Don Marquis (born July 29, 1878, Walnut, Ill., U.S.—died Dec. 29, 1937, New York City) was a U.S. newspaperman, poet, and playwright, creator of the literary characters Archy, the cockroach, and Mehitabel, the cat, wry, down-and-out philosophers of the 1920s.
Educated at Knox College, Galesburg, Ill., Marquis worked as a reporter on The Atlanta Journal. When in 1907 Joel Chandler Harris established the Uncle Remus’s Magazine, Marquis became his associate editor. Harris gave him his own department with a by-line.
In 1912 Marquis left Atlanta for New York City, where he became one of the best known of literary journalists. He wrote his columns “The Sun Dial” for The Sun and “The Lantern” for the Tribune. Archy and Mehitabel first appeared in “The Sun Dial.” Archy’s poetic reflections on the world and the racy misadventures of Mehitabel were related in first person and lowercase by Archy, who supposedly could not press down the typewriter’s shift key.
Among Marquis’ published collections of humorous poetry, satirical prose, and plays are Danny’s Own Story (1912), Dreams and Dust (1915), Hermione (1916), The Old Soak (1916; made into a play, 1926), Sonnets to a Red Haired Lady (1922), The Dark Hours (1924), and Out of the Sea (1927). After Marquis’ death archy and mehitabel (1927) was combined with several sequels into an omnibus, the lives and times of archy and mehitabel (1940), illustrated by George Herriman. In 1957 some of the Archy and Mehitabel stories were made into a musical by George Kleinsinger and Joe Darion. The Best of Don Marquis (1939) has an introduction by Marquis’ friend Christopher Morley.