Hard to find Poetry (Chicago) for March 1921. A good copy that has some little edge wear to paper wrappers and a few chips/soil to the rear index (of Volume XVII) pages. 

See photo #3 for complete contents

Some highlights include: 

Ford Madox Hueffer's (at this date he sometimes called himself "Madox Ford") 19-page verse drama The House opens this number. Editor Monroe also contributes an essay about the poem, contrasting it with a still unpublished work by Lew Sarett. 

A three-page essay in review of T.S. Eliot's The Sacred Wood by English poet and critic Richard Aldington

A four-page essay of some historical interest by Ezra Pound on the state of poetry, following the Great War, in France and England. It's headed "Thames Morasses." 

Other poems and reviews by H.L. Davis (2); the revolutionary poet, model and factory worker, and way ahead of her time author Lola Ridge on Evelyn Scott's first book, a collection of poems called Precipitations); also, Emanuel Carnevali, Fannie Stearns Gifford, Edwin Ford Piper, Nelson Antrim Crawford (on Samuel Roth's 1919 book of verse, Europe: A Book for America) etc.