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921:"A Welshman, a poet of distinction, and a man in whose work much of the peculiarly Welsh attitude to life is expressed with singular grace and sincerity. He combines a vivid sense of beauty with affection for the homely, keen zest for life and adventure with a rare appreciation of the common, universal pleasures, and finds in those simple things of daily life a precious quality, a dignity and a wonder that consecrate them. Natural, simple and unaffected, he is free from sham in feeling and artifice in expression. He has re-discovered for those who have forgotten them, the joys of simple nature. He has found romance in that which has become commonplace; and of the native impulses of an unspoilt heart, and the responses of a sensitive spirit, he has made a new world of experience and delight. He is a lover of life, accepting it and glorying in it. He affirms values that were falling into neglect, and in an age that is mercenary reminds us that we have the capacity for spiritual enjoyment."
869:. Having moved to Watledge, these friendships continued. Some three months before his death, Davies was visited at Glendower by Gordon-Woodhouse and the Sitwells, Davies being too ill to travel. Sitwell noted that Davies looked "very ill", but that "his head, so typical of him in its rustic and nautical boldness, with the black hair now greying a little, but as stiff as ever, surrounding his high bony forehead, seemed to have acquired an even more sculptural quality." Helen privately told Sitwell that Davies' heart showed "alarming symptoms of weakness" caused, according to doctors, by the continuous dragging weight of his wooden leg. Helen kept the true extent of the medical diagnosis from her husband.
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425:, in 1905, again by means of his savings. It proved to be the beginning of success and a growing reputation. To publish it, Davies forwent his allowance to live as a tramp for six months (with the first draft of the book hidden in his pocket), just to secure a loan of funds from his inheritance. After it was published, the volume was ignored. He resorted to posting individual copies by hand to prospective wealthy customers chosen from the pages of
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445:. On reading the book, he later wrote in his essay "Gods of Modern Grub Street", Adcock said he "recognised there were crudities and doggerel in it, there was also in it some of the freshest and most magical poetry to be found in modern books." He sent the price of the book, then asked Davies to meet him. Adcock is seen as "the man who discovered Davies." The first trade edition of
933:: "He can write commonplace or inaccurate English, but it is also natural to him to write, such as Wordsworth wrote, with the clearness, compactness and felicity which make a man think with shame how unworthily, through natural stupidity or uncertainty, he manages his native tongue. In subtlety he abounds, and where else today shall we find simplicity like this?"
488:). It was only through Shaw that Davies' contract with the publishers was rewritten to retain him the serial rights, all rights after three years, royalties of 15 per cent of selling price, and a non-returnable advance of £25. Davies was also to be given a say in the style of illustrations, advertisement layouts and cover designs. The original publisher,
781:. He had caught sight of her just getting off the bus and describes her wearing a "saucy-looking little velvet cap with tassels". Still unmarried, Helen was pregnant at the time. While living with Davies in London, before the couple were married, Helen suffered a miscarriage. Davies initially planned on publication of the book, and sent it to
800:, Gloucestershire, the first being a comfortable, detached 19th-century stone-built house. Axpills (later known as Shenstone), with a garden of character. He lived in several houses, all close to one another, in his last seven years. His last home was the small roadside cottage Glendower in the hamlet of Watledge. The couple had no children.
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with a false indifference.... I was soon home again, away less than four months; but all the wildness was taken out of me, and my adventures after this were not of my seeking, but the result of circumstances." Davies took an ambivalent view of his disability. In his poem "The Fog", published in the 1913
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From 1949, Glendower was the home of the poet's great-nephew Norman
Phillips. In 2003, following a heart attack, Phillips moved into supported accommodation. A support group of local residents, The Friends of Glendower, was established to raise funds for renovation, with the aims of enabling Phillips
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suggested this event, more than any other, led Davies to become a professional poet. Davies writes, "I bore this accident with an outward fortitude that was far from the true state of my feelings. Thinking of my present helplessness caused me many a bitter moment, but I managed to impress all comers
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known as "The Ark", which he grew to despise. Fearing the reaction of his fellow tramps to his writings, Davies would pretend to sleep, while composing his poems in his head, for later transcription in private. At one point, he borrowed money to print some, which he attempted to sell door-to-door.
