An important message to current members: All current members of the Society have on-line access to all current and recent numbers of theNewsletterthrough apassword-protected page on this site. We have e-mailed the password to all current members whose e-mail addresses are in our files. If you are a current member of the Society and have not received an e-mail with your password, please send an e-mail to makerofweb(at)audensociety(dot)org. (Of course, please replace the parenthetical words with the @ sign and a dot.) If you have not renewed your membership recently, please feel free to do so through a link on themembership page. Older numbers of theNewsletter continue to be publicly available on thearchives page.
The only e-mail message that the Society ever sends is a notification (with download link) of a new number of theNewsletter. If you do not want to receive that notification, please contact the webmaster at the address at the foot of this page.
Forthcomng events are now listed on a separate page.
News items:
Thetwo volumes of Auden's poems in thePrinceton University Press edition of The Complete Works of W. H. Auden were published in the US in June 2022 and in the UK and Europe in August 2022.
A critical edition ofThe Shield of Achilles, edited by Alan Jacobs, has been published byPrinceton Univerity Press.
The Society'sNewsletter 41 (February 2023)has beenposted online. Members of the Society who have supplied the webmaster with their e-mail addresses have been sent a message with the password that is required to view or download the file. If you have not received this e-mail message, and you are a current member of the Society, kindly send a message to the webmaster (including your full name) using the address at the foot of this page.
A recording of a conference at the University of Toronto, 1971, with Auden, Marshall McLuhan, and others, hasbeen posted on this site.
The soundtrack of the film, with narration by Auden, shown at US Hemisfair '68, in San Diego, may be heard either at theUniversity of Texas at San Antonio Digital Collection (note that some web browsers will not play the recording; in case of difficulty, try Firefox) ordirectly from this site. Thanks to Angelica Cordero for reporting this link, and to Alex Shenker for initiating the search.
Auden's lecture "On the Hero in Modern Poetry", delivered at San Francisco State University, 11 October 1954, is nowavailable online. This lecture inaugurated the Poetry Center at SFSU, and the Center's digital archive now hosts Auden's lecture. The Society thanks Steve Dickison of SFSU for making this recording available.
A recording of Auden's last reading, at the Palais Palffy, Vienna, 28 September 1973, has come into the Society's hands andmay be heard on this site.
Printed copies will be posted to members who subscribe at the institutional rate. Two online versions of theNewsletter have been posted: one designed foronline reading or to be printed one page to a sheet, the other designed to beprinted on two sides of the page and folded and stapled as a booklet. All recent numbers of theNewsletter may be found on aseparate page.
Auden's televised1971 reading (and updating) of "The Unknown Citizen" has been posted here, thanks to the generosity of the producer.
Somerecent and forthcoming books about Auden are listed here:
Auden and the Muse of History, by Susannah Young-ah Gottlieb
The Landscapes of W. H. Auden's Interwar Poetry: Roots and Routes, by Ladislav Vit
An outbreak offorged signatures of Auden seems to have occurred during the past few years, and a number of them have been offered for sale, or have been sold. A few of them arenoted on this site.
A note on dubious quotationsfrom Auden in a book by Jonah Lehrer titledImaginehas been added to an earlier page listinga few things Auden never wrote.
A highly accurate, thoroughlyrevised version of the Wikipedia.org entry on Auden is now available. This site strongly recommends that online researchers make reference to the archived version of the page, in the link above, rather than to current versions, which may be less accurate or may be subject to vandalism. (A page onWystanus Hugo Auden in the Latin-language Vicipedia may also be of interest.)
Older versions of the Society's web site may be found in theBritish Library's web archive.
See alsosome further notes that may be of interest.
The W. H. Auden Society commemorates the life and work of one of the greatest poets in the English language.
This web site offers a list ofbooks by Wystan Hugh Auden, links to some of hispoems, a selective list ofrecordings of his readings and of musical settings of his poems, and (to be added in the near future) a biography. Recentnews of publications and events of interest to Auden's readers, reports ofwork in progress, and brief scholarly and interpretivenotes may also be found here. Visitors seeking further information can find selective lists of published criticism and biography,links to other web sites, and the archives of the Society's Newsletter. You maysearch the contents of this site.
