Wystan Hugh Auden (21 February 1907 – 29 September
1973, ) who signed his works
W. H.
Auden, was an Anglo-American poet,born in England,
later an American citizen, regarded by many as one of the greatest
writers of the
20th century. His work
is noted for its stylistic and technical achievements, its
engagement with moral and political issues, and its variety of
tone, form and content. 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 grew
up in Birmingham
in a professional middle
class family and read English literature at Christ Church,
Oxford
. His early poems, written in the late 1920s
and early 1930s, alternated between telegraphic modern styles and
fluent traditional ones, were written in an intense and dramatic
tone, and established his reputation as a left-wing political poet
and prophet.
He became uncomfortable in this role in the
later 1930s, and abandoned it after he moved to the United States
in 1939, where he became an American citizen in
1946. His poems in the 1940s explored religious and ethical
themes in a less dramatic manner than his earlier works, but still
combined traditional forms and styles with new forms devised by
Auden himself. In the 1950s and 1960s many of his poems focused on
the ways in which words revealed and concealed emotions, and he
took a particular interest in writing opera librettos, a form
ideally suited to direct expression of strong feelings.
He was also a prolific writer of prose essays and reviews on
literary, political, psychological and religious subjects, and he
worked at various times on documentary films, poetic plays and
other forms of performance. Throughout his career he was both
controversial and influential. After his death, some of his poems,
notably "
Funeral Blues" ("Stop all the
clocks") and "
September 1, 1939",
became widely known through films, broadcasts and popular
media.
Life
Childhood and education, 1907–1927
Childhood
Wystan
Hugh Auden was born in York
, England
, where his
father George Augustus Auden
was a physician. Wystan was the third of three children, all
sons; the eldest, George Bernard Auden, became a farmer; the
second,
John Bicknell Auden,
became a
geologist. His mother, Constance
Rosalie Bicknell Auden, had trained as a missionary nurse. Auden's
grandfathers were both
Church of
England clergymen; his household was
Anglo-Catholic, following a "
High" form of
Anglicanism with doctrine and ritual resembling
that of
Roman Catholicism. He
traced his love of music and language partly to the church services
of his childhood.
He believed he was of Icelandic
descent, and his lifelong fascination with
Icelandic legends and Old Norse sagas is visible throughout his work.
In 1908
his family moved to Harborne
, Birmingham
, where his father had been appointed the School
Medical Officer and Lecturer (later Professor) of Public Health;
Auden's lifelong psychoanalytic interests began in his father's
library. From the age of eight he attended boarding schools,
returning home for holidays.
From the ages six to twelve, "I spent a great many of my waking
hours in the fabrication of a private secondary sacred world, the
basic elements of which were (a) a limestone landscape mainly
derived from the
Pennine Moors in the
North of England, and (b) an
industry - lead mining."
His visits to the Pennine landscape and its
declining lead-mining industry figure in many of his poems; the
remote decaying mining village of Rookhope
was for him
a "sacred landscape", evoked in a late poem, "Amor
Loci."
Until he was fifteen he expected to become a mining engineer, but
his "passion for words" had already begun. He wrote later: "words
so excite me that a pornographic story, for example, excites me
sexually more than a living person can do."
Education
Auden's
first boarding school was St. Edmund's School
, Surrey
, where he
met Christopher Isherwood,
later famous in his own right as a novelist. At thirteen he went to
Gresham's
School
in Norfolk; there, in 1922,
when his friend Robert Medley asked
him if he wrote poetry, Auden first realized his vocation was to be
a poet. Soon after, he "discover(ed) that he (had) lost his
faith" (through a gradual realisation that he had lost interest in
religion, not through any decisive change of views).In school
productions of Shakespeare, he played Katherina in
The Taming of the Shrew in
1922, and
Caliban in
The Tempest in
1925, his last year at Gresham's. His first published poems
appeared in the school magazine in 1923.Auden later wrote a chapter
on Gresham's for
Graham Greene's
The Old School: Essays by Divers Hands (1934).
In 1925 he
went to Christ Church,
Oxford
, with a scholarship in biology, but he switched to
English by his second year. Friends he met at Oxford
included
Cecil Day Lewis,
Louis MacNeice, and
Stephen Spender; these four were commonly
though misleadingly identified in the 1930s as the "
Auden Group" for their shared (but not
identical) left-wing views. Auden left Oxford in 1928 with a
third-class
degree.
He was reintroduced to
Christopher
Isherwood in 1925; for the next few years Isherwood was his
literary mentor to whom he sent poems for comments and criticism.
Auden probably fell in love with Isherwood and in the 1930s they
maintained a sexual friendship in intervals between their relations
with others. In 1935–39 they collaborated on three plays and a
travel book.
