Encyclopedia Britannica

  • History & Society
  • Science & Tech
  • Biographies
  • Animals & Nature
  • Geography & Travel
  • Arts & Culture
  • Games & Quizzes
  • On This Day
  • One Good Fact
  • New Articles
  • Lifestyles & Social Issues
  • Philosophy & Religion
  • Politics, Law & Government
  • World History
  • Health & Medicine
  • Browse Biographies
  • Birds, Reptiles & Other Vertebrates
  • Bugs, Mollusks & Other Invertebrates
  • Environment
  • Fossils & Geologic Time
  • Entertainment & Pop Culture
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Visual Arts
  • Demystified
  • Image Galleries
  • Infographics
  • Top Questions
  • Britannica Kids
  • Saving Earth
  • Space Next 50
  • Student Center

A.E. Housman, detail of a drawing by William Rothenstein, 1906; in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

A.E. Housman

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

  • The Poetry Archive - Biography of A. E. Housman
  • Poetry Foundation - Biography of A. E. Housman
  • A.E. Housman - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)

A.E. Housman (born March 26, 1859, Fockbury, Worcestershire, Eng.—died April 30, 1936, Cambridge) was an English scholar and celebrated poet whose lyrics express a Romantic pessimism in a spare, simple style.

Housman, whose father was a solicitor, was one of seven children. He much preferred his mother; and her death on his 12th birthday was a cruel blow, which is surely one source of the pessimism his poetry expresses. While a student at Oxford, he was further oppressed by his dawning realization of homosexual desires. These came to focus in an intense love for one of his fellow students, an athletic young man who became his friend but who could not reciprocate his love. In turmoil emotionally, Housman failed to pass his final examination at Oxford, although he had been a brilliant scholar.

From 1882 to 1892 he worked as a clerk in the Patent Office in London. In the evenings he studied Latin texts in the British Museum reading room and developed a consummate gift for correcting errors in them, owing to his mastery of the language and his feeling for the way poets choose their words. Articles he wrote for journals caught the attention of scholars and led to his appointment in 1892 as professor of Latin at University College, London.

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry

Apparently convinced that he must live without love, Housman became increasingly reclusive and for solace turned to his notebooks, in which he had begun to write the poems that eventually made up A Shropshire Lad (1896). For models he claimed the poems of Heinrich Heine , the songs of William Shakespeare , and the Scottish border ballads. Each provided him with a way of expressing emotion clearly and yet keeping it at a certain distance. For the same purpose, he assumed in his lyrics the unlikely role of farm labourer and set them in Shropshire , a county he had not yet visited when he began to write the first poems. The popularity of A Shropshire Lad grew slowly but so surely that Last Poems (1922) had astonishing success for a book of verse.

Housman regarded himself principally as a Latinist and avoided the literary world. In 1911 he became professor of Latin at Cambridge , teaching there almost up to his death. His major scholarly effort, to which he devoted more than 30 years, was an annotated edition of Manilius (1903–30), whose poetry he did not like but who gave him ample scope for emendation. Some of the asperity and directness that appears in Housman’s lyrics also is found in his scholarship, in which he defended common sense with a sarcastic wit that helped to make him widely feared.

A lecture, The Name and Nature of Poetry (1933), gives Housman’s considered views of the art. His brother Laurence selected the verses for the posthumous volume More Poems (1936). Housman’s Letters appeared in 1971.

Poems & Poets

October 2024

A. E. Housman

Image of A.E. Housman

At first glance, it can be a major surprise that the author of the enormously popular poetry collection A Shropshire Lad was a classical scholar by the name of A.E. Housman. Alfred Edward Housman was born in Worcestershire, England, and he was profoundly affected by his mother’s death when he was 12. This Cambridge University professor of Latin left no doubt about his priorities: the emendation of classical texts was both an intellectual search for the truth and his life’s work; poetry was an emotional and physiological experience that began with a sensation in the pit of the stomach. The apparent discrepancies in this man who became both a first-rate scholar and a celebrated poet should be a reminder that, whatever else poetry does, it also records the interior life, a life that has its roots well beneath the academic gown or the business suit. Though Housman aspired to be a great scholar first, a look at his life and work reveals that he valued poetry more highly than he often admitted, and that many of the presumed conflicts between the classical scholar and the romantic poet easily dissolve in the personality of the man.

Though the modern student is usually more interested in Housman’s poetry than his textual criticism, a survey of his scholarship helps to appreciate his overall contribution as a scholar. From his early work on Propertius at Oxford University through his professorship at University College, London, and culminating in his office as Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge University, Housman was not interested in the interpretation of the works of the classical writers he treated. Instead, he was solely involved in the investigation of manuscripts to establish reliable texts of their works. This process usually required the peeling away of centuries of errors made by previous editors, whom Housman frequently treated with scorn. In “The Application of Thought to Textual Criticism,” a paper presented to the Classical Association at Cambridge in 1921 and collected in John Carter’s 1961 edition of the writer’s prose, Housman described textual criticism as both a science and an art, requiring reason and common sense. As a science, however, it was not exact, he declared: “A textual critic engaged upon his business is not at all like Newton investigating the motion of the planets: he is much more like a dog hunting for fleas.” Housman railed against the prevailing practice of accepting earlier manuscripts as better manuscripts or of accepting all readings—however inane—within a manuscript simply because of the authority of the whole. In this regard he criticized scholars for being lazy, and this tone of moral rectitude permeated the entire paper. Many scholars, he said, are stupid, lazy, vain—or all three. His last sentence put a cap on it: “Knowledge is good, method is good, but one thing beyond all others is necessary; and that is to have a head, not a pumpkin, on your shoulders, and brains, not pudding, in your head.”

Concerning Housman’s own reputation as a classical scholar, D.R. Shackleton Bailey in a 1959 Listener article said that he was “beyond serious dispute, among the greatest of all time.” Bailey spoke of the scholar’s “passionate zeal to see each one of the innumerable problems in his text not as others had presented it or as he might have preferred it to appear but exactly as it was.” According to John Bayley in the London Review of Books, Housman was “a scholar worshipped and hated for his meticulous standards and his appalling sarcasms on the unscholarly.” Housman’s greatest single textual work was his five-volume edition of the Astronomica of Manilius, a first century CE. Latin poet. The first volume of this work was published in 1903 and the last in 1930. That Housman chose Manilius, a second-rate poet, over Propertius or any of the other better writers with whom he was familiar reveals his desire to establish for himself an unassailable reputation, for as Andrew S.F. Gow declared in A.E. Housman, the scholar realized that the Astronomica of Manilius provided him the greatest opportunity “of approaching finality in the solution of the problems presented.” In a letter to Housman’s biographer Graves, G.P. Goold, a later holder of the Latin chair at University College, summed up the scholar’s accomplishments: “The legacy of Housman’s scholarship is a thing of permanent value; and that value consists less in obvious results, the establishment of general propositions about Latin and the removal of scribal mistakes, than in the shining example he provides of a wonderful mind at work. … He was and may remain the last great textual critic. … And if we accord [Richard] Bentley the honour of being England’s greatest Latinist, it will be largely because Housman declined to claim the title for himself.”

It was at University College that Housman experienced his most sustained period of poetry composition, and the main fruit of this period was the publication of A Shropshire Lad in 1896. First offered to Macmillan Company in 1896 under the title “Poems by Terence Hearsay,” A Shropshire Lad was rejected by that publisher: it was brought out in the same year by Kegan Paul, with the change in the title suggested by Housman’s friend Pollard. The book was published at the author’s own expense, and he insisted that he receive no royalties. There wouldn’t have been many anyway, since Kegan Paul printed only 500, and, as Maude M. Hawkins noted in A.E. Housman: Man Behind a Mask, the book “sold so slowly that Laurence Housman at the end of two years bought up the last few copies.” Though the volume was better appreciated in the United States than in England, Hawkins described most of the critical reviews as “lukewarm or adverse.” A Shropshire Lad did not sell well until it was published by Grant Richards, who became one of Housman’s lifelong friends. Richards’s first edition was 500 copies in 1897, which sold out; he then printed 1000 copies in 1900 followed by 2000 in 1902. “After the slow stream of Housman readers from 1896 to 1903, the momentum of popularity increased rapidly,” Hawkins wrote. “During this period A Shropshire Lad had been reviewed in thirty-three periodicals with both praise and condemnation.”

During the 20th century A Shropshire Lad has been more of a popular than a critical success. Looking back to the book’s heyday, George Orwell remarked in Inside the Whale and Other Essays : “Among people who were adolescent in the years 1910-25, Housman had an influence which was enormous and is now [1940] not at all easy to understand. In 1920, when I was about seventeen, I probably knew the whole of A Shropshire Lad by heart.” Orwell suggested that what made the poem so popular was its snobbishness about belonging to the country; its adolescent themes of murder, suicide, unhappy love, and early death; and its “bitter, defiant paganism, a conviction that life is short and the gods are against you, which exactly fitted the prevailing mood of the young.”

