Paper 4, Module 22: Text

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Paper 4, Module 22: Text Paper 4, Module 22: Text Role Name Affiliation Principal Investigator Prof. Tutun Mukherjee University of Hyderabad Paper Coordinator Prof. Hariharan Institute of English, University of Balagovindan Kerala Content Writer/Author Dr. Sushil Kumar DB College, Sasthamkotta (CW) Content Reviewer (CR) Dr. Jameela Begum Former Head & Professor, Institute of English, University of Kerala Language Editor (LE) Prof. Hariharan Institute of English, University of Balagovindan Kerala 2 W. H. Auden (1907-1973) Keywords:- Auden – major works – influences – themes – love – politics - peace –neurosis-death – fear- Author and his major Contributions Wystan Hugh Auden (image 1) was born on February 21,1907 at York in a professional middle class family. (image 2)He was the third son of George Augustins and Constance Rosallo. W.H Auden was sent to St.Edmund’s school, where he acquired the friendship of Christopher Isherwood(image 4). He visited Berlin in 1928 and was influenced by German poetry. In 1929 Isherwood abandoned his medical profession and joined Auden in Berlin In 1935, he collaborated with Christopher Isherwood on a play with the title The Dog Beneath the Skin. Auden married Erika Mann, daughter of German novelist Thomas Mann, in 1935. In 1937 he visited Spain during the civil war and served as an ambulance driver on the Republican side. In 1938, he visited China with Isherwood. In 1938 Auden became a U.S. citizen and in 1948, he received the Pulitzer Prize for the work The Age of Anxiety. Auden was one of three candidates recommended by the Nobel Committee to the Swedish Academy for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1963. It was at Oxford that Auden became the pivotal member of a group of writers called the “Oxford Group” or the “Auden Generation.” He along with Louise MacNeice, Stephen Spender and C. Day Lewis shared the name ‘Pink Poets’ and the ‘Poets of 1930’s. They are lumped 3 together as a complete figure and called MacSpaunday in the acronym used to designate these four poets. Sir Stephen Harold Spender (1909-1995), first came to prominence as a poet of social protest in the 1930s.He is one among the “four musketeers of the Oxford Movement”, a member of the generation of British poets who came to prominence in the 1930s. They together share some characteristics: i. Their thematic content contained marks of innovation and experimental modernness. ii. They had more intellectual and less emotional appeal. iii. Their political involvement with communism was born out of a sense of guilt and involvement. iv. Sigmund Freud also influenced these poets. v. Their common identity was reflected in their cynicism and satire. vi. Their poetic technique was greatly influenced by Imagism, French Symbolism and Hopkins-Eliot innovations. The group adhered to various Marxist and anti-fascist doctrines and addressed social, political, and economic concerns in their writings. Auden’s first book of poetry, Poems, was privately printed by Stephen Spender in 1928. Critics have noted that Auden’s early verse suggests the influences of Thomas Hardy, Laura Riding, Wilfred Owen, and Edward Thomas. Stylistically, his poems are fragmentary and terse, relying on concrete images and colloquial language to convey Auden’s political and psychological concerns. Marxism was the dominating influence on Auden’s poetry. Auden’s poems, published in the thirties of the twentieth century, a turbulent period in the history, show the shallowness of the disintegrating post war civilization. 4 Poems (1930), The Orators (1932) and The Dance of Death (1933) show the influence of both Freud and Marx and express contemporary political tensions, social and economic unrest. Auden's themes in his shorter poems include the fragility and transience of personal love ("Danse Macabre", "The Dream", "Lay your sleeping head). In 1938 he wrote a series of dark, ironic ballads about individual failure ("Miss Gee", "James Honeyman", "Victor"). All these together with other famous poems such as "Dover", "As He Is", and "Musée des Beaux Arts" ,"In Memory of W. B. Yeats", "The Unknown Citizen", "Law Like Love", "September 1, 1939", and "In Memory of Sigmund Freud” appeared in his collection, Another Time (1940). The volume also contains elegies to poets A. E. Housman, Matthew Arnold, and William Butler Yeats. From 1942 through 1947 he worked mostly on three long poems in dramatic form, each different from the others in form and content. Auden’s next major work, Nones, includes another widely anthologized piece, “In Praise of Limestone,” which asserts a powerful connection between the landscape depicted and the psychology of Auden’s characters. His prose book The Dyer's Hand (1962) gathered many of the lectures he gave in Oxford as Professor of Poetry in 1956–61, together with revised versions of essays and notes written since the mid- 1940s. His later poetry consists of The Shield of Achilles (1955) City Without Walls (1969), Epistle to a Godson(1972) and the unfinished Thank You, Fog (1974) ) include reflective poems about language ("Natural Linguistics") and about his own ageing ("A New Year Greeting", "Talking to Myself", "A Lullaby" "The din of work is subdued"). His last completed poem, in haiku form, was "Archeology", about ritual and timelessness, two recurring themes in his later years. 