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W. H. Auden

Read through the most famous quotes from W. H. Auden




It's a sad fact about our culture that a poet can earn much more money writing or talking about his art than he can by practicing it.


— W. H. Auden


#art #culture #earn #fact #his

Murder is commoner among cooks than among members of any other profession.


— W. H. Auden


#any #commoner #cooks #members #murder

No hero is mortal till he dies.


— W. H. Auden


#hero #mortal #till

Of all possible subjects, travel is the most difficult for an artist, as it is the easiest for a journalist.


— W. H. Auden


#difficult #easiest #journalist #most #possible

One cannot walk through an assembly factory and not feel that one is in Hell.


— W. H. Auden


#cannot #factory #feel #hell #through

Sob, heavy world Sob as you spin, Mantled in mist Remote from the happy.


— W. H. Auden


#heavy #mist #remote #sob #spin

The center that I cannot find is known to my unconscious mind.


— W. H. Auden


#center #conscious mind #find #i #known

The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age.


— W. H. Auden


#age #apt #class #class distinctions #democratic

The countenances of children, like those of animals, are masks, not faces, for they have not yet developed a significant profile of their own.


— W. H. Auden


#developed #faces #like #masks #own

The words of a dead man are modified in the guts of the living.


— W. H. Auden


#dead #guts #living #man #modified






About W. H. Auden

W. H. Auden Quotes




Did you know about W. H. Auden?

By the time of Auden's death in 1973 he had attained the status of a respected elder statesman. " Until he was fifteen he expected to become a mining engineer but his passion for words had already begun. His reconversion was influenced partly by what he called the "sainthood" of Charles Williams whom he had met in 1937 partly by reading Søren Kierkegaard and Reinhold Niebuhr; his existential this-worldly Christianity became a central element in his life.

After his death some of his poems notably "Funeral Blues" ("Stop all the clocks") "Musée des Beaux Arts" "Refugee Blues" "The Unknown Citizen" and "September 1 1939" became known to a much wider public than during his lifetime through films broadcasts and popular media. In the 1950s and 1960s many of his poems focused on the ways in which words revealed and concealed emotions and he took a particular interest in writing opera librettos a form ideally suited to direct expression of strong feelings. Wystan Hugh Auden (pron.

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