From his Oxford years onward, his friends uniformly described him
as funny, extravagant, sympathetic, generous, and, partly by his
own choice, lonely. In groups he was often dogmatic and overbearing
in a comic way; in more private settings he was diffident and shy
except when certain of his welcome. He was punctual in his habits,
and obsessive about meeting deadlines, while choosing to live
amidst physical disorder.
Britain and Europe, 1928–1938
In the
autumn of 1928 Auden left Britain for nine months in Weimar
Berlin
, partly to
rebel against English repressiveness in a city where homosexuality
was widely tolerated. In Berlin, he said, he first
experienced the political and economic unrest that became one of
his central subjects.
On returning to Britain in 1929, he worked briefly as a tutor. In
1930 his first published book,
Poems (1930), was accepted
by
T. S.
Eliot for
Faber and Faber; the firm also published all
his later books.
In 1930 he began five years as a
schoolmaster in boys' schools: two years at the Larchfield
Academy
, in Helensburgh
, Scotland, then three years at the The Downs
School
, in the Malvern Hills
, where he was a much-loved teacher. At the
Downs, in June 1933, he experienced what he later described as a
"Vision of
Agape," when, while sitting with
three fellow-teachers at the school, he suddenly found that he
loved them for themselves, that their existence had infinite value
for him; this experience, he said, later influenced his decision to
return to the Anglican Church in 1940.
During these years, Auden's erotic interests focused, as he later
said, on an idealized "Alter Ego" rather than on individual
persons. His relations (and his unsuccessful courtships) tended to
be unequal either in age or intelligence; his sexual relations were
transient, although some evolved into long friendships. He
contrasted these relations with what he later regarded as the
"marriage" (his word) of equals that he began with
Chester Kallman in 1939 (see below), based
on the unique individuality of both partners.
From 1935 until he left Britain early in 1939, Auden worked as
freelance reviewer, essayist, and lecturer, first with the
G.P.O. Film
Unit, a documentary film-making branch of the post office,
headed by
John Grierson. Through his
work for the Film Unit in 1935 he met and collaborated with
Benjamin Britten, with whom he also
worked on plays, song cycles, and a libretto. Auden's plays in the
1930s were performed by the
Group
Theatre, in productions that he supervised to varying
degrees.
His work now reflected his belief that any good artist must be
"more than a bit of a reporting journalist." In 1936 he spent three
months in Iceland, where he gathered material for a travel book
Letters from Iceland
(1937), written in collaboration with
Louis MacNeice.
In 1937 he went to
Spain
intending to drive an ambulance for the Republic in
the Spanish Civil War, but was put
to work broadcasting propaganda, a job he left in order to visit
the front. His seven-week visit to Spain affected him
deeply, and his social views grew more complex as he found
political realities to be more ambiguous and troubling than he had
imagined. Again attempting to combine reportage and art, he and
Isherwood spent six months in 1938 visiting the
Sino-Japanese War, working on their
book
Journey to a War
(1939). On their way back to England they stayed briefly in New
York and decided to move to the United States.
Auden spent the
autumn of 1938 partly in England, partly in Brussels
.
Many of his poems during the 1930s and afterward were inspired by
unconsummated love, and in the 1950s he summarized his emotional
life in a famous couplet: "If equal affection cannot be / Let the
more loving one be me" ("The More Loving One"). He had a gift for
friendship and, starting in the late 1930s, a strong wish for the
stability of marriage; in a letter to his friend
James Stern he called marriage "the
only subject." Throughout his life, he performed
charitable acts, sometimes in public (as in his marriage of
convenience to
Erika Mann in 1935 that
gave her a British passport with which to escape the Nazis), but,
especially in later years, more often in private, and he was
embarrassed if they were publicly revealed, as when his gift to his
friend
Dorothy Day for the
Catholic Worker movement was reported on the
front page of
The New York Times in 1956.
United States and Europe, 1939–1973
Auden and
Isherwood sailed to New
York
in January 1939, entering on temporary
visas. Their departure from Britain
was later seen by many there as a betrayal and
Auden's reputation suffered. In April 1939 Isherwood moved to California
, and he and Auden saw each other only
intermittently in later years. Around this time, Auden met
the poet
Chester Kallman, who became
his lover for the next two years (Auden described their relation as
a "marriage" that began with a cross-country "honeymoon" journey).
In 1941 Kallman ended their sexual relations because he could not
accept Auden's insistence on a mutual faithful relationship, but he
and Auden remained companions for the rest of Auden's life, sharing
houses and apartments from 1953 until Auden's death. Auden
dedicated both editions of his collected poetry (1945/50 and 1966)
to Isherwood and Kallman.
