Wystan
Hugh Auden was an English poet, often cited as one of the most influential
of the 20th century. He spent the first part of his life in the
United Kingdom, but emigrated to the United States in 1939, becoming
a U.S. citizen in 1946.
Wystan
Hugh Auden was born in York and spent his early childhood in Harborne,
Birmingham, where his father Dr George Auden was the school medical
officer for Birmingham and Professor of Public Health at the University
of Birmingham. From the age of eight Auden was sent away to boarding
schools, firstly at St. Edmund's School (Hindhead) in Surrey,
and later Gresham's School in Norfolk, but he returned to Birmingham
for the holidays. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford University,
but took only a third-class degree. After Oxford he went to live
for a year in Weimar Berlin, in whose tolerant atmosphere his
homosexuality could be more openly expressed.
On
returning to England, he taught at two boys' schools from 1930
to 1935. The most important of these, and where he was happiest,
was the Downs School, near Great Malvern. Here he spent three
years and wrote some of his finest early love poems: including
"This lunar beauty"; "Lay your sleeping head, my
love"; "Fish in the unruffled lakes"; and "Out
on the lawn I lie in bed".
In
1935 Auden made a marriage of convenience to Erika Mann, lesbian
daughter of the great German novelist Thomas Mann, in order to
provide her with a British passport to escape the Third Reich.
Although the "couple" never lived together, they remained
friends and never bothered to divorce. Auden and Christopher Isherwood
emigrated to the United States in 1939. This move away from England,
just as the Second World War was starting, was seen by many as
a betrayal and his poetic reputation suffered briefly as a result.
Soon
after arriving in New York, he gave a public reading with Isherwood
and Louis MacNeice, at which he met the poet Chester Kallman for
the first time. Kallman was to be his lover for a period of two
years, but remained his companion for the rest of his life, and
the two shared houses and apartments for most of the period from
1953 until Auden's death in 1973, though the relationship was
often troubled.
In
1940, Auden returned to the Anglican faith of his childhood when
he joined the Episcopal Church of the United States; he was influenced
in this reconversion partly through reading Søren Kierkegaard
and Reinhold Niebuhr. His conversion influenced his work significantly
as he explored the parable and Christian-allegorical readings
of Shakespeare's plays. He regarded his sexuality as a sin that
he would continue to commit, sometimes alluding to Augustine's
prayer, "Make me chaste, Lord, but not yet."
His
theology in his later years evolved from a highly inward and psychologically-oriented
Protestantism in the early 1940s through a more 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 in which all belief in a supernatural God was regarded
as something that needed to be outgrown in the modern world; Auden
memorialized Bonhoeffer in his poem "Friday's Child".
Having
spent the war years in the United States, Auden became a naturalized
citizen in 1946, but returned to Europe during the summers starting
in 1948, first in Italy then in Austria. From 1956 to 1961, Auden
was Professor of Poetry at Oxford University, a post which required
him to give only three lectures each year, so he spent only a
few weeks at Oxford during his professorship. During the last
year of his life he moved back from New York to Oxford, and he
died in Vienna in 1973. He was buried near his summer home in
Kirchstetten, Austria.
Work
Auden wrote a considerable body of criticism and essays as well
as co-authoring some drama with his friend Christopher Isherwood,
but he is primarily known as a poet. Auden's work is characterised
by exceptional variety, ranging from such rigorous traditional
forms as the villanelle to original yet intricate forms, as well
as the technical and verbal skills Auden displayed regardless
of form. He was also partly responsible for re-introducing Anglo-Saxon
accentual meter to English poetry.
An
area of controversy is the extent to which Auden reworked poems
in successive publications, and dropped several of his best-known
poems from "collected" editions because he no longer
felt they were honest or accurate. His literary executor, Edward
Mendelson, makes the case in his introduction to Auden's Selected
Poems that this was in fact an affirmation of Auden's serious
belief in the power and importance of poetry. The Selected Poems
include some of the verse Auden rejected, and early versions of
some which he later revised.
Auden
always saw himself as a northerner and had a lifelong allegiance
to the high limestone moorland of the North Pennines in Durham,
Northumberland and Cumbria, in particular the poignant remains
of the once-thriving lead mining industry. Auden called it his
'Mutterland' and his 'great good place'. Auden first went north
(to Rookhope, County Durham) in 1919 and the Pennine landscapes
excited a Wordsworthian visionary intensity in the twelve-year-old
Wystan.
From
1921 Auden often stayed at his parents' cottage near Keswick in
Cumbria and some forty of the poems of the ‘20s and ‘30s
and two influential plays Paid on Both Sides and The Dog Beneath
the Skin are set in the North Pennines. The 1922 epiphany when
Auden first became conscious of himself as a creative artist,
occurred at Rookhope, when he dropped a stone down a flooded mineshaft.
References
to the North Pennine area, and lead mining, occur constantly throughout
Auden’s later life in both prose and verse, most notably
in New Year Letter (1940); The Age of Anxiety (1947); Six Unexpected
Days (Vogue article of 1954, an itinerary for Americans to drive
through the North Pennines); Amor Loci (1965) and Prologue at
Sixty (1967) where he calls himself a ‘Son of the North'.
Before
he turned to Anglicanism Auden took an active interest in left-wing
political controversies of his day and some of his greatest work
reflects these concerns, such as Spain, a poem on the Spanish
Civil War and September 1, 1939 on the outbreak of World War II
(both were later repudiated by Auden, and excluded from his Collected
Poems). Other memorable works include his Christmas oratorio,
For the Time Being, The Unknown Citizen, Musée des Beaux-Arts,
and poems on the deaths of William Butler Yeats and Sigmund
Freud.
Auden's ironic love poem Funeral Blues (originally written to
be sung by a soprano friend of his, Hedli Anderson) was movingly
read in the 1994 film Four Weddings and a Funeral. Before this,
Auden's work was famously used in the GPO Film Unit's documentary
film Night Mail, for which he wrote a verse commentary.
Auden
was often thought of as part of a group of like-minded writers
including Edward Upward, Christopher Isherwood, Louis MacNeice
(with whom he collaborated on Letters from Iceland in 1936), Cecil
Day-Lewis, and Stephen Spender, although he himself stopped thinking
of himself as part of a group after about the age of 24. He also
collaborated closely with composers, writing an opera libretto
for Benjamin Britten, and, in collaboration with Chester Kallman,
a libretto for Igor Stravinsky and two libretti for Hans Werner
Henze.
Auden
was a frequent correspondent and longtime friend (although they
rarely saw each other) of J.R.R. Tolkien. He was among the most
prominent early critics to praise The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien
wrote in a 1971 letter, "I am... very deeply in Auden's debt
in recent years. His support of me and interest in my work has
been one of my chief encouragements. He gave me very good reviews,
notices and letters from the beginning when it was by no means
a popular thing to do. He was, in fact, sneered at for it."
His
1947 poem The Age of Anxiety was made into a Symphony by Leonard
Bernstein.
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