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In 1879 the family moved to Raglan Street, Newport, then to Upper Lewis Street, where
William attended Temple School. In 1883 he moved to Alexandra Road School and the following year was arrested, as one of five schoolmates charged with stealing handbags. He was given twelve strokes of the
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to return to the cottage and for it to be a commemoration of Davies' life and work. In 2012 signed copies of five of Davies' books were found during restoration, together with personal papers. By 2017, remedial work on the cottage was sufficiently advanced to allow
Phillips to return.
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in the United
Kingdom and the United States, yet became one of the most popular poets of his time. His themes included observations on life's hardships, the ways the human condition is reflected in nature, his tramping adventures and the characters he met. His work has been classed as
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collection included settings for "The
Likeness", "The Temper of a Maid", "Natures' Friend", "Robin Redbreast" and "A Great Time". "A Great Time" has also been set by Otto Freudenthal (born 1934), Wynn Hunt (born 1910) and Newell Wallbank (born 1914). There are also three songs by Sir
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In
November 1874, William was aged three when his father died. The next year his mother, Mary Anne Davies, remarried as Mrs Joseph Hill. She agreed that care of the three children should pass to their paternal grandparents, Francis and Lydia Davies, who ran the nearby
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I've never been ill before, really, except when I had that accident and lost my leg.... And, d'you know, I grow so irritable when I've got that pain, I can't bear the sound of people's voices.... Sometimes I feel I should like to turn over on my side and die.
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by agreeing to be locked in a series of jails. Here with his fellow tramps Davies enjoyed relative comfort in "card-playing, singing, smoking, reading, relating experiences, and occasionally taking exercise or going out for a walk." At one point on his way to
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248:, known as Cousin Brodribb to the family. He later recalled his grandmother speaking of Irving as "the cousin who brought disgrace on us." According to a neighbour's memories, she wore "pretty little caps, with bebe ribbon, tiny roses and puce trimmings."
294:(1908) covers his American life in 1893–1899, including adventures and characters from his travels as a drifter. During the period, he crossed the Atlantic Ocean at least seven times on cattle ships. He travelled through many states doing seasonal work.
910:. His style was described by Shaw as that of "a genuine innocent", while the biographer L. Hockey said, "It is as a poet of nature that Davies has become most famous; and it is not surprising that he should have taken nature as his main subject."
276:(1918) Davies recalls that, at the age of 14, he was left with orders to sit with his dying grandfather. He missed the final moments of his grandfather's life as he was too engrossed in reading "a very interesting book of wild adventure."
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recalled Davies telling him that along with his grandparents and himself, his home held "an imbecile brother, a sister... a maidservant, a dog, a cat, a parrot, a dove and a canary bird." Sitwell also recounts how Davies's grandmother, a
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and others. He became "the most painted literary man of his day", thanks to
Augustus John, Sir William Nicholson, Dame Laura Knight and Sir William Rothenstein. Epstein's bronze of Davies's head was a successful smaller work.
1053:, again with some unpublished poems. Other materials include an archive of press cuttings, a collection of personal papers and letters, and a number of photographs of Davies and his family, as well as a sketch of him by
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holds a large collection of Davies manuscripts. Items include poems such as a copy of "A Boy's Sorrow", a 16-line poem about the death of a neighbor which appears never to have been published and a collection,
288:. In November 1886 his grandmother signed Davies up for a five-year apprenticeship to a local picture-frame maker. Davies never enjoyed the craft. He left Newport, took casual work and began his travels.
1089:, selected and introduced by Brian Waters, a Gloucestershire poet and writer whose work Davies admired, who described him as "about the last of England's professional poets". The collection included
232:, a busy port. He had an older brother, Francis Gomer Boase, born with part of his skull displaced, who Davies' biographer describes as "simple and peculiar". In 1874 a sister, Matilda, was born.
1906:, in her preface to the book, calls Helen "a country girl who had come to London, become pregnant by a man whom she could not marry, was without resources and afraid to go back to her people."
