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🗓️ 26 March 2024
⏱️ 13 minutes
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Alfred Edward Housman was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, England on March 26, 1859 and was the eldest of seven children. A year after his birth, Housman’s family moved to nearby Bromsgrove, where the poet grew up and had his early education. In 1877, he attended St. John’s College, Oxford and received first class honours in classical moderations.
Housman became distracted, however, when he fell in love with his roommate, Moses Jackson. He unexpectedly failed his final exams, but managed to pass the final year and later took a position as clerk in the Patent Office in London for ten years.
During this time, Housman studied Greek and Roman classics intensively, and, in 1892, he was appointed professor of Latin at University College, London. In 1911, he became professor of Latin at Trinity College, Cambridge, a post he held until his death. As a classicist, Housman gained renown for his editions of the Roman poets Juvenal, Lucan, and Manilius, as well as his meticulous and intelligent commentaries, and his disdain for the unscholarly.
Housman only published two volumes of poetry during his life: A Shropshire Lad (1896) and Last Poems (1922). The majority of the poems in A Shropshire Lad, his cycle of sixty-three poems, were written after the death of Adalbert Jackson, Housman’s friend and companion, in 1892. These poems center around themes of pastoral beauty, unrequited love, fleeting youth, grief, death, and the patriotism of the common soldier. After the manuscript had been turned down by several publishers, Housman decided to publish it at his own expense, much to the surprise of his colleagues and students.
While A Shropshire Lad was slow to gain in popularity, the advent of war, first in the Boer War and then in World War I, gave the book widespread appeal due to its nostalgic depiction of brave English soldiers. Several composers created musical settings for Housman’s work, deepening his popularity.
Housman continued to focus on his teaching, but in the early 1920s, when his old friend Moses Jackson was dying, Housman chose to assemble his best unpublished poems so that Jackson might read them. These later poems, most of them written before 1910, exhibit a range of subject and form much greater than the talents displayed in A Shropshire Lad. When Last Poems was published in 1922, it was an immediate success. A third volume, More Poems, was released posthumously in 1936 by his brother, Laurence, as was an edition of Housman’s Complete Poems (1939).
Despite receiving acclaim as a scholar and a poet during his lifetime, Housman lived as a recluse, rejecting honors and avoiding the public eye. He died on April 30, 1936 in Cambridge.
-bio via Academy of American Poets
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0:00.0 | Welcome back to the Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios. |
0:04.3 | I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Tuesday, March 26, 2024. |
0:10.6 | Today's poem is by A.E. Hausman, and it's called Shropshire Lad number two, |
0:17.1 | though it's perhaps better known by its opening line, loveliest of trees. |
0:23.2 | This is one of Housman's most anthologized poems. |
0:28.5 | A.E. Housman in his own lifetime was best known and achieved greatest renown as a professor of classics and an eminent scholar. |
0:42.3 | It was well into that career that he published a collection of thematically related |
0:50.8 | poems known as the Shropshire Lad, which didn't sell very well at first, but it |
0:58.8 | found a small but faithful readership. And then as England and the rest of Europe began to move |
1:06.7 | into the period of the World Wars, this collection that was spoken mostly in the voice of a |
1:14.6 | youthful adult man, just passing out of adolescence, leaving some of the innocence of youth behind and coming to confront the reality that experience |
1:32.5 | of the world brings with it. More and more English and European readers were drawn to the |
1:39.4 | collection and to its themes, which include the romance of youth, unrequited love, losing friends, |
1:51.7 | and even dying young on the battlefield for one's country. |
1:58.9 | Some of those themes take a while to develop in the collection this poem which is the second |
2:05.1 | is a little more pastoral in its setting as you'll see so let me read the poem |
2:14.7 | offer a few more comments and then read it one more time. |
2:18.9 | This is Shropshelad number two. |
2:22.1 | Loveliest of trees. |
2:27.1 | Loveliest of trees, the cherry now is hung with bloom along the bow, |
2:32.1 | and stands about the woodland ride wearing white for Eastertide. |
2:37.4 | Now of my three score years and ten, twenty will not come again, and take from seventy springs a |
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