In
1940–41, Auden lived in a house in Brooklyn
Heights
which he shared with Carson McCullers, Benjamin Britten, and others, and which
became a famous center of artistic life. In 1940, he joined
the
Episcopal
Church, returning to the
Anglican
Communion he had abandoned at thirteen. His reconversion was
influenced partly by what he called the "sainthood" of
Charles Williams, whom he had
met in 1937, partly by reading
Søren Kierkegaard and
Reinhold Niebuhr; his
existential, this-worldly Christianity became
a central element in his life.
In
1941–42 he taught English at the University of Michigan
. He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1942, but did
not use it, choosing instead to teach at Swarthmore
College
in 1942–45. In the summer of 1945, after the
end of
World War II in Europe, he was
in Germany with the
U. S. Strategic Bombing Survey,
studying the effects of Allied bombing on German morale, an
experience that affected his postwar work as his visit to Spain
had affected
him earlier. On his return, he settled in Manhattan
, working as a freelance writer, and as a lecturer
at The New School for Social Research
and a visiting professor at Bennington, Smith
, and other
American colleges. In 1946 he became a
naturalized citizen of the US.
His
theology in his later years evolved
from a highly inward and psychologically oriented
Protestantism in the early 1940s to a more
Roman Catholic-oriented interest in
the significance of the body and in collective ritual in the later
1940s and 1950s, and finally to the theology of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer which rejected
"childish" conceptions of God for an adult religion that focused on
the significance of human suffering.
Auden
began summering in Europe in 1948, first in Ischia
, Italy
, where he
rented a house, then, starting 1958, in Kirchstetten
, Austria
where he bought a farmhouse, and, he said, shed
tears of joy at owning a home for the first time.
In 1951,
shortly before the two British spies Guy
Burgess and Donald Maclean
fled to the USSR
, Burgess
attempted to phone Auden to arrange a vacation visit to Ischia that
he had earlier discussed with Auden; Auden never returned the call
and had no further contact with either spy, but a media frenzy
ensued in which his name was mistakenly associated with their
escape. The frenzy was repeated when the MI5
documents on
the incident were released in 2007.
In
1956–61, Auden was Professor of
Poetry at Oxford
University
where he was required to give three lectures each
year. This fairly light workload allowed him to continue to
winter in New York, where he now lived on
St. Mark's Place, and to summer in Europe,
spending only three weeks each year lecturing in Oxford. He now
earned his income mostly by readings and lecture tours, and by
writing for
The New Yorker
and other magazines.
During his last years, his conversation became repetitive, to the
disappointment of friends who had known him earlier as a witty and
wide-ranging conversationalist. In 1972, he moved his winter home
from New York to Oxford, where his old college, Christ Church,
offered him a cottage, but he continued to summer in Austria.
He died
in Vienna
in 1973 and
was buried in Kirchstetten
.
Work
Overview
Auden published about four hundred poems, including seven long
poems (two of them book-length). His poetry was encyclopedic in
scope and method, ranging in style from obscure twentieth-century
modernism to the lucid traditional forms such as
ballads and
limericks, from
doggerel through
haiku
and
villanelles to a "Christmas
Oratorio" and a
baroque eclogue in Anglo-Saxon meters. The tone and content
of his poems ranged from pop-song clichés to complex philosophical
meditations, from the corns on his toes to atoms and stars, from
contemporary crises to the evolution of society.
He also wrote more than four hundred essays and reviews about
literature, history, politics, music, religion, and many other
subjects. He collaborated on plays with
Christopher Isherwood and on opera
libretti with
Chester Kallman,
worked with a group of artists and filmmakers on documentary films
in the 1930s and with the
New York
Pro Musica early music group in the 1950s and 1960s. About
collaboration he wrote in 1964: "collaboration has brought me
greater erotic joy . . . than any sexual relations I have
had."
Auden controversially rewrote or discarded some of his most famous
poems when he prepared his later collected editions. He wrote that
he rejected poems that he found "boring" or "dishonest" in the
sense that they expressed views that he had never held but had used
only because he felt they would be rhetorically effective. His
rejected poems include "
Spain" and
"
September 1, 1939." His
literary executor,
Edward Mendelson, argues in his
introduction to Auden's
Selected Poems that Auden's
practice reflected his sense of the persuasive power of poetry and
his reluctance to misuse it. (
Selected Poems includes some
poems that Auden rejected and early texts of poems that he
revised.)