In all of his poetry, Housman continually returns to certain favorite themes. The predominant theme, discussed by Cleanth Brooks in the Ricks collection of essays, is that of time and the inevitability of death. As Brooks said, “Time is, with Housman, always the enemy.” In the first poem of A Shropshire Lad, “1887,” one of the few to be titled, the conventional patriotism of the Queen’s jubilee is shot through with the irony that God can only save the Queen with the help of those who have died for her sake: “The saviours come not home tonight: / Themselves they could not save.” Housman frequently deals with the plight of the young soldier, and he is usually able to maintain sympathy both for the youth who is the victim of war and for the patriotic cause of the nation. Robert B. Pearsall suggested in a 1967 PMLA essay that Housman dealt frequently with soldiers because “the uniform tended to cure isolation and unpopularity, and soldiers characteristically bask in mutual affection.”

It is not only war but nature, too, that brings on thoughts of death in Housman’s poetry. In the famous Shropshire Lad lyric beginning “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now,” the speaker says that since life is all too short, he will go out “To see the cherry hung with snow,” an obvious suggestion of death. In a well-known verse from Last Poems, a particularly wet and old spring causes the speaker to move from a description of nature—“The chestnut casts his flambeaux, and the flowers stream from the hawthorn on the wind away”—to a sense that his lost spring brings one closer to the grave, which, in turn, occasions a splenetic remark about the deity: “Whatever brute and blackguard made the world.” To his credit, Housman rarely wallows in such pessimistic feelings but counsels a kind of stoical endurance as the proper response: “Shoulder the sky, my lad, and drink your ale.” When the sky cannot be shouldered, a type of Roman suicide may be appropriate, as in “Shot? so quick, so clean an ending?” or in another Shropshire Lad poem, which ends with the lines: “But play the man, stand up and end you, / When your sickness is your soul.”

Another frequent theme in Housman’s poetry is the attitude that the universe is cruel and hostile, created by a God who has abandoned it. In the poem “Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries” in Last Poems, mercenaries must take up the slack for an uncaring deity: “What God abandoned, these defended, / And saved the sum of things for pay.” In such a world where “malt does more than Milton can / To justify God’s ways to man,” as the lyricist wrote in A Shropshire Lad, poetry can serve the purpose of inuring one to the harshness of reality. R. Kowalczyk, in a 1967 Cithara essay, summed up this prevalent theme: “Housman’s poetic characters fail to find divine love in the universe. They confront the enormity of space and realize that they are victims of Nature’s blind forces. A number of Housman’s lyrics scrutinize with cool, detached irony the impersonal universe, the vicious world in which man was placed to endure his fated existence.”

Within such a universe, the pastoral theme of the preciousness of youth and youthful beauty is everywhere to be found. In “ To an Athlete Dying Young ,” the youth is praised for leaving a world with his accomplishments intact. Like the young girl Lucy in romantic poet William Wordsworth ’s lyrics, Housman’s youths sometimes die into nature and become part of the natural surroundings: “By brooks too broad for leaping / The lightfoot boys are laid; / The rose-lipt girls are sleeping / In fields where roses fade.” But as Brooks declared, as recorded in Ricks’s collection of essays, Housman’s nature cannot be the same as Wordsworth’s after the century’s achievement in science: “Housman’s view of nature looks forward to our time rather than back to that of Wordsworth. If nature is lovely and offers man delight, she does not offer him solace or sustain him as Wordsworth was solaced and sustained. For between Wordsworth and Housman there interpose themselves Darwin and Huxley and Tindall—the whole achievement of Victorian science.”

Furthermore, society sometimes intrudes into Housman’s world of nature, and when it does, the rustic youth frequently comes in conflict with it. As Oliver Robinson wrote in Angry Dust: The Poetry of A.E. Housman, “Housman is especially sympathetic with the man who is at odds with society, the man who cannot keep ‘these foreign laws of God and man.’"

The themes of his poetry and his emotional handling of them mark Housman as an extension of the romantic movement that flourished in England in the early part of the 19th century and had a resurgence in the aesthetic movement of the 1890s. The critical evaluation of Housman’s work in the two decades after his death in 1936 is tinged with the anti-romanticism of the period. The directness and simplicity of much of Housman’s poetry were viewed as faults. According to Richard Aldington , influential critic I.A. Richards is rumored to have declared “This had put us back ten years,” after leaving Housman’s Cambridge inaugural lecture And Cyril Connolly, in a 1936 New Statesman article reprinted in Ricks’s essay collection, said that Housman’s poems “are of a triteness of technique equalled only by the banality of thought.” He also talked about the limitations of the poet’s themes of man’s mortality and rebellion against his lot.

To see irony in Housman’s poetic technique, however, is to mitigate some of what would otherwise be considered faults: the adolescent nature of some of the thought and the sentimental handling of it. Christopher Ricks, in the essay in his collection on Housman, noted that “everyone seems to take it for granted that Housman’s poems unwaveringly endorse the pessimistic beliefs which they assert. To me his poems are remarkable for the ways in which rhythm and style temper or mitigate or criticize what in bald paraphrase the poem would be saying.”

Regardless of whether one finds irony in the author’s poetic technique, it is true that Housman tried to place some distance between himself and his work. Referring to A Shropshire Lad in a letter written in 1933, Housman stated that “very little in the book is biographical” and said that his view of the world was “owing to my observation of the world, not to personal circumstances.” As to the county of Shropshire itself, Housman admitted in a letter to Maurice Pollet: “I was born in Worcestershire, not Shropshire, where I have never spent much time.”

In his roles as classical scholar and as poet, Housman exhibited an unswerving integrity. While this integrity served him well in his classical endeavors, in his poetry it may have relegated him to a rank below that of the major poets of his age. His poetry, based as it is on emotion, never went beyond what he could verify with his own feelings. As Edmund Wilson said in an essay appearing in the Ricks collection, “His world has no opening horizons; it is a prison that one can only endure. One can only come the same painful cropper over and over again and draw from it the same bitter moral.” But few writers have expressed this dark if limited vision with more poignancy and clarity than Housman.

Housman died in 1936 in Cambridge. A posthumous collection, called More Poems , was edited by his brother Laurence Housman.

  • Northern Europe

A. E. Housman (1859-1936): A Life in Brief

Dick sullivan.

[ Victorian Web Home —> Authors —> A. E. Housman —> Works —> Introduction ]

1title1

A. E. Housman by William Rothenstein. [Click on image to enlarge it.]

His mother died of cancer on his twelfth birthday: by his thirteenth he was a deist , and a few years later became the atheist he remained all his life. He won a scholarship to St John's College, Oxford. Pater was there, Wilde was in his last term, Jowett was Master of Balliol, Ruskin was visiting professor of art, Hopkins was a priest writing 'Duns Scotus's Oxford' about the 'base and brickish skirt' already encroaching on the town. It was a very Victorian place (apart from Wilde's outrageously coloured knickerbockers) of mutton-chop whiskers, frock coats and stove pipe hats on Sundays.

Housman was already arrogant, already sure he knew what his life's work was to be: redaction — the search for truth through correcting scribal errors in classical texts. He made his name with, among other works, an edition of Manilius, a first-century Roman astronomer whose poetry was poor, his science worse. To Housman, the quality of the book as literature didn't matter. All that did was the accuracy of the text — what did the writer write, how did scribes miscopy it? Redaction was about the defeat of decay. Who did he write for? For the one person, not yet born, with the knowledge and insight to appreciate what he'd done. Perhaps he's still waiting.

At Oxford he also fell in love for the first and only time. Housman was gay. Moses Jackson was not; he was a beefy rowing blue — someone who had earned the equivalent of an American varsity letter — up in Oxford on a science scholarship. Homosexuality he called 'beastliness' or 'spooniness'. And that for Housman meant a lifetime of unfulfilled loneliness.

Because I liked you better Than suits a man to say, It irked you and I promised To throw the thought away. [ More Poems XXXI]

In the year of his Finals, Housman was absorbed in Propertius (a poet who wasn't even in the syllabus), lazed away his time with Jackson (perhaps), was upset by his father's decline and feebleness (maybe) and over-confident (possibly). Certainly he failed Greats.

For the next eleven years he was a clerk in the Patent Office, at first because Moses Jackson also worked there. They shared lodgings till Jackson sailed to India to become the headmaster of a school (he also taught science and even designed the lab furniture). Eighteen months later he came home to marry, but Housman was not asked to the wedding, and in fact knew nothing about it until bride and groom were at sea. They rarely met again. And then never after Jackson retired to British Columbia where he died of cancer in 1922.

Meanwhile, Housman had been making a name for himself in the small world of textual criticism through spare time study in the British Museum. In 1892, on the strength of this scholarship, he was offered the Chair of Latin at University College, London (UCL) .

