Born at Sprague, Washington, and educated in and near Portland, Oregon. As a freshman at the University of California, she won the Emily Chamberlin Cook prize for poetry, 1912, and also the Bohemian Club prize.
The poems of Miss Davies express “the girl consciousness” (Kreymborg).
Bibliography
- The Drums in Our Street. 1918. (Poems.)
- The Slave with Two Faces. 1918. (Play.)
- Youth Riding. 1919. (Lyrics.)
- A Little Freckled Person. 1919. (Child Verse.)
- The Husband Test. 1921.
- Also in: Others, 1916, 1917.
Studies and Reviews
- Poetry, 12 (’18): 218.
- See also Book Review Digest, 1919.
Fannie Stearns Davis. See [Fannie Stearns Davis Gifford]
Margaret Wade Deland (Mrs. Lorin F. Deland)—novelist, short-story writer.
Born at a village called Manchester, now a part of Alleghany, Pennsylvania, 1857. Educated in private schools, and studied drawing and design at Cooper Institute. Later, taught design in a girls’ school in New York City.