Early work, 1922–1939
Up to 1930
Auden began writing poems at thirteen, mostly in the styles of
19th-century romantic poets, especially
Wordsworth, and later poets with rural interests,
especially
Thomas Hardy. At eighteen he
discovered
T. S. Eliot and adopted
an extreme version of Eliot's style. He found his own voice at
twenty, when he wrote the first poem later included in his
collected work, "From the very first coming down." This and other
poems of the late 1920s tended to be in a clipped, elusive style
that alluded to, but did not directly state, their themes of
loneliness and loss. Twenty of these poems appeared in his first
book
Poems (1928), a pamphlet
hand-printed by
Stephen
Spender.
In 1928 he wrote his first dramatic work,
Paid on Both Sides, subtitled "A
Charade," which combined style and content from the Icelandic
sagas with jokes from English school life.
This mixture of tragedy and farce, with a dream
play-within-the-play, introduced the mixed styles and content of
much of his later work. This drama and thirty short poems appeared
in his first published book
Poems (1930, 2nd edition with seven poems
replaced, 1933); the poems in the book were mostly lyrical and
gnomic mediations on hoped-for or unconsummated love and on themes
of personal, social, and seasonal renewal; among these poems were
"It was Easter as I walked," "Doom is dark," "Sir, no man's enemy,"
and "This lunar beauty."
A recurrent theme in these early poems is the effect of "family
ghosts", Auden's term for the powerful, unseen psychological
effects of preceding generations on any individual life (and the
title of a poem). A parallel theme, present throughout his work, is
the contrast between biological evolution (unchosen and
involuntary) and the psychological evolution of cultures and
individuals (voluntary and deliberate even in its subconscious
aspects).
1931 to 1935
Auden's next large-scale work was
The
Orators: An English Study (1932; revised editions, 1934,
1966), in verse and prose, largely about hero-worship in personal
and political life. In his shorter poems, his style became more
open and accessible, and the exuberant "Six Odes" in
The
Orators reflect his new interest in Robert Burns. During the
next few years, many of his poems took their form and style from
traditional ballads and popular songs, and also from expansive
classical forms like the Odes of
Horace,
which he seems to have discovered through the German poet
Hölderlin. Around this time his main
influences were
Dante,
William Langland, and
Alexander Pope.
During these years, much of his work expressed left-wing views, and
he became widely known as a political poet, although his work was
more politically ambivalent than many reviewers recognized. He
generally wrote about revolutionary change in terms of a "change of
heart", a transformation of a society from a closed-off psychology
of fear to an open psychology of love. His verse drama
The Dance of Death (1933)
was a political extravaganza in the style of a theatrical revue,
which Auden later called "a nihilistic leg-pull." His next play
The Dog Beneath the
Skin (1935), written in collaboration with Isherwood, was
similarly a quasi-Marxist updating of
Gilbert and Sullivan in which the
general idea of social transformation was more prominent than any
specific political action or structure.
The Ascent of F6 (1937),
another play written with Isherwood, was partly an anti-imperialist
satire, partly (in the character of the self-destroying climber
Michael Ransom) an examination of Auden's own motives in taking on
a public role as a political poet. This play included the first
version of "
Funeral Blues" ("Stop all
the clocks"), written as a satiric eulogy for a politician; Auden
later rewrote the poem as a "Cabaret Song" about lost love (written
to be sung by the soprano
Hedli
Anderson for whom he wrote many lyrics in the 1930s). In 1935,
he worked briefly on documentary films with the
G.P.O. Film
Unit, writing his famous verse commentary for
Night Mail and lyrics for other films that
were among his attempts in the 1930s to create a widely-accessible,
socially-conscious art.
1936 to 1939
These tendencies in style and content culminate in his collection
Look, Stranger! (1936; his British publisher chose the
title, which Auden hated; Auden retitled the 1937 US edition
On This Island). This book
included political odes, love poems, comic songs, meditative
lyrics, and a variety of intellectually intense but emotionally
accessible verse. Among the poems included in the book, connected
by themes of personal, social, and evolutionary change and of the
possibilities and problems of personal love, were "Hearing of
harvests", "Out on the lawn I lie in bed", "O what is that sound",
"Look, stranger, on this island now" (later revised versions change
"on" to "at"), and "Our hunting fathers."
Auden was now arguing that an artist should be a kind of
journalist, and he put this view into practice in
Letters from Iceland (1937) a
travel book in prose and verse written with
Louis MacNeice, which included his long
social, literary, and autobiographical commentary "Letter to Lord
Byron." In 1937, after observing the
Spanish Civil War he wrote a
politically-engaged pamphlet poem
Spain (1937); he later discarded it from
his collected works.
Journey to a
War (1939) a travel book in prose and verse, was written
with Isherwood after their visit to the
Sino-Japanese War.
Auden's last
collaboration with Isherwood was their third play, On the Frontier, an anti-war satire
written in Broadway
and West End
styles.
