A.E. Housman
Title Details

524 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

45 b/w illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press

A.E. Housman

Hero of the Hidden Life

by Edgar Vincent

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
A.E. Housman (1859-1936) was an English classical scholar and poet who had an enormous influence on many British poets and musicians.

A.E. Housman (1859-1936) was both a celebrated poet and the foremost classicist of his day. His poetry was set to music by numerous composers including Arthur Somervell, Ralph Vaughan Williams, George Butterworth, Ivor Gurney, John Ireland and Samuel Barber. Housman's painstaking vocation, to restore classical manuscripts by correcting textual errors, took up virtually the whole of his working life. A seemingly inaccessible, aloof man, he never set out tobe a professional poet, yet poetry poured out of him and became his monument.
His renowned A Shropshire Lad and Last Poems were born of an inner crisis, sparked by a profound but unreciprocated attachment fora fellow undergraduate. To be sexually different in the time of Oscar Wilde was to invite ostracism and disgust. This fact, allied with his secretiveness and penchant for irony, reinforced his reticence on personal matters. Untilnow, he has remained a hidden personality, held in the public mind as prim and grim.
This biography reveals by contrast a man of many facets, one companionable in small groups, generous to a fault, and always on the lookout for humour and fun; a master of English prose; a witty and compelling after-dinner speaker; an occasional writer of nonsense verse; a frequenter of the music hall; an intrepid early traveller by air; and a connoisseur of food and wine. Drawing on Housman's published letters and on 81 significant new finds, Edgar Vincent conjures up a new Housman, created out of his reactions to the events of his life as he experienced them. It weaves together his scholarly life and the biographical elements in his poetry to examine his emotional and sexual needs with dispassion and empathy and to uncover his hidden sensibilities and creative world.

EDGAR VINCENT read English at St Catherine's College, Oxford. Following Oxford he was commissioned in the Navy, spending most of his time with the Royal Marines. Subsequently he worked for Imperial Chemical Industries for thirty years. He then fulfilled a life-longambition to write his book Nelson: Love & Fame, published by Yale University Press in 2003. The book was shortlisted for the BBC 4 Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction, was a New York Times Notable Book and was named one ofAtlantic Monthly's Books of the Year.
Childhood
Oxford
The Patent Office
Re-entry to the Academic Life
Pastures New
Who am I?
Paradoxical Housman
Cambridge: The Glittering Prize
The Great War 1914-1918
After the War
Last Poems: A Requiem for Moses Jackson
Last Things
Paris 1932
Academic Apotheosis and Swan Song
Last Flights to France
More Poems, Additional Poems and De Amicitia
References
Bibliography
"Housman could only publicly express the pain and injustice so keenly felt in his own life from behind the mask of poetry; in his work, Edgar Vincent throws the full light of understanding onto that life in a carefully crafted, rigorously scholarly and thoroughly engaging biography." HOUSMAN SOCIETY NEWSLETTER
"[T]his new biography by Edgar Vincent is now the authoritative one and not likely to be bettered.... It is not a biography that should be missed by any reader interested in Housman or that era of British literature and British society." BRITISH MUSIC SOCIETY JOURNAL

Hardcover

9781783272419

February 2018

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February 2018

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February 2018

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Title Details

524 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

45 b/w illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press