• January 16 –
English novelist and poet
Thomas Hardy's ashes are interred in
Poets' Corner of
Westminster Abbey in London;
pallbearers at the ceremony include
Stanley Baldwin,
J. M. Barrie,
John Galsworthy,
Edmund Gosse,
A. E. Housman,
Rudyard Kipling,
Ramsay MacDonald and
George Bernard Shaw. At the same time, Hardy's heart is interred where he wished to be buried, in the grave of his first wife,
Emma, in the churchyard of his parish of birth,
Stinsford ("
Mellstock") in
Dorset. Later in the year, his widow
Florence publishes the first part of a biography,
The Early Life of Thomas Hardy, 1840–1891 (
Macmillan), in fact largely dictated by Hardy. • September 21 – The
Gorseth Kernow is set up at
Boscawen-Un in
Cornwall by
Henry Jenner ("Gwas Myghal") and others. • November 6 –
Xu Zhimo writes his poem 再別康橋 (simplified Chinese 再别康桥,
Zài Bié Kāngqiáo, "On Leaving Cambridge Once More"). •
Russian poets
Daniil Kharms and
Alexander Vvedensky found
OBERIU (a Russian acronym for "An Association of Real Art"), an avant-garde grouping of Russian post-
Futurist poets in the 1920s-1930s •
American poets
Charles Reznikoff,
George Oppen and
Louis Zukofsky meet in
New York City; they will become some of the founders of the
Objectivist poets group. • The only surviving fragment of
Erinna's
Greek poem
The Distaff (probably first half of the 4th century BCE) is found in the
Oxyrhynchus Papyri. • The
clerihew, the comic pseudo-biographical verse form associated with
Edmund Clerihew Bentley, is mentioned in print for the first time. ==Works published in English==