Louis MacNeice - The University of Birmingham - Edgbaston, Birmingham, U.K.
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Mike_bjm
N 52° 27.064 W 001° 55.771
30U E 572747 N 5811747
A Blue Plaque for Louis MacNeice who was a poet, author and playwright can be found outside the entrance to the Faculty of Arts building.
Waymark Code: WM126RT
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 03/14/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member fi67
Views: 3

A Blue Plaque for Louis MacNeice who was a poet, author and playwright can be found outside the entrance to the Faculty of Arts building. He taught classics at the university between 1930 and 1936.

'Louis MacNeice, (born Sept. 12, 1907, Belfast, Ire.—died Sept. 3, 1963, London, Eng.), British poet and playwright, a member, with W.H. Auden, C. Day-Lewis, and Stephen Spender, of a group whose low-keyed, unpoetic, socially committed, and topical verse was the “new poetry” of the 1930s.

After studying at the University of Oxford (1926–30), MacNeice became a lecturer in classics at the University of Birmingham (1930–36) and later in Greek at the Bedford College for Women, London (1936–40). In 1941 he began to write and produce radio plays for the British Broadcasting Corporation. Foremost among his fine radio verse plays was the dramatic fantasy The Dark Tower (1947), with music by Benjamin Britten.

MacNeice’s first book of poetry, Blind Fireworks, appeared in 1929, followed by more than a dozen other volumes, such as Poems (1935), Autumn Journal (1939), Collected Poems, 1925–1948 (1949), and, posthumously, The Burning Perch (1963). An intellectual honesty, Celtic exuberance, and sardonic humour characterized his poetry, which combined a charming natural lyricism with the mundane patterns of colloquial speech. His most characteristic mood was that of the slightly detached, wryly observant, ironic and witty commentator. Among MacNeice’s prose works are Letters from Iceland (with W.H. Auden, 1937) and The Poetry of W.B. Yeats (1941). He was also a skilled translator, particularly of Horace and Aeschylus (Agamemnon, 1936).' (visit link)

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