5 T he German-Soviet pact disillusioned him and shook his faith in Communism. As a result he abandoned Communism and took metaphysical and religious faith. Auden died in Vienna, Austria, on September 29, 1973. (Wikipedia) Stephen Harold Spender met the poets W.H. Auden and C. Day-Lewis, and during 1930–33. He spent many months in Germany with the writer Christopher Isherwood. His early volumes, Poems (1933), Vienna(1934), Trial of a Judge, a verse play (1938), and The Still Centre (1939)—were influenced by the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke and Federico García Lorca. Above all, his poems expressed a self-critical, compassionate personality. In the following decades Spender, in some ways a more personal poet than his early associates, became increasingly more autobiographical, turning his gaze from the external topical situation to the subjective experience. His reputation for humanism and honesty is fully vindicated in subsequent volumes—Ruins and Visions (1942), Poems of Dedication (1947), The Edge of Being (1949), Collected Poems (1955), Selected Poems (1965), The Generous Days (1971), and Dolphins(1994). At the end of the 1930s, when the nature of Stalinist rule had become more evident—especially after the Stalin-Hitler pact of 1939—Spender became disillusioned with Russian Communism. Especially eloquent testimony of this disenchantment with Communism can be found in Spender's essay in The God That Failed (1949). From the 1940s Spender was better known for his perceptive criticism and his editorial association with the influential reviews Horizon (1940–41) and Encounter (1953–67) than he was as a poet. Spender’s prose works include short stories (The Burning Cactus, 1936), a novel (The Backward Son, 1940), literary criticism (The Destructive Element, 1935; The 6 Creative Element, 1953; The Making of a Poem, 1955; The Struggle of the Modern, 1963), an autobiography (World Within World, 1951; reissued 1994), and uncollected essays with new commentary (The Thirties and After, 1978). He died in London on July 17, 1995. Poetic Characteristics Though intellectual and unemotional, his poetry shows a deep empathy with the essential human condition. What distinguishes Spender’s poetry is the combination of his commitment to the left wing political ideology with his own personal feelings and emotions. He also composed highly moving poems on war. He beautifully expressed his personal emotions in short lyrics. Spender was an accomplished poetic artist who used exact words. In his best poems every word has its value for sound as well as sense. Themes in Auden In an age as confusing and volatile as the interwar period, it was natural that the main themes in literature among young writers and poets would be the social, political and the economic malaise of the period. Auden was not an exception. His works are noted for its stylistic and technical achievements, its engagement with moral and political issues, and its variety of tone, form and content. He was known as the spiritual physician of his generation. The central themes of his poetry are love, politics and citizenship, religion and morals, and the relationship between unique human beings and the anonymous, impersonal world of nature. Auden’s early works are noted for the themes like love, politics, peace, neurosis, death fear, and character http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/524417.W_H_Auden 7 Many of his poems, like “As I Walked Out One Evening,” “Lullaby,” and “O Tell Me the Truth About Love,” are the finest love poems, and “Funeral Blues” features a man deeply in love with another. But at the same time he is deeply concerned with the transience of love in modern world. Almost all of these poems have a sobering undercurrent of sorrow, or of the desire to remind readers that life, and love, are short and are affected by the vicissitudes of existence like sickness and time. Love is sweet, but it does not exist in a universe devoid of suffering, waning of affection or, of course, death. Auden's poetry is sometimes cerebral, sometimes brutally honest and evocative of the historical context in which he is writing. He is renowned for addressing the issues of his day in a moving and relevant manner. The horrors of the modern world do not escape his incisive pen; he deals with the dictators and their mad quest for world domination, the fall of the masses under their leaders' spell, the stultifying bureaucratic state, the Spanish Civil War, the bleakness and perhaps impossibility of the future, the psychic side of warfare, the bleak landscape, the martyrdom of heroes and the death of poets, the unthinking use of modern tools, and the bludgeoning of the human spirit through the great weight of history.
