Collected Poems 1928-1953 by Stephen Spender
Stephen Spender
Faber & Faber (1955)
In Collection
#3109
0*
Poet
Hardcover B000Q6BG56
eng
Product Details
LoC Classification PR6037.P47A17 1955
Dewey 821.91
Nationality British
Cover Price $7.00
No. of Pages 204
Height x Width 9.4  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Links Amazon US
User Defined
Conflict WW2
Notes
Reilly 310,

Omits some of the author's early poems. Cf. his Collected poems, 1928-1985. P. 13.

Sir Stephen Spender (1909- 1995)
Studied at University College, Oxford. During WW2 served in National Fire Service and was co-editor, for two years with Cyril Connolly, of Horizon. Ruins and Visions (1942) and Poems of Dedication (1947). Celebrated entry of Diary for 3rd September, 1939 : "I am going to keep a journal because I cannot accept the fact that I feel so shattered that I cannot write at all."

Sir Stephen Spender (1909-1995): An English poet, critic, lecturer, and professor. His writings often reflect democratic leftist and idealistic qualities, and he is perhaps best well known for his contribution to The God That Failed (1949), a volume of essays by those disillusioned with communism. Though he often romanticized pre-war Germany through his novels and translations of Hölderlin and Schiller, he expressed a fierce hatred of National Socialism. During the Second World War he served in the London Fire Service, and many of his poems reflect his experience amid the flames and destruction that resulted from the German blitz against London. Like Air Raid Across the Bay at Plymouth, To Poets and Airmen is a prime example of the poet’s autobiographical reflections, being a powerful elegy on the iniquity of bombing innocent civilians and the dangers faced by a city’s defenders and rescuers.