Tuesday, August 14, 2007

(New to) Great Regulars: There is the W.H. Auden (he rarely

used his first names) of the 1930s, the English political poet who reported on the Spanish civil war and the start of the Sino-Japanese war in 1939. Then, there is the poet living in the USA during the 1940s who became a US citizen and became primarily concerned with what was called at the time "neo-orthodox Protestant" theology.

from René Wadlow's The Flutes of Dionysus: Newropeans Magazine: W.H. Auden: Poet of the Age of Anxiety

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2 comments :

Anonymous said...

Hello there, I am sorry to ask you a broad and obscure Auden quote, but I am a new student of his...

could you kindly tell me from which of his poems the lyric "If we really want to live we'd better start at once to try..." is taken?

Thank you kindly.

Rus Bowden said...

Thanks for stopping by.

Below is the poem.

Yours,
Rus


~~~~~


by W.H. Auden


Get There If You Can


Have things gone too far already? Are we done for? Must we wait
Hearing doom's approaching footsteps regular down miles of straight;

Run the whole night through in gumboots, stumble on and gasp for breath,
Terrors drawing close and closer, winter landscape, fox's death;

Or, in friendly fireside circle, sit and listen for the crash
Meaning that the mob has realised something's up, and start to smash;

Engine-drivers with their oil-cans, factory girls in overalls
Blowing sky-high monster stores, destroying intellectuals?

Hope and fear are neck and neck: which is it near the course's end
Crashes, having lost his nerve; is overtaken on the bend?

Shut up talking, charming in the best suits to be had in town,
Lecturing on navigation while the ship is going down.

Drop those priggish ways for ever, stop behaving like a stone:
Throw the bath-chairs right away, and learn to leave ourselves alone.

If we really want to live, we'd better start at once to try;
If we don't it doesn't matter, but we'd better start to die.

.