auden in A Sentence

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    Auden wrote the poem in 1947.

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    Auden had a reputation for being somewhat aloof, but it wasn't true.

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    Auden left England in 1939 and became a citizen of the United States.

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    Auden's poems in the latter half of the 1930s reflected his journeys to politically torn countries.

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    Auden seems to have been afraid of this moral complacency and capacity for deception within himself.

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    Auden's poetry was noted for its stylistic and technical achievement, its engagement with politics, morals, love and religion.

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    Com, accessed 26 April 2008:"Swedish dismay at the mangled translation may have cost Auden the Nobel prize in literature.".

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    A famous line from“In Memory of W. B. Yeats”-“Poetry makes nothing happen”- presents Auden's complete rejection of Romantic tenets.

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    Auden's early poetry, influenced by his interest in the Anglo-Saxon language as well as in psychoanalysis, was sometimes riddle-like and clinical.

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    People who have carried out research in the area include Mr. Auden(1933), Mr. Mathur(1958 and 1965), and Professor S. Kumar(1980- 81).

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    11

    Just as Bruegel's painting inspired Auden's poem, John William Waterhouse's painting The Lady of Shalott was inspired by a poem from Lord Alfred Tennyson.

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    12

    Auden's increasing focus on ethical concerns in Another Time points to his reconversion to Christianity, which he had abandoned at the age of fifteen.

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    Bertolt Brecht, W. H. Auden, André Breton, Louis Aragon and the philosophers Antonio Gramsci and Walter Benjamin are perhaps the most famous exemplars of this Modernist form of Marxism.

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    14

    In an age when writers as different as Hemingway and Eliot encouraged their public to admire them as heroic explorers of the mind and spirit, Auden preferred to err in the opposite direction, by presenting himself as less than he was.

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    15

    By refusing to claim moral or personal authority, Auden placed himself firmly on one side of an argument that pervades the modern intellectual climate but is seldom explicitly stated, an argument about the nature of evil and those who commit it.

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