1959 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

Events

 * In the United States, "Those serious new Bohemians, the beatniks, occupied with reading their deliberately undisciplined, protesting verse in night clubs and hotel ballrooms, created more publicity than poetry", wrote Harrison M. Hayford, an academic at Northwestern University. "Meanwhile back on the campus, the 'square' poets were turning more and more to a controlled verse, much of it good enough to survive the pointed charge of academicism." Non-beat, off-campus poets almost routinely displayed "simple competence in the handling of complex forms", he wrote in Encyclopaedia Britannica's Britannica Book of the Year 1960, which covered 1959.
 * Literary critic M.L. Rosenthal coins the term "confessional" as used in Confessional poetry in "Poetry as Confession", an article appearing in the September 19 issue of The Nation. Rosenthal's article reviewed the poetry collection Life Studies by Robert Lowell. The review was later collected in Rosenthal's book of selected essays and reviews, Our Life In Poetry, published in 1991
 * March &mdash; at a dinner celebrating Robert Frost's 85th birthday, the critic Lionel Trilling gave some brief remarks about Frost's poetry and "permanently changed the way people think about his subject", according to critic Adam Kirsch. Trilling said that Frost, had been long viewed as a folksy, unobjectionable poet, "an articulate Bald Eagle" who gave readers comfortable truths in traditional meter and New England dialect in such schoolbook favorites such as "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "The Road Not Taken".  But the critic said Frost instead was "a terrifying poet" not so much like Longfellow as Sophocles, "who made plain ... the terrible things of human life." Trilling was severely criticized at the time, but his view would become widely accepted in the following decades.
 * The chairmanship of The Group, a grouping of British poets, passed to Edward Lucie-Smith this year when Philip Hobsbaum left London to study in Sheffield. The meetings continued at his house in Chelsea, and the circle of poets expanded to include Fleur Adcock, Taner Baybars, Edwin Brock, and Zulfikar Ghose; others including Nathaniel Tarn circulated poems for comment.
 * After 20 years, John Crowe Ransom steps down as editor of The Kenyon Review, which he founded.
 * Aldous Huxley turns down the offer of a knighthood.
 * Carl Sandburg, poet and historian, lectured at the U.S. fair and exposition in Moscow.
 * In France, the centenary of the death of Marceline Desbordes-Valmore was commemorated this year.
 * May 18-24 &mdash; Nikita Khrushchev, Soviet Union, head of state, in an extemporaneous speech at the Congress of Soviet Writers, calls for indulgence towards "deviationist" writers. At the same conference, the poet Alexis Surkov again condemns writing "hostile to socialist realism and denounces fellow poet Boris Pasternak as acting in a way that is "trecherous and unworthy of a Soviet writer". A liberalizing trend in the state's treatment of its writers is evident. Surkov, the subject of intense criticism himself, resigned from the congress, and at some point in the year attacks against Pasternak ceased.
 * The journal Canadian Literature is founded by George Woodcock at the University of British Columbia.
 * The British poetry magazine Agenda was founded by William Cookson and Ezra Pound.

Works published in English
Listed by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:

Canada

 * Ronald Bates, The Wandering World
 * Ralph Gustafson, The Penguin Book of Canadian Verse, anthology
 * Robert Finch, Acis in Oxford and Other Poems. Governor General's Award 1961.
 * George Johnston, The Cruising Auk
 * Irving Layton:
 * A Red Carpet for the Sun, . Governor General's Award 1959.
 * Laughter in the Mind
 * Jay Macpherson, * A Dry Light & The Dark Air. Toronto: Hawkshead Press.

Indian poetry in English

 * Nissim Ezekiel, The Third ( Poetry in English ), Bombay: Strand Bookshop;
 * Keshav Malik, The Lake Surface and Other Poems ( Poetry in English ),, New Delhi: Surge Publications
 * K. P. Budhey, Chant and Incense, Nagpur: Kusum Budhey
 * Prithwindra N. Mukherjee, A Rose-Bud's Song ( Poetry in English ), Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram
 * P. Lal and K. Raghavendra Rao, editors, Anglo-Indian Poetry, anthology, Delhi: Kavita

United Kingdom

 * Patricia Beer, The Loss of the Magyar, a first book of poems
 * Edwin Bronk, An Attempt at Exorcism, Northwood, Middlesex: Scorpion Press
 * George Mackay Brown, Loaves and Fishes
 * Robert Graves, Collected Poems, the fourth version
 * James Harrison, Catchment Area, a first book of poems
 * Geoffrey Hill, For the Unfallen: Poems 1952–1958
 * P. J. Kavanagh, For the Unfallen
 * Laurence Lerner, Domestic Interior, a first book of poems
 * Christopher Logue, Songs
 * Louis MacNeice, Eighty-Five Poems
 * James Michie, Possible Laughter, a first book of poems
 * I. A. Richards, Goodbye Earth, a first book of poems by a longtime critic
 * Anne Ridler, A Matter of Life and Death
 * Rex Taylor, Poems, a first book of poems
 * Vernon Watkins, Cypress and Acacia