In 1896, he published A Shropshire Lad , a book of sixty three poems speaking of loss and loneliness, Redcoats, hangings and ale. Larkin called him 'the poet of unhappiness.' Auden complained he was adolescent. Orwell confused him with the class war. His poetry is notable for its simplicity, clarity and brevity — yet there is a depth to it as well. [Housman: Poetry]

Some at UCL said he was scathing yet remote; a man who never troubled to remember the faces of the young women in his classes. At least one student said he never spoke to anybody individually. Others gave different accounts, of course. Who knows? Teachers are there to be caricatured. With staff he was more congenial, even genial, and particularly good at dinner. His idea of a good night out was dinner at the Caf— Royal, a music hall, and supper in the Criterion Grille. Now he had money he became bit of a gastronome and oenophile, holidaying in Paris (for food), Italy (for culture).

If you'd asked Housman the great Socratic question: 'How should we live?' he'd have replied: 'Through knowledge for its own sake, curiosity, the craving to know things as they really are.' Truth was paramount and was to be found in exact knowledge, though mankind had only a faint sense of it. Somewhere hidden in the errors of a classical text was the truth, the words the poet had written. To find them again was to right a kind of wrong done against the truth. The Tree of Knowledge will make us wise, he argued, because our natures need knowledge to be fulfilled.

In 1911 he became Kennedy Professor of Latin in Cambridge, and a fellow of Trinity College. At high table he could dine with seven Nobel Laureates, four presidents of the Royal Society, the philosophers Whitehead, Russell, Wittgenstein, as well as Rutherford who split the atom, and the man who discovered argon. Gide was a guest, and Gertrude Stein and Alice B Toklas.

In August 1914 the Great War broke out. It's hard to know what to make of Housman's attitude. At the outbreak of war he gave most of his money to the Exchequer. But then he seems to have largely ignored wounded men and soldiers under orders for the Front, when Trinity was half-converted into a hospital and barracks. He did contribute verses to The Blunderbuss , a magazine produced by troops billeted there, but it was a tinkling 1890s piece ( Last Poems II) wholly out of keeping with what was going on in Flanders. In 1915 he holidayed on the Riviera because, he said, the usual appalling people weren't there. But in 1916 he refused to make the tedious crossing to Le Havre when Dieppe was closed to civilians. Not out of fear of U-boats, he said. He thought a U-boat had more to fear from being rammed by a steamer than the steamer had of being torpedoed. And this at time when U-boats were bringing the country to within seven days of defeat. However he did send his sister some verse ( Last Poems IV) when her son was killed in action. Poetry, he said, is to harmonise the sadness of the universe.

The War changed nothing, he claimed. But of course it did. Nothing was ever the same again. His particular kind of scholarship to begin with. He'd always said a scholar had no more concern with the beauty of a text than a botanist had with a flower's. Now he had. Content suddenly mattered, not just form.

Last Poems came out in 1922, the year that Moses Jackson died of stomach cancer in Vancouver. It's very likely the book was written and put together (several poems date from the '90s) just for him. Jackson read it before he died. The letter Housman wrote has not been made public, but is said to very self-revealing.

Still, he still took afternoon walks in a school-boyish cricket cap, grey suit, starched collar and elastic sided boots. He said 'hello' to no one; this was walking time, talking was for dinner. Every year, too, he vacationed on the Continent; flew there, presumably in converted bombers when passenger flights were in the pioneer stage and the crockery was real, the cutlery silver.

He'd lived in the same three Victorian rooms ('bare, bleak, grim, stark, comfortless,' various people called them) until he was too frail to climb the stairs. For a time he lived in Trinity's older buildings before going to a nursing home in Trumpington Street where he died, in his sleep during the day.

They buried him in Ludlow, for some reason. His brother, Laurence (the painter, poet and playwright) brought out More Poems and Additional Poem s after his death. All four books are still read and on sale in the bigger London bookstores, which won't stock anything that isn't guaranteed to turn a penny (or make a quick buck). In England a Housman Society is dedicated to him. Composers such as Vaughan Williams, George Butterworth, John Ireland, Bax and Bliss, and seemingly dozens of others set his poems to music. The music is still played, the songs still sung.

Some found him impossible; he could be cold, cutting, and sarcastic. Others remember him playing with the Master of Trinity's grandchildren (and their toys). His problem was he couldn't relate to others, through shyness or because of what had happened to him. Small talk didn't come easily (didn't in fact come at all), and as a dinner guest his long silences could be a problem. But he was, for example, at ease with his brother, Basil, and his sister-in-law, Jeannie. They therefore knew a different man — a happy, teasing, slightly bantering older brother — and were puzzled by his forbidding reputation. His brother, Laurence, also said of him: 'he had the happiest laugh I've ever heard.' And he was widely known for his wit and humour (albeit waspish, dry, donnish) both in conversation and in the Prefaces to his editions of Lucan, Juvenal and Manilius. Of Merrill's Catullus : 'half the ship's cargo has been thrown overboard to save the bilge water.' Of Jowett's Plato : 'the best translation of a Greek philosopher which has ever been executed by a person who understood neither philosophy nor Greek.' Of Meredith: ' Meredith has never been treated justly. He once wrote admirable books which were not admired. He now writes ridiculous books which are not ridiculed.' 'Any fool can write a sonnet, and most fools do.' And, in a letter; 'Death and marriage are raging though this College with such fury that I ought to be grateful for having escaped both.' But one of them, of course, he couldn't escape from forever; he died in 1936.

Bibliography

A. E. Housman: A Reassessment ed. Alan W Holden & J Roy Birch London:, MacMillan, 2000.

Graves, Richard. Perceval. A. E. Housman: The Scholar-Poet . London: Routledge, 1979.

Housman, A. E. Introductory Lecture 1892 . Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1937.

Housman, A. E. Selected Prose . Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1961.

Housman, Laurence. A E H . London: Jonathan Cape, 1937.

Larkin, Philip. Required Reading . London: Faber and Faber 1983

Page, Norman. A. E. Housman: A Critical Biography . London: MacMillan, 1996.

Richards, Grant. Housman . Oxford: Oxford UP, 1941.

Stoppard, Tom. The Invention of Love Sir . London: Faber & Faber, 1997.

Last modified 8 June 2007

a.e. housman short biography

A. E. Housman

A Critical Biography

  • © 1996
  • Norman Page

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

164 Accesses

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this book

Subscribe and save.

  • Get 10 units per month
  • Download Article/Chapter or eBook
  • 1 Unit = 1 Article or 1 Chapter
  • Cancel anytime
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access

Licence this eBook for your library

Institutional subscriptions

About this book

Similar content being viewed by others.

a.e. housman short biography

Poe Among the Modernists: A (Ghostly) Reappraisal

a.e. housman short biography

Richardson, Charlotte Caroline

a.e. housman short biography

Introduction: ‘And Every Evening Surprised that I Was Still Alive I Repeated Verses’

  • English language

Table of contents (10 chapters)

Front matter, introduction: ‘all that need be known’, a worcestershire lad, the years of penance, ‘picked out of the gutter’, cambridge i, cambridge ii, the scholar, back matter, bibliographic information.

Book Title : A. E. Housman

Book Subtitle : A Critical Biography

Authors : Norman Page

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24584-0

Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan London

eBook Packages : Palgrave Literature & Performing Arts Collection , Literature, Cultural and Media Studies (R0)

Copyright Information : Norman Page 1996

Softcover ISBN : 978-0-333-65601-3 Published: 31 March 1996

eBook ISBN : 978-1-349-24584-0 Published: 15 April 1996

Edition Number : 1

Number of Pages : XV, 236

Topics : Poetry and Poetics , Nineteenth-Century Literature , Twentieth-Century Literature

  • Publish with us

Policies and ethics

  • Find a journal
  • Track your research

Find anything you save across the site in your account

How A. E. Housman Invented Englishness

An illustration of an enormous blue face rising into the sky and clouds

In person, A. E. Housman was so shy and furtive that Max Beerbohm once compared him to “an absconding cashier.” For such a crabbed and elusive figure, though, he continues to draw a surprising amount of attention: books, articles, musical tributes, even a Broadway play, Tom Stoppard’s “The Invention of Love.” Academics know him the way he is mostly depicted in that play—as a formidable classicist, probably the greatest of his generation. But the real source of his fame is a single small volume of poetry, “A Shropshire Lad,” which has never been out of print since it was published, in 1896. Somehow, these sixty-three short lyrics, celebrating youth, loss, and early death, became for generations of readers the perfect evocation not merely of what it feels like to be adolescent and a little emotional but of what it means to be English. We don’t have anything remotely like it in American lit. Some of Emily Dickinson’s brief lyrics come closest—tonally, and in their mastery of the short, compressed line—but she has never quite attained Housman’s popularity, and the landscape she wrote about, the one inside her own head, could hardly be said to have created a sense of national identity. “He is a strange phenomenon,” Ted Hughes said of Housman, “but to my mind the most perfect expression of something deeply English and a whole mood of English history.”