Recommended publications
  • Christopher Isherwood Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8pk0gr7 No online items Christopher Isherwood Papers Finding aid prepared by Sara S. Hodson with April Cunningham, Alison Dinicola, Gayle M. Richardson, Natalie Russell, Rebecca Tuttle, and Diann Benti. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens Manuscripts Department The Huntington Library 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2191 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org © October 2, 2000. Updated: January 12, 2007, April 14, 2010 and March 10, 2017 The Huntington Library. All rights reserved. Christopher Isherwood Papers CI 1-4758; FAC 1346-1397 1 Overview of the Collection Title: Christopher Isherwood Papers Dates (inclusive): 1864-2004 Bulk dates: 1925-1986 Collection Number: CI 1-4758; FAC 1346-1397 Creator: Isherwood, Christopher, 1904-1986. Extent: 6,261 pieces, plus ephemera. Repository: The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Manuscripts Department 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2191 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org Abstract: This collection contains the papers of British-American writer Christopher Isherwood (1904-1986), chiefly dating from the 1920s to the 1980s. Consisting of scripts, literary manuscripts, correspondence, diaries, photographs, ephemera, audiovisual material, and Isherwood’s library, the archive is an exceptionally rich resource for research on Isherwood, as well as W.H. Auden, Stephen Spender and others. Subjects documented in the collection include homosexuality and gay rights, pacifism, and Vedanta. Language: English. Access The collection is open to qualified researchers by prior application through the Reader Services Department, with two exceptions: • The series of Isherwood’s daily diaries, which are closed until January 1, 2030.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTENTS Xiii Xxxi Paid on Both Sides
    CONTENTS PREFACE ix ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS xi INTRODUCTION xiii THE TEXT OF THIS EDITION xxxi PLAYS Paid on Both Sides [first version] (1928), by Auden 3 Paid on Both Sides [second version] (1928), by Auden 14 The Enemies of a Bishop (1929), by Auden and Isherwood 35 The Dance of Death (1933), by Auden 81 The Chase (1934), by Auden 109 The Dog Beneath the Skin (1935), by Auden and Isherwood 189 The Ascent of F 6 (1936), by Auden and Isherwood 293 On the Frontier (1937-38), by Auden and Isherwood 357 DOCUMENTARY FILMS Coal Face (1935) 421 Night Mail (1935) 422 Negroes (1935) 424 Beside the Seaside (1935) 429 The Way to the Sea (1936) 430 The Londoners (1938?) 433 CABARET AND WIRELESS Alfred (1936) 437 Hadrian's Wall (7937) 441 APPENDICES I Auden and Isherwood's "Preliminary Statement" (1929) 459 1. The "Preliminary Statement" 459 2. Auden's "Suggestions for the Play" 462 VI CONTENTS II The Fronny: Fragments of a Lost Play (1930) 464 III Auden and the Group Theatre, by M J Sldnell 490 IV Auden and Theatre at the Downs School 503 V Two Reported Lectures 510 Poetry and FIlm (1936) 511 The Future of Enghsh Poetic Drama (1938) 513 fEXTUAL NOTES PaId on Both SIdes 525 The EnemIes of a BIshop 530 The Dance of Death 534 1 History, Editions, and Text 534 2 Auden's SynopsIs 542 The Chase 543 The Dog Beneath the Skm 553 1 History, Authorship, Texts, and EditIOns 553 2 Isherwood's Scenano for a New Version of The Chase 557 3 The Pubhshed Text and the Text Prepared for Production 566 4 The First (Pubhshed) Version of the Concludmg Scene 572 5 Isherwood's
    [Show full text]
  • On the Poetry of the Dog Beneath the Skin
    GSJ: Volume 7, Issue 6, June 2019 ISSN 2320-9186 870 GSJ: Volume 7, Issue 6, June 2019, Online: ISSN 2320-9186 www.globalscientificjournal.com ON THE POETRY OF THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN Associate Prof. Yahya Saleh Hasan Dahami English Department, Faculty of Science and Arts – Al Mandaq AL BAHA UNIVERSITY, Al Baha KSA [email protected] [email protected] https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0195-7878 Abstract The Dog Beneath the Skin is the first play to be coauthored between Wystan Hugh Auden and Christopher Isherwood. It is a play written in verse, which creates a challenge of success for the dramatists for two reasons, the first is that it deals with verse, the second it is collaborative. The study through the collaborators, trying to show, to