Tuesday, October 22, 2019
The Poetry Of A. E. Housman Essays - A. E. Housman, Free Essays
The Poetry Of A. E. Housman Essays - A. E. Housman, Free Essays    The Poetry of A. E. Housman       Housman was born in Burton-On-Trent, England, in 1865, just as   the US Civil War was ending. As a young child, he was disturbed by the   news of slaughter from the former British colonies, and was affected   deeply. This turned him into a brooding, introverted teenager and a   misanthropic, pessimistic adult. This outlook on life shows clearly in   his poetry. Housman believed that people were generally evil, and that   life conspired against mankind. This is evident not only in his   poetry, but also in his short stories. For example, his story, "The   Child of Lancashire," published in 1893 in The London Gazette, is   about an child who travels to London, where his parents die, and he   becomes a street urchin. There are veiled implications that the child   is a homosexual (as was Housman, most probably), and he becomes mixed   up with a gang of similar youths, attacking affluent pedestrians and   stealing their watches and gold coins. Eventually he leaves the gang   and becomes wealthy, but is attacked by the same gang (who don't   recognize him) and is thrown off London Bridge into the Thames, which   is unfortunately frozen over, and is killed on the hard ice below.   Housman's poetry is similarly pessimistic. In fully half the poems the   speaker is dead. In others, he is about to die or wants to die, or his   girlfriend is dead. Death is a really important stage of life to   Housman; without death, Housman would probably not have been able to   be a poet. (Housman, himself, died in 1937.) A few of his poems show  an uncharacteristic optimism and love of beauty, however. For example,   in his poem "Trees," he begins:    "Loveliest of trees, the cherry now  Hung low with bloom along the bow  Stands about the woodland side  A virgin in white for Eastertide"    ...and ends:    "Poems are made by fools like me  But only God can make a tree."    (This is a popular quotation, yet most people don't know its source!)    Religion is another theme of Housman's. Housman seems to have had  trouble reconciling conventional Christianity with his homosexuality   and his deep clinical depression. In "Apologia pro Poemate Meo" he   states:    "In heaven-high musings and many  Far off in the wayward night sky,  I would think that the love I bear you  Would make you unable to die [death again]    Would God in his church in heaven  Forgive us our sins of the day,  That boy and man together  Might join in the night and the way."    I think that the sense of hopelessness and homosexual longing is  unmistakable. However, these themes went entirely over the heads of   the people of Housman's day, in the early 1900s.        The best known collection of Housman's poetry is A Shropshire   Lad, published in 1925, followed shortly by More Poems, 1927, and Even   More Poems, 1928. Unsurprisingly, most collections have the same sense   and style. They could easily be one collection, in terms of stylistic  content. All show a sense of the fragility of life, the perversity of  existence, and a thinly veiled homosexual longing, in spite of the   fact that many of the poems apparently (but subliminally?) speak of   young women. It is clear from these works that women were only a   metaphor for love, which in Housman's case usually did not include the   female half of society. More Poems contains perhaps the best statement   of Housman's philosophy of life, a long, untitled poem (no. LXIX) with   oblique references to the town of his birth, Burton-on-Trent, and   statements like:    "And while the sun and moon endure  Luck's a chance, but trouble's sure..."    Indeed, how much more pessimistic can one be?       Not only a poet and storyteller, Housman was a noted classical   scholar. He is known for his extensive translations of the Greek   classics, especially Greek plays by Euripides and Sophocles.   Unfortunately, the bulk of his manuscripts were lost in a disastrous   fire in his office at Oxford, which was caused by a lit cigar falling   into a stack of papers. There were rumors that Housman was hidden in a   closet with a young boy at the time, and therefore did not see the   fire in his own office until it was too late to extinguish it. The   Trustees of the college, however, managed to squelch the rumors, and   Housman's academic tenure was not threatened by the incident.    
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