Auden's themes in his shorter poems now included the fragility and
transience of personal love ("Danse Macabre", "The Dream", "Lay
your sleeping head"), a theme he treated with ironic wit in his
"Four Cabaret Songs for Miss
Hedli
Anderson" (which included "O Tell Me the Truth About Love" and
the revised version of "
Funeral
Blues"), and also the corrupting effect of public and official
culture on individual lives ("Casino", "School Children", "Dover").
In 1938 he wrote a series of dark, ironic ballads about individual
failure ("Miss Gee", "James Honeyman", "Victor"). All these
appeared in his next book of verse,
Another Time (1940), together with other
famous poems such as "Dover", "As He Is", and "
Musée des Beaux Arts" (all
written before he moved to America in 1939), and "In Memory of W.
B. Yeats", "
The Unknown
Citizen", "Law Like Love", "
September 1, 1939", and "In Memory of
Sigmund Freud" (written in America). The elegies for Yeats and
Freud are partly statements of Auden's anti-heroic theme, in which
great deeds are performed, not by unique geniuses whom others
cannot hope to imitate, but by otherwise ordinary individuals who
were "silly like us" (Yeats) or of whom it could be said "he wasn't
clever at all" (Freud), and who became teachers of others, not
awe-inspiring heroes.
Middle period, 1940–1957
1940 to 1946
In 1940 Auden wrote a long philosophical poem "New Year Letter",
which appeared with miscellaneous notes and other poems in
The Double Man (1941). At
the time of his return to the Anglican Communion he began writing
abstract verse on theological themes, such as "Canzone" and "Kairos
and Logos." Around 1942, as he became more comfortable with
religious themes, his verse became more open and relaxed, and he
increasingly used the
syllabic verse
he learned from the poetry of
Marianne
Moore.
His recurring themes in this period included the artist's
temptation to use other persons as material for his art rather than
valuing them for themselves ("Prospero to Ariel") and the
corresponding moral obligation to make and keep commitments while
recognizing the temptation to break them ("In Sickness and
Health").
From 1942 through 1947 he worked mostly on three long poems in
dramatic form, each differing from the others in form and content:
"
For the Time Being: A Christmas
Oratorio", "
The Sea and the
Mirror: A Commentary on Shakespeare's
The Tempest"
(both published in
For the Time Being, 1944), and
The Age of Anxiety: A
Baroque Eclogue (published separately 1947). The first two,
with Auden's other new poems from 1940-44, were included in his
first collected edition,
The Collected Poetry of W.
H. Auden (1945), with most of his earlier poems,
many in revised versions.
1947 to 1957
After completing
The Age of Anxiety in 1946 he focused
again on shorter poems, notably "A Walk After Dark," "The Love
Feast", and "The Fall of Rome." Many of these evoked the Italian
village where he summered in 1948-57, and his next book,
Nones (1951), had a Mediterranean
atmosphere new to his work. A new theme was the "sacred importance"
of the human body in its ordinary aspect (breathing, sleeping,
eating) and the continuity with nature that the body made possible
(in contrast to the division between humanity and nature that he
had emphasized in the 1930s); his poems on these themes included
"
In Praise of Limestone" and
"Memorial for the City." In 1949 Auden and Kallman wrote the
libretto for
Igor Stravinsky's opera
The Rake's Progress,
and later collaborated on two libretti for operas by
Hans Werner Henze.
Auden's first separate prose book was
The Enchafèd Flood: The Romantic
Iconography of the Sea (1950), based on a series of lectures
on the image of the sea in romantic literature. Between 1949 and
1954 he worked on a sequence of seven
Good
Friday poems, "
Horae Canonicae",
an encyclopedic survey of geological, biological, cultural, and
personal history, focused on the irreversible act of murder; the
poem was also a study in cyclical and linear ideas of time. While
writing this, he also wrote a sequence of seven poems about man's
relation to nature, "Bucolics." Both sequences appeared in his next
book,
The Shield of
Achilles (1955), with other short poems, including the
book's title poem, "Fleet Visit", and "Epitaph for the Unknown
Soldier."
Extending the themes of "Horae Canonicae", in 1955–56 he wrote a
group of poems about "history," the term he used to mean the set of
unique events made by human choices, as opposed to "nature," the
set of involuntary events created by natural processes, statistics,
and anonymous forces such as crowds. These poems included "T the
Great", "The Maker", and the title poem of his next collection
Homage to Clio (1960).