Authors and publishers seeking permission to quote the writings of W. H. Auden may consult thecopyright page.
TheAuden Museum in Kirchstetten,in the attic of Auden's house, is maintained by the community of Kirchstetten. Access is restricted, because the house is privately owned. To visit, make an appointment with Maria Rollenitz by telephone: +43-2743-8696. Some photographs of the museum may be foundhere, on a page from a site intended for a conference that was unfortunately cancelled.
A page offrequently asked questions contains information about the poems by Auden quoted inTuesdays with Morrie (“September 1, 1939”) and inFour Weddings and a Funeral (“Stop all the clocks...”).
Information is available about membership in the W. H. Auden Society and itsofficers, and a list of contacts is provided for authors and publishers seekingcopyright permission to quote, reprint, or translate Auden's works. Amap of this site is provided.
You mayjoin the Society on-line using a credit card and a web-based transaction service. Details may be found on themembership page.
Following the ratification of itsConstitution in May 2004, the Society is now registered with the Charity Commission for England and Wales as Charity No. 1104496. The W. H. Auden Society is registered as a not-for-profit corporation in the State of New York.
All works by Auden quoted on this site are copyright by the Estate of W. H. Auden and used with the permission of the Estate.
Some further notes that may be of interest:
W. H. Auden's Revising Process, a series of eleven articles by Yoshinari S. Yamada, first published in 1974-1990, is now available from this site as a single PDF file.
Auden's Revisions, by W. D. Quesenbery, is a book-length study that the author completed shortly before his death. Through the generosity of his daughter Whitney Quesenberythe entire book is available on this site in PDF format, together with aseparate copyright notice. Readers should confirm all readings listed in this study against the original text, as it includes many errors which the author would surely have corrected had he lived long enough to do so.
A warning to potential buyers of Auden memorabilia: Three items in Auden's handwriting were offered for sale on eBay in March 2009; two of them are not exactly what the auction listings describe them as being, and potential bidders should beware. The item described as "Very rare authentic W. H. Auden handwritten poem" is not a poem at all, but a partial pencil draft of the index of the first lines of the poems that Auden selected for inclusion in an anthology,The Faber Book of Modern American Verse, published in 1956; every line is the first line of one of the poems in the anthology, all written by other poets. The item described as "Authentic W. H. Auden handwritten Polish Ballet notes" is a printed programme booklet with notesnot written by Auden, but someone else who has not been identified; the lot also includes a three-by-five-inch index card with notes that are, however, in Auden's hand; the notes are a brief list of poems by the American poet William Vaughn Moody, evidently listed for possible inclusion in the sameFaber Book of Modern American Verse. The item described as "Authentic W. H. Auden Driver's License" is, however, accurately described, and is evidently Auden's driver's license, apparently issued in December 1968.
News that wasn't: The London newspaperThe Independent splashed across its front page on 5 September 2007 the news that three "lost" schoolboy poems by Auden had been rediscovered. These three unsigned poems were in fact known to researchers for many decades, and there seem to be no convincing reason to believe that Auden wrote any of them. It is of course not impossible that Auden was the author, but they could equally well have been written by almost any literate schoolboy of the period. Katherine Bucknell, the editor of Auden'sJuvenilia, has argued in the Society'sNewsletter that one of the poems was written by Auden's friend Robert Medley. Probably no one will ever know who actually wrote these poems, and, as Auden wrote in "Archaeology," "guessing is always / more fun than knowing."
A note on Reinaldo Javier Sanchez from Venezuela: Some years ago, the Society received an e-mail from Reinaldo Javier Sanchez, who describes himself as a professor of English at a university in Venezuela, asking for a copy of Auden'sCollected Poems to sent to him by air mail; he writes that he needs it for a project that he has planned for his students. If other webmasters should receive a similar request, they may wish to read some earlier messages written by Prof. Javier Sanchez. Examples of such messages may be foundhereandhere, and further messages from Prof. Javier Sanchez - who evidently teaches a wide range of subjects, is deeply committed to his students, is sometimes male and sometimes female, and has remained 25 years old from at least 2004 through 2009 - may be found through a web search. For some unknown reason, Prof. Javier Sanchez's name does not appear in thedirectory of the university in which he claims to teach.
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