Artur Enășescu

Born in Botoșani, his parents were Alexandru Enăcescu, a Post, Telegraph, Telephone (PTT) employee, and his wife Olga (née Nacu).

Other magazines that featured his verses include Flacăra, Moldova, Rampa, Epoca, Convorbiri literare, Vremuri nouă, Solia, Îndrumarea, Junimea Moldovei de Nord, Luceafărul, Cuvântul liber, Universul liber, Familia, Propilee literare and Ideea literară.

Drafted into the Romanian Army when his country entered World War I in 1916, Enășescu saw action at Oituz and Măgura Cașinului.

In the 1930s, with his lost mind, he was a vagabond, sleeping in passageways or under the staircase of the Ferdinand Hotel.

He cut a tragic and colorful figure in the landscape of downtown Bucharest, as recorded by artists Ion Sava and Aurel Jiquidi.