 * Anthologies in the United Kingdom
 * Edwin Muir, editor, New Poets 1959, an anthology including work by Iain Crichton Smith, Karen Gershon and Christopher Levenson
 * Guy Butler, A Book of South African Verse

United States

 * W.H. Auden, Selected Poetry
 * Joseph Payne Brennan, The Dark Returners (collects a handful of poems as filler to the short fiction)
 * Hayden Carruth, the Crow and the Heart, New York: Macmillan
 * Louis O. Coxe, The Wilderness, and Other Poems
 * Babette Deutsch, Coming of Age
 * Robert Duncan, Selected Poems, San Francisco: City Lights Books
 * William Everson (also known as "Brother Antoninus"), The Crooked Lines of God, University of Detroit Press
 * John Fandel, Testament, and Other Poems
 * Jean Garrigue, A Water Walk by Villa d'Este
 * Barbara Gibbs, The Green Chapel
 * Allen Ginsberg, Kaddish, written about his mentally-ill mother
 * Ramon Guthrie, graffiti, New York: Macmillan
 * Donald Hall, Dark Houses
 * Edwin Honig, The Gazebos: Forty-One Poems, Clarke & Way
 * Barbara Howes, Light and Dark
 * Langston Hughes, Selected Poems
 * Jack Kerouac, Mexico City Blues
 * Kenneth Koch, Ko, or a Season on Earth
 * Denise Levertov, With Eyes at the Back of Our Heads, New York: New Directions
 * Robert Lowell, Life Studies, a book on his family and on his own life that reflected stylistic changes that seemed more in line with the popular openness of Beat and Confessional poetry
 * James Merrill, ''The Country of a Thousand Years of Peace, and Other Poems"
 * W. S. Merwin, translation, The Poem of the Cid, London: Dent ((American edition, 1962, New York: New American Library)
 * Marianne Moore, O to Be a Dragon
 * Vladimir Nabokov, Poems
 * Ogden Nash, Verses from 1929 On
 * Ned O'Gorman, The Night of the Hammer
 * Hyam Plutzik, Apples From Shinar
 * Ezra Pound, Thrones: 96–109 de los cantares
 * Charles Reznikoff, Inscriptions: 1944-1956, self-published
 * Theodore Roethke, Words for the Wind
 * Delmore Schwartz, Summer Knowledge: New and Selected Poems 1938-1958, Garden City, New York: Doubleday
 * Louis Simpson, A Dream of Governors, Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press
 * W.D. Snodgrass, Heart's Needle
 * Gary Snyder, Riprap
 * May Swenson, A Cage of Spines
 * David Wagoner, A Place to Stand
 * Reed Whittemore, The Self-Made Man
 * Richard Wilbur, Advice to a Prophet and Other Poems, New York: Reynal and Hitchcock
 * James Wright, Saint Judas, Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press
 * Louis Zukofsky, A 1-12, published by Cid Corman's Origin Press


 * Criticism, scholarship and biography
 * Richard Ellmann, James Joyce, biography, winner of the National Book Award in 1960
 * Hugh Kenner (Canadian writing and published in the United States):
 * The Art of Poetry, criticism
 * The Invisible Poet: T.S. Eliot (revised edition in 1969), criticism

Other in English

 * Frank Collymore, Collected Poems, Barbados
 * M. K. Joseph, The Living Countries, New Zealand
 * E. H. McCormick, New Zealand Literature, a Survey, acholarship, New Zealand
 * Chris Wallace-Crabbe, The Music of Division, Sydney: Angus & Robertson, Australia

Works published in other languages
Listed by language and often by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:

France

 * Louis Aragon, Elsa
 * Yves Bonnefoy, L'Improbable
 * Aimé Césaire, Ferrements, Martinique poet published in France
 * Edmond Jabès, Je batis ma demeure, poemès 1943–1957
 * Michel Deguy, Meurtrières
 * Patrice de La Tour du Pin, Le Second Jeu
 * Henri Michaux, Paix dans les brisements, about his experiences taking mescaline
 * Saint-John Perse, Chronique, Marseilles: Cahiers du Sud
 * Boris Vian, Je voudrais crever


 * Anthologies in France
 * Roger Caillois and Jean Clarence Lambert, editors, Trésor de la poésie universelle
 * Max Pol Fouchet, De L'Amour au voyage, anthologie thématique de la poésie française
 * Paul Valéry wrote the preface to the new edition this year of Anthologie des poètes de la N. R. F.
 * Alain Bosquet and Pierre Seghers, editors, Les poèmes de l'année 1959, with poems by:


 * Criticism, scholarship and biography
 * Correspondance de Stéphane Mallarmé (1862-1871)

Canadian poetry in French

 * Maurice Beaulieu, Il fait clair de glaise
 * Olivier Marchand, Crier que je vis
 * Fernand Ouellet, Séquences de l'Aile''