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district. He lived there from early 1916 until 1921 in a small apartment, initially accompanied by an infestation of rodents, and adjacent to rooms occupied by a loud, Belgian prostitute.
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accompaniment. A musical adaptation of this poem with John
Karvelas (vocals) and Nick Pitloglou (piano) and an animated film by Pipaluk Polanksi can be found on YouTube. Again in 1970,
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in London, who did more to help him than anyone else. Thomas rented for Davies the tiny two-roomed
Stidulph's Cottage in Egg Pie Lane, not far from his own home at Elses Farm near
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in Kent. Davies moved to the cottage from 6 Llanwern Street, Newport, via London, in the second week of
February 1907. The cottage was "only two meadows off" from Thomas's house.
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in August 1924. He later changed his mind and asked for its return, and for the destruction of all copies. Cape in fact retained the copies and, after Davies's death, asked
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For his poetry Davies drew much on experiences with the seamier side of life, but also on his love of nature. By the time he took a prominent place in the Edward Marsh
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thereafter. Davies' biographers agree the accident was crucial, although Davies played down the story. Moult begins his biography with the incident, and his biographer
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Stonesifier describes her as "a twenty-two-year-old Sussex girl, a nurse in a hospital to which he was sent for treatment" when very ill in the spring of 1922. While
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was published by Alston Rivers in 1907. A second edition followed in 1908 and a third in 1910. A 1906 edition, by Fifield, was advertised but has not been verified.
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Several anecdotes of Davies's time with the Thomas family appear in a brief account later published by Thomas's widow Helen. In 1911, he was awarded a
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on 20 March 1899, he lost his footing and his right foot was crushed under the wheels of the train. The leg was amputated below the knee and he wore a
958:, that he wrote like an angel but according to those who had met him talked like poor Poll, except that he was no parrot of other people's opinions."
1206:, from January 1917, regarded by many as the most accurate artistic impression of Davies and a copy of which Davies owned himself, may be found at
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1160:", a song with lyrics from Davies's 1927 poem "The Dragonfly", as did the English singer-songwriter and instrumentalist Blake for his 2011 album
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Davies' health continued to decline and he died in September 1940 at the age of 69. Never a churchgoer in adult life, he was cremated at the
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The turning point in Davies's life came after a week of rambling in London. He spotted a newspaper story about the riches to be made in the
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The marriage certificate gives his occupation as "An Author", that of his father as "Able Seaman" and that of Helen's father as "Farmer".
569:. In December 1908 his essay "How It Feels To Be Out of Work", described by Stonesifer as "a rather pedestrian performance", appeared in
338:, a blind man leads the poet through the fog, showing the reader how someone impaired in one domain may have a big advantage in another.
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as to the advisability of publication. Shaw gave a negative reply and the work remained unpublished until after Helen's death in 1979.
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1133:: "Thunderstorms", "This Night", and "Leisure", and "The Rain" for voice and piano, by Margaret Campbell Bruce, published in 1951 by
514:, which Davies was particularly keen to have, and subsequently arranged a meeting between Davies, Lawrence and Lawrence's wife-to-be
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Please help improve this article by looking for better, more reliable sources. Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed.
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Davies began to spend more time in London and make literary friends and acquaintances. Despite an aversion to giving his own
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and set off to make his fortune in Canada. Attempting with a fellow tramp, Three-fingered Jack, to jump a freight train at
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1041:. His return in September 1938 for the unveiling of the plaque in his honour proved to be his last public appearance.