what extent, both achieved attainment in dealing with verse drama. This study also endeavors to trace the poetic features in The Dog Beneath the Skin and to attempt proving the capability and controllability in writing successful drama in verse through collaboration. This paper is done by using an analytic-critical method. It is an approach to a drama shared by both Auden and Isherwood. The study tersely traces the growth and elaboration of poetic drama until the twentieth century. It goes through the sort of collaboration between Auden and Isherwood. It is concluded by examining and analyzing, its central part, the poetic features and essentials in the play The Dog Beneath the Skin. Key Words: Auden and Isherwood, collaboration, literature, poetic drama, The Dog Beneath the Skin, twentieth century GSJ© 2019 www.globalscientificjournal.com GSJ: Volume 7, Issue 6, June 2019 ISSN 2320-9186 871 Introduction It is believed that poetic dramas possess the facility to break into the sources of sentiment and action of people all over the ages.
    [Show full text]
  • Sharpe, Tony, 1952– Editor of Compilation
    more information - www.cambridge.org/9780521196574 W. H. AUDen IN COnteXT W. H. Auden is a giant of twentieth-century English poetry whose writings demonstrate a sustained engagement with the times in which he lived. But how did the century’s shifting cultural terrain affect him and his work? Written by distinguished poets and schol- ars, these brief but authoritative essays offer a varied set of coor- dinates by which to chart Auden’s continuously evolving career, examining key aspects of his environmental, cultural, political, and creative contexts. Reaching beyond mere biography, these essays present Auden as the product of ongoing negotiations between him- self, his time, and posterity, exploring the enduring power of his poetry to unsettle and provoke. The collection will prove valuable for scholars, researchers, and students of English literature, cultural studies, and creative writing. Tony Sharpe is Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University. He is the author of critically acclaimed books on W. H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, Vladimir Nabokov, and Wallace Stevens. His essays on modernist writing and poetry have appeared in journals such as Critical Survey and Literature and Theology, as well as in various edited collections. W. H. AUDen IN COnteXT edited by TONY SharPE Lancaster University cambridge university press Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo, Delhi, Mexico City Cambridge University Press 32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10013-2473, USA www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521196574 © Cambridge University Press 2013 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
    [Show full text]
  • Auden's Revisions
    Auden’s Revisions By W. D. Quesenbery for Marilyn and in memoriam William York Tindall Grellet Collins Simpson © 2008, William D. Quesenbery Acknowledgments Were I to list everyone (and their affiliations) to whom I owe a debt of gratitude for their help in preparing this study, the list would be so long that no one would bother reading it. Literally, scores of reference librarians in the eastern United States and several dozen more in the United Kingdom stopped what they were doing, searched out a crumbling periodical from the stacks, made a Xerox copy and sent it along to me. I cannot thank them enough. Instead of that interminable list, I restrict myself to a handful of friends and colleagues who were instrumental in the publication of this book. First and foremost, Edward Mendelson, without whose encouragement this work would be moldering in Columbia University’s stacks; Gerald M. Pinciss, friend, colleague and cheer-leader of fifty-odd years standing, who gave up some of his own research time in England to seek out obscure citations; Robert Mohr, then a physics student at Swarthmore College, tracked down citations from 1966 forward when no English literature student stepped forward; Ken Prager and Whitney Quesenbery, computer experts who helped me with technical problems and many times saved this file from disappearing into cyberspace;. Emily Prager, who compiled the Index of First Lines and Titles. Table of Contents Acknowledgments 3 Table of Contents 4 General Introduction 7 Using the Appendices 14 PART I. PAID ON BOTH SIDES (1928) 17 Appendix 19 PART II.