Peter Parker’s new book, “Housman Country: Into the Heart of England” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)—which helpfully includes the text of “A Shropshire Lad” in an appendix—is partly a brisk, sensible biography of Housman and partly a study in poetic reputation. It traces the way Housman’s singular vision seized hold of the English imagination, inspiring not just a literary following but a generation of composers, like George Butterworth and Ralph Vaughan Williams, who sought to do musically what Housman had done with verse: to create a new and authentically English kind of song. Parker, the author of very good biographies of J. R. Ackerley and Christopher Isherwood, casts a wide net here, and eventually it unravels in a skein of loose ends and Housmanian magpie-pickings. Parker lists just about all the many authors who ever snatched a title from Housman, for example. He also points out that not only is there an American rock band (formerly Army of Strippers) now called Housman’s Athletes but that the British rocker Morrissey used to quote Housman often and a grateful fan once wrote, “I thought his poems would be drivel about babies and flowers, but it’s really good stuff about suicide.” Parker doesn’t entirely succeed in explaining the great mystery of Housman—why it’s these rueful, corpse-strewn poems and not, say, the heartier ones of John Masefield which continue to resonate within the English soul. But he leaves no doubt about Housman’s lingering attraction. You could conclude from his book that when many people pulled the lever to vote for Brexit they were imagining a return to Shropshire.

To judge from Parker’s account, there were a number of different Housmans, and how you felt about him depended on which one you happened to meet. He was an adventurous eater and a lover of good wine. He liked dirty stories and flying in airplanes. At high table at his Cambridge college, he could be clubbable and amusing, and might even bend your ear about how much he liked the jazz-age novels of Anita Loos. But he could also be rude, aloof, brooding, and difficult. He suffered fools not at all, and was unable to tolerate a compliment. Willa Cather, who so admired his poetry that she made a pilgrimage to meet its author, found him “gaunt and gray, and embittered.” The whole encounter, she said, gave her “a fit of dark depression.” As Housman’s obituary in the London Times put it, “In his attitude to life, there seemed something baffled and even shrinking, as though he feared criticism and emotion alike more than he relished experience. . . . He valued confidence, but held back from intimate relations, and seemed to prefer isolation to giving himself away.”

There was Housman the poet, who actually wrote very little, and Housman the classical scholar, who spent most of his time poring over ancient texts and whose greatest pleasure seemed to come from writing caustic put-downs of other scholars. About an editor of Persius and Juvenal: “Mr. Owen’s innovations, so far as I can see, have only one merit, which certainly, in view of their character, is a merit of some magnitude: they are few.” He sometimes composed these insults in advance, leaving blanks for names he could later plug in. Housman was not a translator or a classical historian. He specialized in the dry-as-dust business of textual criticism, determining the correct version of a classical text by comparing different manuscripts and judging which variant was the most likely—whether in a certain line of Propertius it should be “ et” or “ aut ,” and deciding where the commas belonged in Catullus. His life’s work was a five-volume edition of Manilius, an astrologer poet, who even Housman conceded was third-rate—“facile and frivolous,” he said, remarkable mostly for “doing sums in verse.”

How to square these two, the poet and the pedant, has preoccupied commentators for decades. Edmund Wilson once suggested that what made Housman so adept at textual criticism was his ability to think like a poet, not only like a scholar, and that his fetish for accuracy stemmed from a real passion for his texts. But Wilson also pointed out that in Housman’s choice of Manilius there seems an element of perversity and self-mortification, and that his scholarship sometimes radiated not so much love for literature as hatred for his rivals. The poems in “A Shropshire Lad” are not completely disconnected from Housman’s scholarly work—among other things, they owe something to Horace, Housman’s favorite Latin poet, in particular to Horace’s way of weighting apparently inconsequential words—but they seem to have welled up from another part of him, a spring of emotion that he couldn’t, or didn’t want to, repress. Poetry, he once said, was for him a “morbid secretion,” as the pearl is for the oyster.

Housman never lived in Shropshire, or even spent much time there. He was born in Worcestershire in 1859, the eldest of seven children. His father was a Dickensian figure—a jolly, heavy-drinking lawyer, often broke and given to investing in harebrained schemes. His mother, to whom he was very close, died when Housman was twelve, an experience that turned him into a lifelong atheist. At school, he was an exceptionally gifted student of Latin and Greek, and easily won a classics scholarship to St. John’s College, Oxford, where he sailed through his first set of exams and then spectacularly botched the second. It’s possible that he was rattled by the news that his father had become seriously ill. It’s also possible that he took his success for granted and didn’t study hard enough. The young Housman was a know-it-all, who refused to have anything to do with his tutor after hearing the man mispronounce a Greek word, and even took a dim view of Benjamin Jowett, the famous master of Balliol and the greatest Greek scholar of the day.

How A. E. Housman Invented Englishness

Link copied

But the more likely cause of Housman’s failure was that he had become emotionally undone over an unrequited yearning for his roommate, Moses Jackson. Jackson was athletic and good-looking, bright enough, but something of a philistine, according to one acquaintance, “quite unliterary and outspoken in his want of any such interest.” Apparently, he had no clue about Housman’s feelings for him. After Oxford, the two men roomed together in London, where they both had jobs at the Patent Office, and where Housman spent every evening at the British Museum, studying on his own, heroically and penitentially, and writing papers that eventually redeemed him as a classicist, landing him professorships first at University College, London, and then at Cambridge. But in 1885 there was a blowup between him and Jackson. Parker speculates that Housman made some sort of declaration and was rejected. Stoppard imagines that it’s Jackson who forces the issue, worried perhaps by the recent passage of a law against acts of “gross indecency” between men. In the play, Jackson is slow to figure things out but finally says, in effect, “You’re not sweet on me, are you?”

Whatever happened, Housman moved out, and Jackson soon married and settled in Karachi. Years later, Housman’s younger brother, Laurence, a novelist and playwright, also gay but much more open about it, suggested that on the rebound Housman found solace in the arms of Jackson’s younger brother, Adalbert. But Laurence was in his nineties then, and this may have been wishful thinking. Despite later rumors about Parisian rent boys and a Venetian gondolier, there’s no sure evidence that Housman ever slept with anyone, and there’s little reason to doubt that Moses Jackson was his only real love. The two men stayed distantly in touch, with Housman becoming a godfather to one of Jackson’s children and lending Jackson a large sum of money when he retired to British Columbia and tried, unsuccessfully, to make it as a farmer there. Housman, after finally overcoming his Oxford failure and achieving distinction as an academic, wrote to Jackson, “I would much rather have followed you round the world and blacked your boots.”

More than half of “A Shropshire Lad” was written during a charged five-month period in 1895, when Housman seems to have been missing Jackson acutely. Readers with advanced gaydar, like Oscar Wilde and E. M. Forster, early on detected a note of suppressed homosexual desire in the book, especially in poems like the one that begins:

Look not in my eyes, for fear  They mirror true the sight I see, And there you find your face too clear  And love it and be lost like me.

The young Forster even wrote Housman a fan letter, and years later, after dining with him at his Cambridge college and hearing Housman say “with a twinkle” that he sometimes went to Paris to be with “unrespectable company,” ventured up the staircase to Housman’s rooms. He slipped his card under the door, but there was no reply.

Parker says that many early readers of Poem No. 44, addressed to a young man who has killed himself rather than face a life of “disgrace and scorn,” would have known that it referred to the well-publicized case of Henry Maclean, a young soldier who shot himself in a London hotel, apparently out of homosexual shame. And he makes the provocative suggestion—which could equally well be applied to other Housman poems, including the strange one that recommends plucking out your eye and cutting off your hand or foot if it offends you—that not every line need be taken at face value and the whole thing might be meant angrily or ironically:

Oh you had forethought, you could reason,  And saw your road and where it led, And early wise and brave in season  Put the pistol to your head.

But one reason “A Shropshire Lad” has been so successful is that readers find there what they want to find. In 1929, a financial expert hired by Housman’s publisher declared that “A Shropshire Lad” was the “filthiest book I have ever read: all about rogering girls under hedges.” During the First World War, British soldiers carried copies in the breast pockets of their tunics, believing the author to be a kindred spirit and a war poet—though Housman knew little about war and soldiering. His main credential was his sense that life passes too quickly and death is always standing by, or, as one of his most famous poems has it:

Here dead we lie because we did not choose To live and shame the land from which we sprung Life, to be sure, is nothing much to lose, But young men think it is, and we were young.

