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The beginning of Audenâs career, starting at Oxford, was mixed in with several contemporariesâ, particularly those of Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender, and Cecil Day-Lewis. While they did not know each other collectively as a group at that time, as is commonly supposed, their work was actively anti-fascist in sentiment and aesthetically similar. While Auden himself was influenced by earlier Romantic poets, particularly their humanism, he was also drawn to the more experimentally modern T. S. Eliot. Auden was also influenced by his friendship and collaborations with novelist Christopher Isherwood. In the 1930s, Audenâs interest in political events is apparent in the poems of Another Time, which solidified his reputation as a political poet, a definition Auden did not always like. Eventually, he wrote about the political poems of Irish poet William Butler Yeats, noting âthe fallacious belief that art ever makes anything happen, whereas the honest truth, gentlemen, is that, if not a poem had been written, not a picture painted nor a bar of music composed, the history of man would be materially unchangedâ (Share, Don. âPoetry makes nothing happen. . . or does it?â poetryfoundation.org, 2009). While this statement is often summarized as a dyspeptic credo, Don Share points out that âfor Auden, the job of the poet is not to be what he called, at about this time, a âcrusaderââbut to make poems happen.
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By W. H. Auden