    [Show full text]
  • © in This Web Service Cambridge University
    Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-19657-4 - W. H. Auden in Context Edited by Tony Sharpe Index More information Index Acton, Harold, 91 ‘As It Seemed to Us’, 14 ‘The Acts of John’, 86 ‘At the Grave of Henry James’, 75, 131, 375 The Adelphi, 338, 345 ‘Atlantis’, 50, 130 Agee, James, 215 ‘Aubade’, 348 Alexander, Michael, 260 ‘Auden and MacNeice: Their Last Will and Allen, Bill, 147 Testament’, 83, 241 Allen, John, 223, 225 ‘August for the people and their favourite Alston Moor, 15, 16 islands’, 41, 43, 212, 317 Alvarez, A. A., 365 ‘Balaam and his Ass’, 308 Amsterdam, 316 Berlin journals (unpublished), 24, 26, 317, Anders als die Andern, 103 355 Anglo-Saxon Reader (Sweet), 261 ‘Brothers and Others’, 272, 273 Ansen, Alan, 83, 91, 103, 121, 295n, 369, 378 ‘Bucolics’, 59, 64, 77, 178 Arendt, Hannah, 107, 126 ‘California’, 52 Aristotle, 181 ‘Case Histories’, 345 Arnold, Matthew, 49 ‘Christmas 1940’, 63 Ashbery, John, 124, 355 ‘Commentary’, 155, 157, 185 Astor, Lady Nancy, 146 ‘Consider this and in our time’, 2, 38, 153, Atlantic, 125 205–6 Auden, Constance, 69, 107 ‘Control of the passes was, he saw, the key’ Auden, George, 151, 259 (‘The Secret Agent’), 16, 20, 287, 361 Auden, John, 15, 45, 84, 86, 236 ‘Dame Kind’, 108 Auden’s writings ‘Deftly, admiral, cast your fly’, 334, 363 ‘1929’, 299, 362 ‘Dichtung und Wahrheit’, 183, 308, 363, 365 ‘A Bride in the ‘30s’, 376 ‘Dover’, 342–4 A Certain World, 19, 77, 87, 260, 329 ‘Easily, my dear,. .’, 207–8, 213 A Choice of de la Mare’s Verse, 360 Elegy for Young Lovers, 250, 324 ‘A Communist to Others’,
    [Show full text]
  • Xerox University Microfilms 300 North Zeeb Road Ann Arbor, Michigan 46106 75-15,270 OLDHAM, Perry Donald, Jr., 1943- the CONVERSATIONAL POETRY of W
    INFORMATION TO USERS This material was produced from a microfilm copy of the original document. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the original submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand markings or patterns which may appear on this reproduction. 1. The sign or "target" for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is "Missing Page(s)". If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting thru an image and duplicating adjacent pages to insure you complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a large round black mark, it is an indication that the photographer suspected that the copy may have moved during exposure and thus cause a blurred image. You will find a good image of the page in the adjacent frame. 3. When a map, drawing or chart, etc., was part of the material being photographed the photographer followed a definite method in "sectioning" the material. It is customary to begin photoing at the upper left hand corner of a large sheet and to continue photoing from left to right in equal sections with a small overlap. If necessary, sectioning is continued again - beginning below the first row and continuing on until complete. 