Later work, 1958–1973
In the late 1950s Auden's style became less rhetorical while its
range of styles increased. In 1958, having moved his summer home
from Italy to Austria, he wrote "Good-bye to the Mezzogiorno";
other poems from this period include "Dichtung und Wahrheit: An
Unwritten Poem", a prose poem about the relation between love and
personal and poetic language, and the contrasting "Dame Kind",
about the anonymous impersonal reproductive instinct. These and
other poems, including his 1955-66 poems about history, appeared in
Homage to Clio (1960).
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.
While translating the haiku and other verse in
Dag Hammarskjöld's
Markings,
Auden began using haiku for many of his poems. A sequence of
fifteen poems about his house in Austria, "Thanksgiving for a
Habitat", appeared in
About the
House (1965), with other poems that included his
reflections on his lecture tours, "On the Circuit." In the late
1960s he wrote some of his most vigorous poems, including "River
Profile" and two poems that looked back over his life, "Prologue at
Sixty" and "Forty Years On." All these appeared in
City Without Walls (1969). His
lifelong passion for Icelandic legend culminated in his verse
translation of
The Elder Edda
(1969).
He was commissioned in 1963 to write lyrics for the Broadway
musical
Man of La Mancha, but the
producer rejected them as insufficiently romantic.
A Certain World: A Commonplace Book
(1970) was a kind of self-portrait made up of favorite quotations
with commentary, arranged in alphabetical order by subject. His
last prose book was a selection of essays and reviews,
Forewords and Afterwords (1973).
His last books of verse,
Epistle
to a Godson (1972) and the unfinished
Thank You, Fog (1974) include reflective
poems about language ("Natural Linguistics") and about his own
aging ("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.
Reputation and influence
Auden's stature in modern literature has been disputed, with
opinions ranging from that of
Hugh
MacDiarmid, who called him "a complete wash-out", to the
obituarist in
The Times (London),
who wrote: "W. H. Auden, for long the
enfant terrible of English poetry
. . . emerges as its undisputed master."
In his
enfant terrible stage in the 1930s he was both
praised and dismissed as a progressive and accessible voice, in
contrast to the politically nostalgic and poetically obscure voice
of
T. S.
Eliot. His departure for America in 1939
was hotly debated in Britain (once even in Parliament), with some
critics treating it as a betrayal, and the role of influential
young poet passed to
Dylan Thomas,
although defenders such as
Geoffrey
Grigson, in an introduction to a 1949 anthology of modern
poetry, wrote that Auden "arches over all." His stature was
suggested by book titles such as
Auden and After by
Francis Scarfe (1942) and
The
Auden Generation by Samuel Hynes (1972).
In the US, starting in the late 1930s, the detached, ironic tone of
Auden's regular stanzas set the style for a whole generation of
poets;
John Ashbery recalled that in
the 1940s Auden "was
the modern poet." His manner was so
pervasive in American poetry that the ecstatic style of the
Beat Generation was partly a
reaction against his influence.
In the 1950s and 1960s, some writers
(notably Philip
Larkin
and Randall Jarrell)
lamented that Auden's work had declined from its earlier
promise.
By the time of Auden's death in 1973 he had attained the status of
a respected elder statesman. The
Encyclopaedia Britannica notes that
"by the time of
Eliot's death in 1965
... a convincing case could be made for the assertion that Auden
was indeed Eliot's successor, as Eliot had inherited sole claim to
supremacy when
Yeats died in
1939." With some exceptions, British critics tended to treat his
early work as his best, while American critics tended to favor his
middle and later work. Unlike other modern poets, his reputation
did not decline after his death, and
Joseph Brodsky wrote that his was "the
greatest mind of the twentieth century."
Auden's popularity and familiarity suddenly increased after his
"
Funeral Blues" ("Stop all the
clocks") was read aloud in the film
Four Weddings and a Funeral
(1994); subsequently, a pamphlet edition of ten of his poems,
Tell Me the Truth About Love, sold more than 275,000
copies. After September 11, 2001, his poem "
September 1, 1939" was widely circulated
and frequently broadcast. Public readings and broadcast tributes in
the UK and US in 2007 marked his centenary year.
Published works
The following list includes only the books of poems and essays that
Auden prepared during his lifetime; for a more complete list,
including other works and posthumous editions, see
Bibliography of W.
H.
Auden.
In the list below, works reprinted in the
Complete Works of
W. H. Auden are indicated by footnote
references.
Books
- Poems (London, 1930;
second edn., seven poems substituted, London, 1933; includes poems
and Paid on Both Sides: A
Charade) (dedicated to Christopher Isherwood).
- The Orators: An English
Study (London, 1932, verse and prose; slightly revised edn.,
London, 1934; revised edn. with new preface, London, 1966; New York
1967) (dedicated to Stephen
Spender).
- The Dance of
Death (London, 1933, play) (dedicated to Robert Medley and Rupert Doone).