After the war, “A Shropshire Lad” travelled in the breast pockets of the generation who had taken up rambling and rediscovering the English countryside, even though—aside from a few place names, like Bredon Hill and Wenlock Edge, evidently chosen more for euphony than for anything else—it’s not much of a geographic guide. The landscape of “A Shropshire Lad” is an all-purpose landscape, not a particular one, and, far from being the unspoiled countryside imagined by Brexiteers, it’s a place mostly of unhappy love and early death. Long past rogering each other, if they ever got that far, most of the Shropshire lads and lasses are already in their graves. Even the poems ostensibly celebrating seasonal rebirth, like the one beginning “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now / Is hung with bloom along the bough,” contain within them, like a canker, a note of foreboding, and wind up sounding like laments.

Housman’s morbidness so bothered Ezra Pound that he wrote a famous parody:

O woe, woe. People are born and die We also shall be dead pretty soon. Therefore let us act as if we were         dead already.

What Pound missed was Housman’s music, which so lent itself to composers—the intensity of his tone and the tautness and compactness of his expression. Parker sees Housman’s habit of plainness and terseness as manifestations of English traits that amount to a sort of polite national understatement: modesty, restraint, stiff-upper-lipness. Housman is tight-lipped, certainly, but that doesn’t account for the feeling you sometimes get that the poems are so repressed they ought to bear warning signs like those found on tanker trucks: “Caution: Contents Under Pressure.”

Housman insisted that the task of poetry was “to transfuse emotion—not to transmit thought”; it was to make your throat clench and your hair stand on end. The emotion his own poetry most often elicits is that of overwhelming sadness. Parker sees him, quite rightly, as belonging to the long tradition of English melancholia, but despite the sometimes old-fashioned ways in which it is framed—the lads and lasses, the ploughed fields, the shimmering weirs—Housman’s melancholy is a more angsty, modern version, untethered from any religious or artistic consolation. He’s less like Keats, say, than like Hardy, his near-contemporary, whose bleakness, both personal and poetic, at times outdoes even Housman’s. (Hardy once wrote to Rider Haggard, after the death of Haggard’s ten-year-old son, “To be candid I think the death of a child is never really to be regretted, when one reflects on what he has escaped.”)

Some of Housman’s brand of sadness also carries over into the poetry of Philip Larkin, who was an admirer, especially in poems like “Cut Grass” and “The Trees,” which borrow the characteristic Housman form of short lines in just a few stanzas. In some ways, even Larkin’s life mirrors Housman’s: the small output of poems fastidiously worked over, the seemingly dull career as an academic librarian, the solitary bachelor flat (though we now know, of course, that he wasn’t nearly as lonely and sex-starved as he pretended). It’s not hard to imagine the two of them huddled over a couple of pints and taking great pleasure in reminding each other of all the ways in which the world is going to hell.

Loss, weariness, diminishment, the sense of a golden age long gone—you could make a case that for the past hundred and twenty years or so this has been the authentic, dominant note of Englishness in poetry, more than a wistful, Brexity yearning for a pastoral countryside. Part of Housman’s charm, even now, is the way he makes that sadness sound and feel so sweet:

Into my heart an air that kills  From yon far country blows: What are those blue remembered hills  What spires, what farms are those?
That is the land of lost content.  I see it shining plain, The happy highways where I went  And cannot come again.

But that sweetness, verging on sentimentality, is also Housman’s limitation: the lads and lasses slumbering under the grass, never growing old or sick or worrying about how to find a job. Sadness in Housman is a one-size-fits-all emotion, not one rooted in particulars. It puddles up automatically. And reading “A Shropshire Lad” you can find yourself becoming narcotized against feelings that are deeper and more complicated. That may be the real secret of the book’s enduring popularity, the way it substitutes for a feeling of genuine loss the almost pleasant pain of nostalgia. ♦

The Illness and Insight of Robert Lowell

A E Housman Biography | Poet

Photo of A E Housman

Alfred Edward Housman (/ ' h a s m n / ; 26 March 1859 – 30 April 1936), usually known as A. E. Housman, was an English classical scholar and poet, best known to the general public for his cycle of poems A Shropshire Lad. Lyrical and almost epigrammatic in form, the poems' wistful evocation of doomed youth in the English countryside, in spare language and distinctive imagery, appealed strongly to late Victorian and Edwardian taste, and to many early 20th-century English composers (beginning with Arthur Somervell ) both before and after the First World War. Through its song-setting the poetry became closely associated with that era, and with Shropshire itself.

A E Housman: Poems | Best Poems | Short Poems | Quotes

Photo of A. E. Housman

A. E. Housman: Poems | Best Poems | Short Poems | Quotes

Book: Shattered Sighs

Best Poems

A. E. Housman

A. E. Housman

Alfred Edward Housman was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, England, on March 26, 1859, 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 heterosexual 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 he studied Greek and Roman classics intensively, and in 1892 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 63 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 acclaim as a scholar and a poet in his lifetime, Housman lived as a recluse, rejecting honors and avoiding the public eye. He died in 1936 in Cambridge.

A Shropshire Lad (1896) Last Poems (1922) More Poems (1936) Complete Poems (1939)

  • Share this Poem:

Share on Facebook

Quotes of the Day

Popular topics, poets by type.

');   |     |     |     |     |     |  
Search for:

/ / / Biography
Popular Poets




















  
See also:









A. E. Housman Biography
  | | |

   |       |       |       |       |       |       |   

Poetry Connection

A.E. Housman

Biography of A.E. Housman (1859 – 1936)

Alfred Edward Housman (March 26, 1859 – April 30, 1936) was an English poet and classical scholar, now best known for his cycle of poems A Shropshire Lad . He was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, the eldest of seven children of a country solicitor. His brother Laurence Housman and sister Clemence Housman also became writers.

Housman was educated first in King Edward’s School, then in Bromsgrove School where he acquired a strong academic grounding and won prizes for his poetry. In 1877 he won an open scholarship to St John’s College, Oxford, where he studied classics. He was a brilliant student, gaining first class honours in classical moderations, but a withdrawn person whose only friends were his roommates Moses Jackson and A. W. Pollard. Housman fell in love with the handsome, athletic Jackson who, being heterosexual, rejected him, though the two remained best friends. This experience, reflected in some of his poems, may be an explanation of Housman’s unexpected failure in his final exams (the “Greats”) in 1881. Housman took this failure very seriously but managed to take a pass degree the next year, after a brief period of teaching in Bromsgrove School.

After graduating, Jackson got a job as a clerk in the Patent Office in London and arranged a job there for Housman as well. They shared an apartment with Jackson’s brother Adalbert until 1885 when Housman moved in to lodgings of his own. Moses Jackson married and moved to India in 1887 and Adalbert Jackson died in 1892, leaving Housman a profoundly lonely man. He continued pursuing classical studies on his own and published scholarly articles on such authors as Horace, Propertius, Ovid, Aeschylus, Euripides and Sophocles. He gradually acquired such a high reputation that in 1892 he was offered the professorship of Latin in University College London, which he accepted.

Although Housman’s sphere of responsibilities as professor included both Latin and Greek, he put most of his energy in the study of Latin classics. His reputation in this field grew steadily, and in 1911 he took the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he remained for the rest of his life. In 1903-1930, he published his critical edition of Manilius’s Astronomicon in five volumes. He also edited works of Juvenal (1905) and Lucan (1926). Many colleagues were afraid of his scathing critical attacks on those whom he found guilty of unscholarly sloppiness. To his students he appeared as a severe, reticent, remote authority. The only pleasures he allowed himself in his spare time were those of gastronomy which he also practised on frequent visits to France and Italy.

Housman always found his true vocation in classical studies and treated poetry as a secondary activity. He never spoke about his poetry in public until 1933 when he gave a lecture on The Name and Nature of Poetry in which he argued that poetry should appeal to emotions rather than intellect. He died two years later in Cambridge. His ashes are buried near St Laurence’s Church, Ludlow, Shropshire.

During his years in London, A E Housman completed his cycle of 63 poems, A Shropshire Lad . After several publishers had turned it down, he published it at his own expense in 1896, much to the surprise of his colleagues and students. At first the book sold slowly, but during the second Boer War, Housman’s nostalgic depiction of brave English soldiers stroke a chord with English readers and his poems became a lasting success. Later, World War I had a further increasing effect on their popularity. Several composers, Arthur Somervell first, found inspiration in the seeming folksong-like simplicity of the poems. The most famous musical settings are by George Butterworth and Ralph Vaughan Williams, with others by Ivor Gurney, John Ireland and Ernest John Moeran.

Housman was surprised by the success of A Shropshire Lad because it, like all his poetry, is imbued with a deep pessimism and an obsession with all-pervasive death, with no place for the consolations of religion. Set in a half-imaginative pastoral Shropshire, “the land of lost content” (in fact Housman wrote most of the poems before ever visiting the place), the poems explore themes of fleetingness of love and decay of youth in a spare, uncomplicated style which many critics of the time found out of date compared with the exuberance of some Romantic poets. Housman himself acknowledged the influence of the songs of William Shakespeare, the Scottish Border Ballads and Heinrich Heine, but specifically denied any influence of Greek and Latin classics in his poetry.

