I lived from 1907-1973.
I was from England, and am in the English category.
I was influenced by poets Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, Thomas Hardy, Gerard Manley Hopkins.
Wystan Hugh Auden was born in York, England, in 1907, he moved to Birmingham with his family during his childhood and was later educated at Christ's Church, Oxford. As a young man he was influenced by the poetry of Thomas Hardy and Robert Frost, as well as William Blake, Emily Dickinson, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and Old English verse. At Oxford his precocity as a poet was immediately apparent, and he formed lifelong friendships with two fellow writers, Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood.
Read full description...
In 1928, Auden published his first book of verse, and his collection Poems, published in 1930, which established him as the leading voice of a new generation. Ever since, he has been admired for his unsurpassed technical virtuosity and an ability to write poems in nearly every imaginable verse form; the incorporation in his work of popular culture, current events, and vernacular speech; and also for the vast range of his intellect, which drew easily from an extraordinary variety of literatures, art forms, social and political theories, and scientific and technical information. He had a remarkable wit, and often mimicked the writing styles of other poets such as Dickinson, W. B. Yeats, and Henry James. His poetry frequently recounts, literally or metaphorically, a journey or quest, and his travels provided rich material for his verse.
He visited Germany, Iceland, and China, served in the Spanish Civil war, and in 1939 moved to the United States, where he met his lover, Chester Kallman, and became an American citizen. His own beliefs changed radically between his youthful career in England, when he was an ardent advocate of socialism and Freudian psychoanalysis, and his later phase in America, when his central preoccupation became Christianity and the theology of modern Protestant theologians. A prolific writer, Auden was also a noted playwright, librettist, editor, and essayist. Generally considered the greatest English poet of the twentieth century, his work has exerted a major influence on succeeding generations of poets on both sides of the Atlantic.
W. H. Auden was a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets from 1954 to 1973, and divided most of the second half of his life between residences in New York City and Austria. He died in Vienna in 1973.
Popular poetry
Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
18 lines, 17 comments
Say this city has ten million souls,
Some are living in mansions, some are living in holes:
36 lines, 2 comments
Lady, weeping at the crossroads Would you meet your love
43 lines, 3 comments
O what is that sound which so thrills the ear
Down in the valley drumming, drumming?
36 lines
Some thirty inches from my nose
The frontier of my Person goes,
7 lines, 12 comments
Lay your sleeping head, my love,
Human on my faithless arm;
42 lines, 3 comments
This lunar beauty
Has no history
24 lines, 1 comment
For us like any other fugitive,
Like the numberless flowers that cannot number
20 lines
If it form the one landscape that we, the inconstant ones,
Are consistently homesick for, this is chiefly
95 lines, 2 comments
He disappeared in the dead of winter:
The brooks were frozen, the airports almost deserted,
76 lines, 4 comments
Start a forum topic about this poet
|
|