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After lodging at several addresses in Sevenoaks, Davies moved back to London early in 1914, settling eventually at 14
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poet Olaf Baker. He was finding work difficult with rheumatism and other ailments. Harlow (1993) lists a total of 14
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By this time Davies had a library of some fifty books at his cottage, mostly 16th and 17th-century poets, among them
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Several sources give the birth as 20 April, which Davies himself believed, but his birth certificate gives 3 July
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Davies's main biographer Stonesifer compared the realism, directness and simplicity of Davies' prose to that of
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During this London period, Davies embarked on a series of public readings of his work, alongside others such as
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as the residence of one of his characters in his early story "The Bloomsbury Christening", later collected in
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in December 1990, to mark Davies's work, on the 50th anniversary of his death. The bronze head of Davies by
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Prior to his marriage, Davies often stayed in London with his friend Osbert Sitwell and Sitwell's brother
662:. He enjoyed the society and conversation of literary men, particularly in the rarefied downstairs at the
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was a frank, often disturbing account of his life before and after picking Helen up at a bus-stop in the
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762:, Sussex, and the couple set up home in the town at Tor Leven, Cantelupe Road. According to a witness,
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2251:""PENSION FOR TRAMP POET: W.H.Davies to Have 50 a Year - Conrad and Yeats Also Aided" at nytimes.com"
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The couple lived quietly and happily, moving from East Grinstead to Sevenoaks, then to Malpas House,
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1932:
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by Professor W. D. Thomas. Thomas' citation attempted a summary of Davies' themes, style and tone:
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973:. Sitwell described him as having a "long and aquiline" face and "broad-shouldered and vigorous".
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A controversial statue by Paul Bothwell-Kincaid, inspired by the poem "Leisure", was unveiled in
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2052:, London: Jonathan Cape (3rd impression 1943), pp. xxi–xxviii, "Introduction" by Osbert Sitwell.
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823:. Of his own poems he added only "The Kingfisher" and "Leisure". The collection reappeared as
733:, describes the beginnings of Davies's writing career and his acquaintance with Belloc, Shaw,
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On 5 February 1923, Davies married 23-year-old Helen Matilda Payne at the Register Office,
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1037:. He returned to his native Newport in 1930, where he was honoured with a luncheon at the
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series, he was an established figure, generally known for the opening lines of the poem "
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1684:(with preface by Daniel George and introduction by Osbert Sitwell, Jonathan Cape, 1963)
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in 1911: "What is this life if, full of care / We have no time to stand and stare...."
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Many Davies poems have been set to music. "Money, O!" was set for voice and piano in
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854:, gave an address. Davies was unwell; the unveiling was his last public appearance.
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Plaque commemorating Davies' supposed place of birth, at "The Church House Inn", in
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In September 1938, Davies attended the unveiling of a plaque in his honour at the
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broadcasts of Davies reading his work made between 1924 and 1940 (now held in the
575:. He continued to send other periodical articles to editors, but without success.
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2322:, London: Jonathan Cape: Introduction: "W. H. Davies, Man and Poet", pp. 9–20.
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492:, rejected the new terms and the book passed to the London publisher Fifield.
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435:, in return. He sold 60 of the 200 copies printed. One of the copies went to
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at 14 Portland Street. His grandfather Francis Boase Davies, originally from
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2602:, ed. Daniel George, London: Jonathan Cape, 1963, pp. xxv–xxvi, "Foreword".
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The effort was not successful and Davies burned all of the printed sheets.
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Davies returned to Britain, to a rough life largely in London shelters and
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1983:
1817:, London: Jonathan Cape (first full biography of Davies), ISBN B0000CLPA3
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1464:, introduction by Davies (Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co, 1924)
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by Lewis Davies included an imagined sitting by Davies for a portrait by
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Welsh Poets: A Representative English selection from Contemporary Writers
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484:, who agreed to write a preface (largely through the efforts of his wife
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2983:– browsable collection of some poems and prose (non-profit organisation)
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261:, was "of a more austere and religious turn of mind than her husband."
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1113:, along with over 100 poems arranged by period of publication period.
518:. Lawrence was initially impressed but his view changed after reading
244:, had been a sea captain. Davies was related to the British actor Sir
1580:; special limited edition of 15 on handmade paper also hand-coloured)
503:
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187:, though it is not typical of that class of work in theme or style.
