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  1. Feb 21, 2018 · There was nothing more admirable in Auden than his complete sanity and his firm belief in sanity; in his eyes all kinds of madness were lack of discipline—“Naughty, naughty,” as he used to say. The main thing was to have no illusions and to accept no thoughts—no theoretical systems—that would blind you to reality.

  2. step forward in his 'conversion to Communism'. By 1966, though, it seemed to Auden as if written by 'someone talented but near the border of sanity, who might well, in a year or two, become a Nazi'. As a retrospective glance at his earlier work, it is less self-confident than the work itself, and ill at ease when seen against Spender's

  3. Auden’s spirituality didn’t incline him to piety. He smoked and drank heavily and used amphetamines to fuel his literary output. During his New York years, Auden became friends with Oliver Sacks, the neurologist who would later become a celebrated author himself.

  4. Mar 31, 2013 · Looking back on his younger self, the middle-aged Auden half joked that the author of these early poems was “someone talented but near the border of sanity, who might well, in a year or two, become a Nazi.”Great poetry, however, doesn’t require philosophical coherence.

  5. In “The Age of Anxiety: A Critical Literary Analysis,” W.H. Auden offers a scathing critique of modern society. He argues that the anxiety and alienation that pervade contemporary life are the result of a fundamental disconnect between individuals and their communities.

  6. What is known is that Auden's interest in the problem of individual commitment to collective political action remained keen and was heightened by his sojourn to China in 1937.

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  8. W. H. Auden is a giant of twentieth-century English poetry whose writings demonstrate a sustained engagement with the times in which he lived. But how did the century’s shifting cultural terrain afect him and his work?

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