Changing World
Autobiography
By: Harriet Monroe
Date: 1938
Source: Monroe, Harriet. A Poet's Life: Seventy Years in a Changing World. New York: Macmillan, 1938, 251–254.
About the Author: Harriet Monroe (1860–1936) was born in Chicago, the second daughter of Henry Stanton Monroe, a lawyer, and Martha Mitchell Monroe. A poet and an art critic for the Chicago Tribune, she also taught school and helped establish the Chicago Institute of Arts. But she is best known as the editor of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, which she founded in 1912. Monroe died in 1936 while on a trip to Peru. Her autobiography, A Poet's Life: Seventy Years in a Changing World, was published two years later, in 1938.
Introduction
The beginning of the twentieth century was a transitional time for poetry, and for literature in general. Walt Whitman had forged new ground for poets...
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1910's The Arts Primary Sources
- The Masquerade Dress
- O Pioneers
- Ethiopia Awakening
- Modern Dancing
- "St. Louis Blues"
- Debate Over the Birth of a Nation
- "The Imagining Ear"
- Charlie Chaplin as the "Little Tramp"
- Boy With Baby Carriage
- "Chicago"
- Evening Star, III
- "Over There"
- "Mandy"
- "September, 1918"
- "Paper Pills"
- A Poet's Life: Seventy Years in a Changing World
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