4. The majority of users indicate that the textual content is of greatest value, however, a somewhat higher quality reproduction could be made from "photographs" if e ^ n tia l to the understanding of the dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cambridge Companion to British Poetry, 1945–2010 Edited by Edward Larrissy Index More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-09066-8 - The Cambridge Companion to British Poetry, 1945–2010 Edited by Edward Larrissy Index More information INDEX Aark Arts, 188 Alvi, Moniza, 192 , 205 Abandonedbuildings , 91 The Country at my Shoulder , 188 Abse, Dannie, 244 – 5 Amis, Kingsley, 3 , 4 , 28 , 32 , 57 Poetry and Poverty , 244 Bright November , 28 See also Mavericks ‘Mightier than the Pen’, 35 Ackroyd, Peter, 238 Amis, Martin, 254 Adams, Anna, 205 Ampurias, 64 Adcock, Fleur, 201 , 203 , 205 Anglo-Irish Treaty, 131 The Faber Book of Twentieth Century Anglo-Welsh Poetry 1480–1990 , 163 Women Poets , 197 , 202 See also Garlick, Raymond , and ‘Instructions to a Vampire’, 203 Mathias, Roland Agard, John, 6 , 188 , 192 Angry Young Men, 118 Agbabi, Patience, 205 , 234 Angus, Marion, 149 Bloodshot Monochrome , 232 Anvil Press, 118 ‘The London Eye’, 232 – 3 ap Gwilym, Dafydd, 164 , 170 Telling Tales , 190 ‘Y Gwynt’, 164 Albion Village Press, 4 Apocalyptic poets, 54 Aldermaston marches, 69 Apples and Snakes, 77 Ali, Monica, 181 Armitage, Simon, 110 , 242 , 254 Allen, Michael, 137 ‘The Stuff’, 112 – 13 Allingham, William, 134 Zoom! , 112 Allen, Donald Arnold, Matthew, 189 The New American Poetry , 65 ‘Dover Beach’, 189 Allen Lane publishers, 55 Arts Council, 87 , 241 , 248 , 249 Allen, Woody Arvon, 240 – 41 The Purple Rose of Cairo , 233 Ashbery, John, 44 Allison, Jonathan, 139 Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 151 Allnut, Gillian. 205 Astley, Neil, 248 , 249 ‘Convent’, 207 Atta, Dean ‘The Talking Princess’, 200 I Am Nobody’s Nigger
    [Show full text]
  • W. H. Auden and Opera: Studies of the Libretto As Literary Form
    W. H. AUDEN AND OPERA: STUDIES OF THE LIBRETTO AS LITERARY FORM Matthew Paul Carlson A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English and Comparative Literature. Chapel Hill 2012 Approved by: George S. Lensing Erin G. Carlston Tim Carter Allan R. Life Eliza Richards !2012 Matthew Paul Carlson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT MATTHEW PAUL CARLSON: W. H. Auden and Opera: Studies of the Libretto as Literary Form (Under the direction of George S. Lensing) From 1939 to 1973, the poet W. H. Auden devoted significant energy to writing for the musical stage, partnering with co-librettist Chester Kallman and collaborating with some of the most successful opera composers of the twentieth century, including Benjamin Britten, Igor Stravinsky, and Hans Werner Henze. This dissertation examines Auden’s librettos in the context of his larger career, relating them to his other poetry and to the aesthetic, philosophical, and theological positions set forth in his prose. I argue that opera offered Auden a formal alternative to his own early attempts at spoken verse drama as well as those of his contemporaries. Furthermore, I contend that he was drawn to the role of librettist as a means of counteracting romantic notions of the inspired solitary genius and the sanctity of the written word. Through a series of chronologically ordered analyses, the dissertation shows how Auden’s developing views on the unique capacities of opera as a medium are manifested in the librettos’ plots.