Criticism, scholarship and biography in French Canada

 * Editor not known, La Poésie et nous, a collection of essays on poetry

Israel

 * L. Ben-Amitai, Ahaliba
 * Leah Goldberg, Mukdam Umeuhar ("Early and Late")
 * Abraham Halfi, ka-Almonin ba-Geshem ("As the Unknown in the Rain")
 * Yeshurun Keshet, Hayim Genuzim ("Hidden Life")
 * Shimshon Meltzer, Or Zorua, ("Scattered Light")
 * Yonathan Ratush, Zela
 * Zalmen Shneur, a 10-volume collection of his poems

United States

 * M. S. Ben-Meir, Zel Utzlil ("Shadow and Sound"), posthumous
 * A. S. Schwartz, Shirim ("Poems"), posthumous

India
Listed in alphabetical order by first name:
 * Agyeya (pen name of Sachchidananda Vatsyayan), editor, Teesra Saptak, an anthology of seven poets, including Kunwar Narain), Bhratiya Jnanpith, ISBN 81-263-0822-2; Hindi-language
 * Harumal Isardas Sadarangani, Ruba'ivun; Sindhi-language
 * M. Gopalakrishna Adiga, Bhumigita; Kannada-language

Italian

 * Maria Luisa Spaziani, Luna lombarda

Anthologies in Italy

 * Editor not known, Nuovi poeti, an anthology of Italian poetry since 1945
 * Salvatore Quasimodo, editor, Poesia italiana del dopoguerra, an anthology of Italian poetry since 1945

Latin America

 * Santos Chocano, Poesía de Santos Chocano
 * Rafael Maya, Navegación nocturna
 * Pablo Neruda, Estravagario (Chile)
 * Octavio Paz, La estación violenta
 * Valdelomar, Obra poética

Anthologies in Latin America

 * P. Félix Restrepo, prologue and epilogue, Poemas de Colombia, published by the Colombian Academy, with biographical notes by Carlos López Narváez
 * Antonio de Undurraga, editor, Atlas de la poesía de Chile, including poetry from Guillermo Blest Gana and Luis Merino Reyes

Criticism, scholarship and biography in Latin America

 * Raúl Leiva, Imagen de la poesía mexicana contemporánea, concerning 29 poets

Spain

 * Gabriel Celaya, Cantata en Aleixandre, verse variations on themes of Vicente Aleixandre, published as a book by the literary magazine Papeles de sSon Armadans

Yiddish

 * B. Y. Bialostotsky, a book of poetry
 * M. Daych, a book of poetry
 * E. Korman, a book of poetry
 * H. Leyvik, Lider tsum eybikn ("Songs to the Eternal")
 * Efrayim Oyerbakh, a book of poetry
 * Y. Tsvi Shargel, a book of poetry

Other

 * Mário Cesariny, Nobilíssima Visão (Portugal)
 * Odysseus Elytis, To Axion Esti — It Is Worthy (Greece)

United Kingdom

 * Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry: Francis Cornford

United States

 * Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (later the post would be called "Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress"): Richard Eberhart appointed this year.
 * National Book Award for Poetry: Theodore Roethke, Words for the Wind
 * Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Stanley Kunitz, Selected Poems 1928-1958
 * Bollingen Prize: Theodore Roethke
 * Fellowship of the Academy of American Poets: Louise Bogan

Other

 * Premio de la Crítica in poetry (Spain): Blas de Otero
 * Canada: Governor General's Award, poetry or drama: Red Carpet for the Sun, Irving Layton

Births
Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
 * October 1 – Brian P. Cleary, American humorist, poet and author


 * Also:
 * Dermot Bolger, Irish author, playwright and poet
 * Peter Gizzi, American poet
 * Laura Lush, Canadian poet
 * Carl Phillips, American writer and poet

Deaths
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
 * January 3 – Edwin Muir, 72 (born 1887), Scottish poet, novelist and translator
 * February 20 – Zalman Shneur, 72, Hebrew-Yiddish poet and author
 * February 23 – Luis Palés Matos, Puerto Rican poet, of a heart attack
 * April 4 – Sarah Cleghorn, 83
 * April 8 – Kyoshi Takahama 高浜 虚子, pen name of Kiyoshi Takahama (born 1874), Japanese, Shōwa period poet; close disciple of Masaoka Shiki
 * June 9 – Ryuko Kawaji 川路柳虹, pen-name of Kawaki Makoto (born 1888), Japanese, Showa period poet and literary critic
 * June 23 – Boris Vian, 39, French writer, poet, singer, and musician
 * July 6 – George Grosz (born 1893), German artist and poet, died from falling down a flight of stairs after a night drinking
 * August 5 – Edgar Guest, 79, American poet known as the "poet of the people"
 * August 21 – Denis Devlin (born 1908) Irish modernist poet and career diplomat
 * September 18 – Benjamin Péret, 60, French poet and Surrealist
 * December 27 – Alfonso Reyes, 70, Mexican poet, and writer