In the early 1920s, when Moses Jackson was dying in Canada, Housman wanted to assemble his best unpublished poems together so that Jackson could read them before his death. These later poems, most of them written before 1910, show a greater variety of subject and form than those in A Shropshire Lad but also a certain lack of the kind of consistency found in the earlier poems. He published them as his Last Poems (1922) because he thought that his poetic inspiration was running out and that he would not publish any more poems in his lifetime. This proved true.

Housman’s brother Laurence edited his posthumous poems which appeared in More Poems (1936) and Complete Poems (1939). In these poems, Housman appears more candid about his homosexuality and atheism than in his lifetime, though the essay De Amicitia , published by Laurence Housman in 1967, is even more revealing. Housman also wrote a parodic Fragment of a Greek Tragedy , in English, and humorous poems published posthumously under the title Unkind to Unicorns .

Housman’s most familiar poem is surely “ When I was one-and-twenty ,” number XIII from A Shropshire Lad . The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations includes no fewer than fourteen of its sixteen lines.

Biography By: This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and uses material adapted in whole or in part from the Wikipedia article on A.E. Housman.

Poems By A.E. Housman

Miscellaneous, a shropshire lad, collected poems, from a shropshire lad.

   |       |       |       |       |       |   
Biography
Search

Get Your Degree!

Find schools and get information on the program that’s right for you.

Powered by Campus Explorer

& etc

A E Housman " (1896), was slow in gaining popularity. By the time his second book, (1922), was published, however, the individuality and quality of his work were widely appreciated, and the new volume was an immediate success. appeared in 1936, and in 1940.

Personae
Terms Defined
Referenced Works
 

Interesting Literature

10 of the Best A. E. Housman Poems Everyone Should Read

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

A. E. Housman (1859-1936) didn’t write a great deal of poetry, but the poems he left behind are loved by millions around the world. But what are Housman’s best poems? Drawing up a ‘top ten’ has proved difficult. We’ve included some of his most famous poems, but have also included some of the poems which, we feel, show Housman doing what he did best: tugging at the heartstrings through skilfully crafted verse.

1. ‘ Loveliest of trees, the cherry now ’.

Now, of my threescore years and ten, Twenty will not come again, And take from seventy springs a score, It only leaves me fifty more …

One of A. E. Housman’s most widely anthologised poems, this sees the speaker reflecting on the fact that, aged 20, he only has 50 of his threescore years and ten remaining. Because time is short, he will appreciate the cherry blossom while he’s around to do so. This poem is the first of four poems on this list from A. E. Housman’s first, self-published volume, A Shropshire Lad (1896).

2. ‘ To an Athlete Dying Young ’.

Smart lad, to slip betimes away From fields where glory does not stay, And early though the laurel grows It withers quicker than the rose.

Eyes the shady night has shut Cannot see the record cut, And silence sounds no worse than cheers After earth has stopped the ears …

Housman fell in love with Moses Jackson, a fellow student and athlete, while studying at the University of Oxford in the late 1870s. Jackson didn’t return Housman’s love, but they remained friends and Jackson was, more than any other person, Housman’s poetic muse.

This poem, which was recited in the 1985 film Out of Africa and quoted by Krusty the Klown in an episode of The Simpsons , may have been inspired by the death of Moses’ brother Adalbert Jackson, in 1892.

3. ‘ On Wenlock Edge the wood’s in trouble ’.

’Twould blow like this through holt and hanger When Uricon the city stood: ’Tis the old wind in the old anger, But then it threshed another wood.

Then, ’twas before my time, the Roman At yonder heaving hill would stare: The blood that warms an English yeoman, The thoughts that hurt him, they were there …

Like the fiction of Mary Webb or Arthur Machen’s remarkable 1890s novel The Hill of Dreams , ‘On Wenlock Edge’ (later set to music by Ralph Vaughan Williams) imagines the life of a Roman soldier who trod the same land in west England as he now treads, but in the times of Roman occupation.

4. ‘ Into my heart an air that kills ’.

Into my heart an air that kills From yon far country blows: What are those blue remembered hills, What spires, what farms are those?

One of A. E. Housman’s best poems, and arguably his most popular. In two short quatrains Housman encapsulates the feeling of nostalgia we have for our homeland, a ‘land of lost content’.

The speaker views a distant land and recalls, with a certain melancholy nostalgia, the hills and spires of his homeland. He recognises that, whilst he was happy when he lived there, he cannot return there now he is older and has left that land behind.

5. ‘ Tell me not here, it needs not saying ’.

Possess, as I possessed a season, The countries I resign, Where over elmy plains the highway Would mount the hills and shine, And full of shade the pillared forest Would murmur and be mine …

Taken from Housman’s second volume Last Poems (1922) – which, true to its title, was the final collection Housman allowed to be published during his lifetime – this poem muses upon ‘heartless, witless nature’ during the autumn season.

The poetry of A. E. Housman is often characterised as self-pitying and even adolescent in its outlook on the world. ‘One day I’ll be dead, and  then  you’ll be sorry’ is how at least one detractor has cruelly summed up the gist of Housman’s work.

But what ‘Tell me not here’ shows is just how finely Housman trod the line between expressing a sentiment and being sentimental. His poetry contains pity, but it stops short of being self-pitying.

6. ‘ Tarry, delight, so seldom met ’. 

By Sestos town, in Hero’s tower, On Hero’s heart Leander lies; The signal torch has burned its hour And sputters as it dies …

This poem, which was unpublished in Housman’s lifetime and appeared in the posthumous collection More Poems , is about the brevity of happiness and the knowledge that it must inevitably pass, leaving us with the daily struggle of living to get on with.

But Housman expresses this sentiment wonderfully through the mythical lovers of Hero and Leander: Leander would swim out to see Hero every night, but knew he would have to swim back afterwards.

7. ‘ How clear, how lovely bright ’.

Ensanguining the skies How heavily it dies Into the west away; Past touch and sight and sound Not further to be found, How hopeless under ground Falls the remorseful day.

The final line of this underrated poem – about the fading of hope as we grow older – provided Colin Dexter with the title of his final Inspector Morse novel, The Remorseful Day (1999). Worth it for the magnificent final stanza alone.

8. ‘ Because I liked you better ’.

Because I liked you better Than suits a man to say, It irked you, and I promised To throw the thought away …

Housman didn’t publish this poem in his lifetime, perhaps because the second line, ‘Than suits a man to say’, hinted at Housman’s homosexuality. However, we think it’s one of the greatest poems about unrequited love ever written, and about promising to abide by the loved one’s wish that the lover put them out of mind.

Part of its power comes, perhaps, from the fact that we know the speaker never did forget the one they so hopelessly loved: Housman certainly didn’t.

9. ‘ Give me a land of boughs in leaf ’.

Alas, the country whence I fare, It is where I would stay; And where I would not, it is there That I shall be for aye …

When the world of bereft of life and leaves, Housman intimates in this poem, it is a barren land full of sorrow. The land of the living is where he would like to remain, but unfortunately he is filled with the knowledge that he is going to die soon, and will be in the land of the dead forever.

10. ‘ When the bells justle in the tower ’.

At just four lines, this is the shortest Housman poem in this list. Christopher Ricks called it the best thing Housman ever did, but Housman chose not to publish it during his lifetime. The double meaning of ‘tongue’ is a nice touch (the speaker’s tongue, but also the tongue of the bell in the tower).

Discover more from Interesting Literature

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Type your email…

8 thoughts on “10 of the Best A. E. Housman Poems Everyone Should Read”

Reblogged this on Misanthropester .

Reblogged this on newauthoronline and commented: Housman is one of my favourite English poets and I would recommend anyone who is not familiar with his verse to dip into Houseman. “On Wenlock Edge” is the first Housman poem I recollect reading (or, rather hearing read on the radio). Its a wonderful poem. Kevin

But my favourite isn’t there – it’s a whole fantasy trilogy in three verses:

Her strong enchantments failing, Her towers of fear in wreck, Her limbecks dried of poison And the knife at her neck,

The Queen of air and darkness Begins to shrill and cry, ‘Oh young man, oh my slayer, Tomorrow you shall die.’

Oh Queen of air and darkness, I think ‘tis truth you say, And I shall die tomorrow; but you will die today.

We had to leave out too many classics! ‘A whole fantasy trilogy in three verses’ is a fantastic (as it were) way of describing that poem. Of course, T. H. White borrowed the line ‘Queen of air and darkness’ for his Once and Future King series :)

I didn’t know that much about Housman and his poetry. Really enjoyed this post.

Thanks for taking the time to compile this list. I am a new blogger and just made my first book review post. I look forward to checking out more from this blog!