    [Show full text]
  • Biographical Glossary
    Biographical Glossary All entries are British unless otherwise noted. Ackerley, Joseph Randolph (1896–1967). Literary editor, author, and close friend of Forster’s. He was the literary editor of The Listener from 1935 to 1959. He is also the author of My Dog Tulip (1956) and We Think the World of You (1960). Auden, Wystan Hugh (1907–73). Poet and intimate friend of Isherwood’s. Major works of poetry include The Orators (1932), The Age of Anxiety: A Baroque Eclogue (1947), The Shield of Achilles (1955), and City Walls and Other Poems (1969). He collaborated with Isherwood on three plays: The Dog Beneath the Skin (1935), The Ascent of F6 (1936), and On the Frontier (1939). Bachardy, Don (1934– ). American painter and Isherwood’s companion from 1953 until Isherwood’s death in 1986. His drawings have been pub- lished in several books: October (1983), Last Drawings of Christopher Isherwood (1990), and Stars in My Eyes (2000). His paintings and drawings are in the collections of the National Portrait Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of New York, and other major art institutions. Barger, Harold (1907–89). Professor of Economics at Columbia University form 1937 to 1975. He graduated from King’s College, Cambridge, and the London School of Economics. Baxter, Walter (1915– ). Author of a novel, Look Down in Mercy (1951), which was considered controversial. He had previously owned a restaurant in London. Beerbohm, Henry Maximilian (Max) (1872–1956). Humorist and essay- ist. Author of Zuleika Dobson (1911). His A Christmas Garland (1912) con- tains parodies of contemporary literary writers, such as Henry James, Joseph Conrad, and H.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Quest' in the Early Works of WH Auden
    THE MOTIF OF THE 'QUEST' IN TEE EARLY GJORKS OF W. H. AUDEN Leslie Edgar Arnold B.A., University of ~eeds,1964 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of English @ LESLIE EDGAR ARNOLD 1968 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY April, 1968 EXAMINING COMMITTEE APPROVAL - - - - (name) senior supervisor Robin Blaser I (name) 3 Examining Comnittee Malcolm Page -, , . (name) Examining Committee Robert H. Dunham PARTTAL COPYRIGIIT LICENSE I hereby grant to Simon Fraser University the right to lend my thesis or dissertation (the title of which is shown below) to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. I further agree that permission for multiple copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by me or the Dean of Graduate Sttldies. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Title of Thesis/~issertation: Author: (signature ) (name ) (date) TABLE OF CONTENTS Pages INTRODUCTION .. .. 1 CSAPTER ONE: T9E POETRY (i) Poems .. 23 (ii) The Orators .. .. 43 (iii) Look. Stranger! .. 64 CHAPTER TWO: THE PLAYS (i) Introduction . 82 (ii) Paid on Both Sides .. 88 (iii) The Dance of Death . 94 (iv) The! Dog i3eneath the Skin .. 100 (v) The Ascent of F6 .. .. 110 (vi) On the Frontier .. 123 IN CONCLUSION .. BIBLIOGRAPHY .. Introduction In a review, published in The Spectator of July 15 1960, Philip Larkin establishes the essential dichotomy in the poetic development of W.H.' Auden: I have been trying to imagine a discussion of Auden between one man who had read nothing of his after 1940 and another who had read nothing before.
    [Show full text]
  • Durham Research Online
    Durham Research Online Deposited in DRO: 02 February 2016 Version of attached le: Accepted Version Peer-review status of attached le: Peer-reviewed Citation for published item: Garrington, Abbie (2016) 'Early Auden.', in Oxford handbooks online : scholarly research reviews. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Further information on publisher's website: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935338.013.91 Publisher's copyright statement: This is a draft of a chapter that was accepted for publication by Oxford University Press in Oxford handbooks online : scholarly research reviews. Additional information: Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. Durham University Library, Stockton Road, Durham DH1 3LY, United Kingdom Tel : +44 (0)191 334 3042 | Fax : +44 (0)191 334 2971 https://dro.dur.ac.uk Early Auden Abstract W. H. Auden’s early work is marked by a preoccupation with the hero figure, both in terms of the literary greats with whom Auden establishes poetic conversations, and in terms of the inter-war Truly Strong Man, whom the poet both explores for his power, and exposes as a figure half-dreamt by a nation in search of itself.
    [Show full text]