- Poems (New York, 1934;
contains Poems [1933 edition], The Orators [1932
edition], and The Dance of Death).
- The Dog Beneath the
Skin (London, New York, 1935; play, with Christopher Isherwood) (dedicated to
Robert Moody).
- The Ascent of F6
(London, 1936; 2nd edn., 1937; New York, 1937; play, with Christopher Isherwood) (dedicated to
John Bicknell Auden).
- Look, Stranger!
(London, 1936, poems; US edn., On
This Island, New York, 1937) (dedicated to Erika Mann)
- Letters from
Iceland (London, New York, 1937; verse and prose, with
Louis MacNeice) (dedicated to
George Augustus Auden).
- On the Frontier
(London, 1938; New York 1939; play, with Christopher Isherwood) (dedicated to
Benjamin Britten).
- Journey to a War
(London, New York, 1939; verse and prose, with Christopher Isherwood) (dedicated to
E. M.
Forster).
- Another Time (London, New
York 1940; poetry) (dedicated to Chester
Kallman).
- The Double Man (New
York, 1941, poems; UK edn., New Year Letter, London, 1941)
(Dedicated to Elizabeth Mayer).
- For the Time Being
(New York, 1944; London, 1945; two long poems: "The Sea and the Mirror: A Commentary
on Shakespeare's The Tempest", dedicated to James and Tania Stern, and "For the Time Being: A Christmas
Oratorio", in memoriam Constance Rosalie Auden [Auden's
mother]).
- The Collected Poetry of W. H. Auden
(New York, 1945; includes new poems) (dedicated to Christopher Isherwood and Chester Kallman).
- The Age of
Anxiety: A Baroque Eclogue (New York, 1947; London, 1948;
verse; won the 1948 Pulitzer
Prize for Poetry) (dedicated to John
Betjeman).
- Collected Shorter Poems, 1930-1944 (London, 1950;
similar to 1945 Collected Poetry) (dedicated to Christopher Isherwood and Chester Kallman).
- The Enchafèd
Flood (New York, 1950; London, 1951; prose) (dedicated to
Alan Ansen).
- Nones (New York, 1951;
London, 1952; poems) (dedicated to Reinhold and Ursula Niebuhr)
- The Shield of
Achilles (New York, London, 1955; poems; won the 1956
National Book Award for
Poetry) (dedicated to Lincoln and
Fidelma Kirstein).
- Homage to Clio (New
York, London, 1960; poems) (dedicated to E. R. and A. E. Dodds).
- The Dyer's Hand (New
York, 1962; London, 1963; essays) (dedicated to Nevill Coghill).
- About the House (New
York, London, 1965; poems) (dedicated to Edmund and Elena Wilson).
- Collected Shorter Poems 1927-1957 (London, 1966; New
York, 1967) (dedicated to Christopher Isherwood and Chester Kallman).
- Collected Longer Poems (London, 1968; New York,
1969).
- Secondary Worlds
(London, New York, 1969; prose) (dedicated to Valerie Eliot).
- City Without Walls and
Other Poems (London, New York, 1969) (dedicated to Peter Heyworth).
- A Certain World: A
Commonplace Book (New York, London, 1970; quotations with
commentary) (dedicated to Geoffrey
Gorer).
- Epistle to a Godson and
Other Poems (London, New York, 1972) (dedicated to Orlan
Fox).
- Forewords and
Afterwords (New York, London, 1973; essays) (dedicated to
Hannah Arendt).
- Thank You, Fog: Last
Poems (London, New York, 1974) (dedicated to Michael and Marny
Yates).
Film scripts and opera libretti
- Night Mail (1936,
documentary film narrative, not published separately except as a
program note).
- Paul Bunyan
(1941, libretto for operetta by Benjamin Britten; not published until
1976).
- The Rake's Progress
(1951, with Chester Kallman,
libretto for an opera by Igor
Stravinsky).
- Elegy for Young
Lovers (1961, with Chester
Kallman, libretto for an opera by Hans Werner Henze).
- The Bassarids (1961, with
Chester Kallman, libretto for an
opera by Hans Werner Henze based
on The Bacchae of Euripides).
- Love's Labour's
Lost (1973, with Chester
Kallman, libretto for an opera by Nicolas Nabokov, based on Shakespeare's play).
Notes
- The first syllable of "Auden" rhymes with "law" (not with
"how").
- Auden used the phrase "Anglo-American Poets" in 1943,
implicitly referring to himself and T. S. Eliot.