My favourite poet, even though he is often melancholy.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

  • ABBREVIATIONS
  • BIOGRAPHIES
  • CALCULATORS
  • CONVERSIONS
  • DEFINITIONS

Biographies.net

A. E. Housman

1859 – 1936, who was a. e. housman.

Alfred Edward Housman, usually known as A. E. Housman, was an English classical scholar and poet, best known to the general public for his cycle of poems A Shropshire Lad. Lyrical and almost epigrammatic in form, the poems' wistful evocation of doomed youth in the English countryside, in spare language and distinctive imagery, appealed strongly to late Victorian and Edwardian taste, and to many early 20th-century English composers both before and after the First World War. Through its song-setting the poetry became closely associated with that era, and with Shropshire itself.

Housman was counted one of the foremost classicists of his age, and has been ranked as one of the greatest scholars of all time. He established his reputation publishing as a private scholar and, on the strength and quality of his work, was appointed Professor of Latin at University College London and later, at Cambridge. His editions of Juvenal, Manilius and Lucan are still considered authoritative.

Famous Quotes:

  • In every American there is an air of incorrigible innocence, which seems to conceal a diabolical cunning.

We need you!

Help us build the largest biographies collection on the web.

  • Alfred Edward Housman
  • Laurence Housman
  • St John's College, Oxford
  • Bromsgrove School
  • University of Oxford

Submitted on July 23, 2013

Use the citation below to add to a bibliography:

Style: MLA Chicago APA

"A. E. Housman." Biographies.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 18 Oct. 2024. < https://www.biographies.net/people/en/a_e_housman >.

Cite.Me

Discuss this A. E. Housman biography with the community:

 width=

Report Comment

We're doing our best to make sure our content is useful, accurate and safe. If by any chance you spot an inappropriate comment while navigating through our website please use this form to let us know, and we'll take care of it shortly.

You need to be logged in to favorite .

Create a new account.

Your name: * Required

Your email address: * Required

Pick a user name: * Required

Username: * Required

Password: * Required

Forgot your password?    Retrieve it

Image Credit

The web's largest resource for, biographies & memoirs, a member of the stands4 network, browse biographies.net.

  • Free writing courses
  • Famous poetry classics
  • Forums: Poet's • Suggestions
  • My active groups   see all
  • Trade comments
  • Print publishing
  • Rate comments
  • Recent views
  • Membership plan
  • Contact us + HELP

a.e. housman short biography

Famous poet / 1859-1936  •  Ranked #159 in the top 500 poets

A e housman.

a.e. housman short biography

A. E. Housman was an English classical scholar and poet, best known for his cycle of poems “A Shropshire Lad” . These poems, with their themes of rural life, loss, and fleeting youth, resonated with the melancholic mood of the late Victorian era. They also foreshadowed the disillusionment of the early 20th century, making Housman's work relevant to readers today.

Housman's poetry is characterized by its directness and simplicity of language. He employed traditional forms, often using ballad meter and a restrained, almost stoic tone. Despite their seemingly straightforward presentation, the poems explore profound and universal human experiences, including love, death, the passage of time, and the complexities of memory.

Housman was part of a generation of poets who reacted against the ornate style of the Victorian era. Authors like Thomas Hardy and Gerard Manley Hopkins , with their focus on realism and psychological depth, shared similar sensibilities with Housman. His work also anticipated the themes of loss and disillusionment that would become prevalent in the poetry of the First World War, influencing poets like Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon .

a.e. housman short biography

XIX: To an Athlete Dying Young

Xxxvi: here dead we lie because we did not choose, is my team ploughing, famous poets ( ranked #159 ).

a.e. housman short biography

  • Send Message
  • Open Profile in New Window

Biography of A.E. Housman

Alfred Edward Housman – is one of the most famous poets of England of the Edwardian age. Somebody call him a “a poetry world’s puzzle”, somebody – “the last classical poet of meadow England, but his works are beloved and famous till the present moment.

Born: March 26, 1859 Fockbury, Worcestershire, England, United Kingdom Scholar, Poet

When was Alfred Edward Housman born?

A.E. Housman

The poet was born in 1859 in the Bromsgrove, Worcestershire city and was the eldest of the seven children. He spent his childhood in Valle-House, Fockbury, Worchestershire. He lost his mother early, and his father married again Alfred got good education and from childhood showed his uncommon abilities to writing. So, while studying in king Edward’s school, he got several awards for his works in the field of poetry. After finishing school, he got a grant in St. John’s college and continued his education.

Contemporaries talked about him as about an uncommunicative, unsociable person, who was always gloomy and secretive. Housman has neither found his second half, nor got married, but everybody knew about his homosexuality. While studying at college, he got in love with his friend, Mozes Jackson, who has never loved him back. Many people think that particularly that denial influenced his works, which was full of pessimism, sadness and anguish.

After finishing college, Housman started to follow reclusive way of life, not communicating with other poets, but continuing to write. He was a Latinist and taught Latin in Cambridge University. Together with this he wrote poems and edited his digest for his own money and in small edition. It is called «A Shropshire Lad», which was written in 1896. This book tells the reader about destinies of distant backwoods, Shropshire. It is peculiar that a poet himself has never been there. Firstly, contemporaries didn’t evaluate that work and only in 2 years the long-awaited success came. In Russia this poet is known too and many Russian writers, such as Samuel Marshak translated his works. Among other famous digests of Housman works, which also brought him a success, “Last Poems” are distinguished, edited in 1922.

Popular poems by A.E. Housman

  • To An Athlete Dying Young
  • Terence, This is Stupid Stuff
  • When I Was One-and-Twenty
  • Loveliest of Trees, the Cherry Now
  • Is My Team Ploughing
  • Eight O’Clock
  • Twice a Week the Winter Thorough
  • With Rue My Heart Is Laden
  • The Day of Battle

Death of Sylvia Plath

biography A.E. Housman

The poet lived a long life and died in 1936 at the age of 77 in Cambridge. Worchester university, where he spent his childhood, named one of its housing in the honor of Housman post mortem.

It is peculiar that Housman was not the only child in the family, who deepened into writing. His native brother, Lawreng and sister Klemens also became writers and were rather popular.

A.E. Housman death: April 30, 1936; Cambridge, England, United Kingdom

Related Posts

Biography of Henry Lawson

a.e. housman short biography

A.E. Housman

  • Born March 26 , 1859 · Fockbury, Worcestershire, England, UK
  • Died April 30 , 1936 · Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK (natural causes)
  • Birth name Alfred Edward Housman
  • English poet and scholar. He was the eldest of seven children born to Edward Housman, a solicitor, and Sarah Jane Housman (née Williams). Housman was brought up and educated in Worcestershire, winning a scholarship to Bromsgrove School in 1870. In 1877 he won another scholarship, to St. John's College, Oxford, where he studied classics. In his first Public Examination in 1879, he gained first-class honours. However, he failed his second Public Examination in 1881, partly through neglecting the study of philosophy and history, towards which the course was geared, in favour of the poetry and textual criticism in which he was interested. Consequently he left Oxford without a degree. In 1882 he began working at the Patent Office as a clerk. During this period he began publishing articles on Latin and Greek poetry, and by 1892, when he applied for the post of Professor of Latin at University College London, he had twenty-five published articles to his name. While teaching at UCL he published an edition of Ovid 's `Ibis' (in 1894). This was followed by editions of works by Manilius (1903-30, in five volumes), Juvenal (1905) and Lucan (1926). In 1911 he was made Benjamin Hall Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge, where he taught until a few days before his death. He refused all the honours and awards offered him, including six honorary degrees from British universities and (in 1929) the Order of Merit. He did however accept the fellowship of St. John's College, Oxford. Housman's first volume of poetry, 'A Shropshire Lad', was published in 1896. Although sales were initially slow, by the time his second volume, 'Last Poems', was published in 1922 it had achieved the status of a modern classic and Housman had become something of a literary celebrity, a position with which he was less than entirely comfortable. His poems are frequently concise, often suggesting the rhythms of traditional ballads. Frequently they evoke the English countryside, specifically that of Housman's native West Midlands. His subject-matter is often melancholy: recurring themes include unrequited love and the death of young men (in war, by suicide, or by hanging). A supplementary volume, 'More Poems', was published in 1936 shortly after his death, edited by his brother Laurence. The following year Laurence published a biography including eighteen further poems. Among these were poems too explicit or personal to be published during his lifetime, e.g. 'Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists' (about the imprisonment of Oscar Wilde ). At Oxford Housman had fallen in love with a fellow undergraduate, Moses Jackson. Jackson did not reciprocate his affection and may not even have been aware of it. He was already working at the Patent Office when Housman applied for a job there, and from 1882 to 1887 Housman lived with Jackson and his brother in lodgings in Bayswater. However, in 1887 Moses left the country for India, returning briefly two years later to marry. Thereafter his contact with Housman was minimal. 'A Shropshire Lad' was dedicated to him, as was the first volume of Housman's edition of Manilius. Housman's avowed atheism is expressed in such poems as 'Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries' and 'Easter Hymn'. However, he also described the Church of England as 'the best religion I have ever come across', and much of his poetry echoes the language of the Book of Common Prayer and the King James Bible. Perhaps his most religious work (superficially at least) is 'For My Funeral'. This was sung as a hymn at his funeral, and recited on 17 September 1996, when a memorial was dedicated to Housman in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey. - IMDb Mini Biography By: Peter Brynmor Roberts

