Template:Short description Template:Year nav topic5 Template:Use British English This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1914.

EventsEdit

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|CitationClass=web }}</ref> It includes Ford Madox Hueffer's "The Saddest Story", a preliminary version of The Good Soldier.

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    • T. S. Eliot (at this time in England to study) meets fellow American poet Ezra Pound for the first time, in London.
  • September 29Arthur Machen's short story "The Bowmen", origin of the legend of the Angels of Mons, is published in The Evening News (London).
  • October 2 – The date predicted by Charles Taze Russell, founder of the Watchtower Society (Jehovah's Witnesses), as the date for the "full end" of Babylon, or nominal Christianity, with statements such as: "True, it is expecting great things to claim, as we do, that within the coming twenty-six years all present governments will be overthrown and dissolved.... In view of this strong Bible evidence concerning the Times of the Gentiles, we consider it an established truth that the final end of the kingdoms of this world, and the full establishment of the Kingdom of God, will be accomplished at the end of A. D. 1914...."<ref>Studies In the Scriptures Series II – The Time Is At Hand (1889 ed.) pp. 99 and 101.</ref>
  • November 7 – The first issue of The New Republic magazine is published in the United States.
  • November 16M. P. Shiel is convicted and imprisoned for "indecently assaulting and carnally knowing" his 12-year-old de facto stepdaughter on October 26 in London.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • December – Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky, who writes under the pen name "Guillaume Apollinaire", enlists in the French Army to fight in World War I and becomes a French citizen<ref name=pa20cfv>Template:Cite book</ref> after an August attempt at enlistment is rejected.
  • December 31T. S. Eliot writes to Conrad Aiken from Oxford (where he has a scholarship at Merton College), saying: "I hate university towns and university people, who are the same everywhere, with pregnant wives, sprawling children, many books and hideous pictures on the walls.... Oxford is very pretty, but I don't like to be dead."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

New booksEdit

FictionEdit

Children and young peopleEdit

DramaEdit

  • Lascelles AbercrombieThe End of the World (September, Birmingham, England)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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PoetryEdit

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Non-fictionEdit

BirthsEdit

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DeathsEdit

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AwardsEdit

ReferencesEdit

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See alsoEdit

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