- The first definition of "Anglo-American" in the OED
(2008 revision) is: "Of, belonging to, or involving both England
(or Britain) and America." See also the definition "English in
origin or birth, American by settlement or citizenship" in See also
the definition "an American, especially a citizen of the United
States, of English origin or descent" in See also the definition "a
native or descendant of a native of England who has settled in or
become a citizen of America, esp. of the United States" from
The Random House Dictionary, 2009, available online
at
- The name Wystan derives from the 9th century St Wystan, who
was murdered by Beorhtwulf, king of Mercia, after
Wystan objected to Beorthtwulf's plan to marry Wystan's mother. His
remains were reburied at Repton, Derbyshire, where they became the object of a
cult; the parish church of Repton is named St Wystan's. Auden's
father, George Augustus Auden, was educated at
Repton
School.
- In "Letter to Lord Byron" he names the saga character Auðun
Skökull as one of his ancestors.
- The Times, July 5, 1922 (Issue 43075), p. 12, col.
D
- Wright,
Hugh, Auden and Gresham's in Conference Common
Room, Vol. 44, No. 2, Summer 2007 online at
schoolsearch.co.uk (accessed 25 April 2008)
- The Old School: Essays by Divers Hands (London:
Jonathan Cape, 1934) title details at books.google.com
- Lissner, Will. "Poet and Judge Assist a Samaritan." New
York Times, 2 March 1956, pp. 1, 39.
References
Printed sources
See also the listings on
the
criticism page at the W. H. Auden
Society web site. In the list below, unless noted, publication
data and ISBN refer to the first editions; many titles are also
available in later reprints.
Bibliography
- Bloomfield, B. C., and Edward
Mendelson (1972). W. H. Auden: A Bibliography
1924-1969. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. ISBN
0-8139-0395-5. See post-1969 supplements in Auden Studies
series listed below.
General biographical and critical studies
- Carpenter, Humphrey (1981).
W. H. Auden: A Biography. London: George
Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-049-28044-9.
- Clark, Thekla (1995). Wystan and Chester: A Personal Memoir
of W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman. London:
Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-17591-0.
- Davenport-Hines, Richard
(1996). Auden. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-17507-2.
- Farnan, Dorothy J. (1984). Auden in Love. New York:
Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-50418-5.
- Fuller, John (1998).
W. H. Auden: A Commentary. London: Faber and
Faber. ISBN 0-571-19268-8.
- Hecht, Anthony (1993). The
Hidden Law: The Poetry of W.H. Auden. Cambridge
(Mass.): Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-39006-7.
- Mendelson, Edward (1981).
Early Auden. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-28712-1.
- Mendelson, Edward (1999).
Later Auden. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN
0-374-18408-9.
- Osborne, Charles
(1979). W. H. Auden: The Life of a Poet.
London: Eyre Methuen. ISBN 978-0871317889
- Smith, Stan, ed. (2005). The Cambridge Companion to
W. H. Auden. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press. ISBN 0-521-82962-3.
- Spears, Monroe K. (1963). The Poetry of W. H.
Auden: The Disenchanted Island. New York: Oxford
University Press.
- Spender, Stephen, ed. (1975).
W. H. Auden: A Tribute. London: Weidenfeld
& Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-76884-0.
- Wright, George T. (1969; rev. ed. 1981). W. H.
Auden. Boston: Twayne. ISBN 0-8057-7346-0.
Special topics
- Haffenden, John, ed. (1983).
W. H. Auden: The Critical Heritage. London:
Routledge and Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-710-09350-0. Selected reviews of
Auden's books and plays.
- Kirsch, Arthur (2005). Auden and Christianity. New
Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10814-1.
- Mitchell, Donald (1981), Britten and Auden in the Thirties:
the year 1936. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN
0-571-11715-5.
- Myers, Alan, and Robert Forsythe (1999), W. H. Auden: Pennine Poet . Nenthead: North
Pennines Heritage Trust. ISBN 0-9513535-78. Pamphlet with map and
gazetteer.
Auden Studies series
- Auden, W. H.; ed. by Katherine
Bucknell and Nicholas Jenkins (1990) "The Map of All My
Youth": early works, friends and influences (Auden Studies 1).
Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-812964-5.
- Auden, W. H.; ed. by Katherine
Bucknell and Nicholas Jenkins (1994). "The Language of
Learning and the Language of Love": uncollected writings, new
interpretations (Auden Studies 2). Oxford: Oxford University
Press. ISBN 0-19-812257-8.
- Auden, W. H.; ed. by Katherine
Bucknell and Nicholas Jenkins (1995). "In Solitude, For
Company": W. H. Auden after 1940: unpublished
prose and recent criticism (Auden Studies 3). Oxford: Oxford
University Press. ISBN 0-19-818294-5.
External links
See also the descriptive list on
the links page
at the W. H. Auden Society web site.