Contribute to this page

  • Learn more about contributing

More from this person

  • View agent, publicist, legal and company contact details on IMDbPro

More to explore

Recently viewed.

a.e. housman short biography

IMAGES

  1. NPG x7765; A.E. Housman

    a.e. housman short biography

  2. A short biography of A. E. Housman

    a.e. housman short biography

  3. Critical Biography: A. E. Housman : A Critical Biography (Paperback

    a.e. housman short biography

  4. aehousman_bio

    a.e. housman short biography

  5. A E Housman

    a.e. housman short biography

  6. A.E. Housman's poems exude a love that reaches out from the 19th century

    a.e. housman short biography

VIDEO

  1. Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries

  2. A E Housman is the poet today: Exploring Old Poets

  3. A.E. Housman, A Shropshire Lad, LVI-LXI

  4. A.E. Housman, A Shropshire Lad, XXXVIII-XLII

  5. A.E. Housman, A Shropshire Lad, LXII-LXIII

  6. Housman on Focusing on Life’s Ills

COMMENTS

  1. A.E. Housman

    A.E. Housman was an English scholar and poet who wrote A Shropshire Lad and other lyrics expressing Romantic pessimism. He also edited Manilius and taught Latin at Cambridge.

  2. A. E. Housman

    Alfred Edward Housman (/ ˈ h aʊ s m ən /; 26 March 1859 - 30 April 1936) was an English classical scholar and poet. After an initially poor performance while at university, he took employment as a clerk in London and established his academic reputation by first publishing as a private scholar.Later Housman was appointed Professor of Latin at University College London and then at the ...

  3. A. E. Housman

    Learn about the life and work of A. E. Housman, a classical scholar who also wrote the popular poetry collection A Shropshire Lad. Discover his achievements in textual criticism, his passion for Latin literature, and his controversial style and themes.

  4. A. E. Housman (1859-1936): A Life in Brief

    Housman was already arrogant, already sure he knew what his life's work was to be: redaction — the search for truth through correcting scribal errors in classical texts. He made his name with, among other works, an edition of Manilius, a first-century Roman astronomer whose poetry was poor, his science worse.

  5. A. E. Housman Biography

    Alfred Edward Housman was born on March 26, 1859, in Fockbury, Worcestershire, into an ancient family of preachers and farmers whose English roots extended back to the fourteenth century.

  6. A. E. Housman: A Critical Biography

    A.E. Housman (1859-1936) was a poet of enormous popularity and widespread influence: a Latin scholar of the front rank, a superb prose stylist, a notable writer of comic verse and, thanks to the enormous success of A Shropshire Lad, one of the greatest and best-known poems in the English language, he became a legend in his own lifetime.

  7. Housman, A.E

    Written mostly in ballad form with rhyming alternate lines, and mainly short with straightforward language, the poems in A Shropshire Lad speak directly to the reader, and for this reason, ... Page, Norman, A. E. Housman: A Critical Biography, Schocken (New York, NY), 1983.

  8. A E Housman

    A. E. Housman. BORN: 1859, Worcestershire, England DIED: 1936, Cambridge, England NATIONALITY: English GENRE: Poetry MAJOR WORKS: A Shropshire Lad (1896) Last Poems (1922) More Poems (1936) The Collected Poems of A. E. Housman (1939) Manuscript Poems: Eight Hundred Lines of Hitherto Uncollected Verse from the Author's Notebooks (1955) Overview. A. E. Housman continues to be a frequently read ...

  9. How A. E. Housman Invented Englishness

    Whatever happened, Housman moved out, and Jackson soon married and settled in Karachi. Years later, Housman's younger brother, Laurence, a novelist and playwright, also gay but much more open ...

  10. HumanitiesWeb.org

    A E Housman - Biography. Born in Catshill, Worcestershire, in 1859 and educated at the University of Oxford. After ten years as a civil servant, he was made professor of Latin at University College, London (1892-1911) and at the University of Cambridge (1911-1936). Housman was considered one of the foremost classical scholars of his time.

  11. A E Housman Biography

    A E Housman Biography (Famous Poet Bio). Read information including facts, works, awards, and the life story and history of A E Housman. This short biographical feature on A E Housman will help you learn about one of the best famous poet poets of all-time.

  12. A. E. Housman Biography

    A. E. Housman. Alfred Edward Housman (; 26 March 1859 - 30 April 1936) was an English classical scholar and poet. After an initially poor performance while at university, he took employment as a clerk in London and established his academic reputation by publishing as a private scholar at first. ... His biography is available in 30 different ...

  13. A. E. Housman biography

    A. E. Housman. Biography. Alfred Edward Housman was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, England, on March 26, 1859, 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 ...

  14. A. E. Housman Biography

    Housman regarded himself principally as a Latinist and avoided the literary world. In 1911 he became professor of Latin at Cambridge, teaching there almost up to his death. His major scholarly effort, to which he devoted more than 30 years, was an annotated edition of Manilius (1903-30), whose poetry he did not like but who gave him ample scope ...

  15. A.E. Housman (1859

    Biography of A.E. Housman (1859 - 1936) A.E. Housman (1859-1936) Alfred Edward Housman (March 26, 1859 - April 30, 1936) was an English poet and classical scholar, now best known for his cycle of poems A Shropshire Lad. He was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, the eldest of seven children of a country solicitor. His brother Laurence Housman ...

  16. HumanitiesWeb.org

    A E Housman Biography "Experience has taught me, when I am shaving of a morning, to keep watch over my thoughts, because if a line of poetry strays into my memory, my skin bristles so that the razor ceases to act...The seat of this sensation is the pit of the stomach. Born in Catshill, Worcestershire, in 1859 and educated at the University of Oxford. After ten years as a civil servant, he was ...

  17. 10 of the Best A. E. Housman Poems Everyone Should Read

    A. E. Housman (1859-1936) didn't write a great deal of poetry, but the poems he left behind are loved by millions around the world. ... In two short quatrains Housman encapsulates the feeling of nostalgia we have for our homeland, a 'land of lost content'. The speaker views a distant land and recalls, with a certain melancholy nostalgia ...

  18. Biography of A. E. Housman

    Housman was counted one of the foremost classicists of his age, and has been ranked as one of the greatest scholars of all time. He established his reputation publishing as a private scholar and, on the strength and quality of his work, was appointed Professor of Latin at University College London and later, at Cambridge.

  19. A E Housman

    Browse the poems of A E Housman, an English classical scholar and poet, best known for his cycle of poems "A Shropshire Lad". Find his biography, analysis, and full list of poems on this web page.

  20. Biography and poems of A.E. Housman: Who is A.E. Housman

    In Russia this poet is known too and many Russian writers, such as Samuel Marshak translated his works. Among other famous digests of Housman works, which also brought him a success, "Last Poems" are distinguished, edited in 1922. Popular poems by A.E. Housman. To An Athlete Dying Young; Terence, This is Stupid Stuff; When I Was One-and-Twenty

  21. A.E. Housman

    A.E. Housman. Writer: Camera Three. English poet and scholar. He was the eldest of seven children born to Edward Housman, a solicitor, and Sarah Jane Housman (née Williams). Housman was brought up and educated in Worcestershire, winning a scholarship to Bromsgrove School in 1870. In 1877 he won another scholarship, to St. John's College, Oxford, where he studied classics.

  22. A.E. Housman, a critical biography : Page, Norman : Free Download

    Housman, A. E. (Alfred Edward), 1859-1936, Classicists -- England -- Biography, Poets, English -- 19th century -- Biography Publisher New York : Schocken Books Collection trent_university; internetarchivebooks; printdisabled; inlibrary Contributor Internet Archive Language English Item Size 768.8M

  23. A. E. Housman: A Critical Biography [PDF] [21p5hej17d40]

    A Critical Biography A. E. HOUSMAN A Critical Biography By the same author THE LANGUAGE OF JANE AUSTEN SPEECH IN THE ENGLISH NOVEL THOMAS HARDY THOMAS HARDY: The Writer and his Background (editor) WILKIE COLLINS: The Critical Heritage (editor) NABOKOV: The Critical Heritage (editor) A DICKENS COMPANION D. H. LAWRENCE: Interviews and Recollections (editor) TENNYSON: Interviews and Recollections ...