Orrick Glenday Johns
Orrick Glenday Johns (June 2, 1887 – July 8, 1946) was an American
poet and
playwright. He was one of the earliest modernist free-verse poets in
Greenwich Village in 1913-1915 and associated with the artist's colony at
Grantwood, New Jersey (sometimes referred to as Ridgefield), where ''
Others: A Magazine of the New Verse'' was founded and published by
Alfred Kreymborg in 1915. Johns's work "Olives," a series of fourteen small poems appeared in the first issue of July 1915. He is part of a coterie of poets and authors sometimes called the "Others" group who were contributors to the magazine or residents at the colony and included:
William Carlos Williams,
Wallace Stevens,
Marianne Moore,
Mina Loy,
Ezra Pound,
Conrad Aiken,
Carl Sandburg,
T. S. Eliot,
Amy Lowell,
H.D.,
Djuna Barnes,
Man Ray,
Skipwith Cannell,
Lola Ridge,
Marcel Duchamp, and
Fenton Johnson (poet) (the only African American published in the magazine). Johns is also associated with poets like
Vachel Lindsay and
Sara Teasdale. and the dramatist
Zoe Akins.
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