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Time to Stand and Stare: A Life of W. H. Davies with Selected Poems
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Time to Stand and Stare: A Life of W. H. Davies with Selected Poems
506:, he began a collection of his own. The Georgian poetry publisher
310:, he lay alone in a swamp for three days and nights suffering from
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1690:(Jonathan Cape, written 1924, published 1980) (autobiographical)
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1979:
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298:
2522:""WH Davies signed books found in Gloucestershire cottage" at"
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For his honorary degree in 1926, Davies was introduced at the
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2842:"Supertramp, Sickert and Jack the Ripper at Equinox Theater"
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pamphlet series, 1928; illustrated by Sir William Nicholson)
2545:"Leisure poet's home is being restored to its former glory"
2473:"Campaign to save last home of poet WH Davies at bbc.co.uk"
1640:, (a Welsh tale by W. J. T. Collins, R. H. Johns Ltd, 1937)
1608:(with illustrations by Hilda M. Quick, Jonathan Cape, 1933)
1379:, on the Kinglsey Trust Association Publication Fund, 1921)
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1986:; on Davies' death in 1940, probate awarded was £2,441.15s
1540:(selected and illustrated by Jacynth Parsons (daughter of
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pension of £50, later increased to £100 and then to £150.
2370:, Winchester, Oak Knoll Books, St Paul's Bibliographies.
1737:, Winchester: Oak Knoll Books, St.Paul's Bibliographies.
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in Surrey, and finally to a string of five residences at
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1602:(with engravings by Hilda M. Quick, Jonathan Cape, 1933)
725:) though none included his most famous work, "Leisure".
269:. In 1885 Davies wrote his first poem entitled "Death."
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622:. While in London he also took up with artists such as
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2663:"Texts by W. Davies set in Art Songs and Choral Works"
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influenced a generation of British writers, including
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for Cape, choosing works by over 120 poets, including
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Davies self-published his first slim book of poetry,
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Transcription of Supertramp and a selection of poems
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Among the Bohemians: Experiments in Living 1900–1939
2249:Special Cable to THE NEW YORK TIMES (7 July 1911).
2177:"The Salvation Army London City Colony: Statistics"
1144:sang and quoted from "Leisure" on their 1970 album
698:In October 1917 his work appeared in the anthology
2981:"The supertramp – W.H.Davies" at greenfolder.co.nz
1403:Shorter Lyrics of the Twentieth Century, 1900–1922
946:, called Davies' work "new yet old, recalling now
2975:"Campaign to save last home of poet W. H. Davies"
174:poet and writer, who spent much of his life as a
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1619:The Poems of W. H. Davies: A Complete Collection
983:
297:Davies took advantage of the corrupt system of "
2397:"An Amazing Document – from the Tablet Archive"
1576:, 1931; limited edition of 290, illustrated by
1554:, introduction by Davies, Gregynog Press, 1928)
1450:What I Gained and Lost By Not Staying at School
766:, the ceremony found Davies "in a near panic".
431:, asking them to send the price of the book, a
1484:Augustan Book of Poetry: Thirty Selected Poems
1409:True Travellers. A Tramp's Opera in Three Acts
750:Davies' last home "Glendower", Watledge Road,
702:collated by A. G. Prys-Jones and published by
220:, Davies was born at 6 Portland Street in the
2149:, London: Fifield, Chapter XX: "Hospitality".
2494:This is Gloucestershire (14 October 2009).
1721:W. H. Davies: Man and Poet – A Reassessment
1245:(of the author, The Farmhouse, 1905) (also
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803:In 1930 Davies edited the poetry anthology
373:Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
2588:English Literature in Transition 1880–1920
2030:(1944). "3:The Homeland of W. H. Davies".
1846:W. H. Davies, the True Traveller: A Reader
1703:W. H. Davies, the True Traveller: A Reader
1405:(ed Davies, Bodley Head, 1922) (anthology)
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2136:, London: Jonathan Cape, ISBN B0000CLPA3.
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2000:
1998:
1996:
1994:
1992:
1959:Learn how and when to remove this message
1389:, Vol 1, Numbers 1, 2 & 3, 1921/1922)
368:Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
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2686:"Sweet Chance, that led my steps abroad"
2542:
2334:"Forgotten Poets of the First World War"
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1502:(Jonathan Cape, 1926) (autobiographical)
1480:(Jonathan Cape, 1925) (autobiographical)
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526:as "so thin, one can hardly feel them."
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170:(3 July 1871 – 26 September 1940) was a
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2425:, Sevenoaks: Hodder and Stoughton Ltd,
2179:. .salvationarmy.org.uk. Archived from
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865:and attended musical recitals given by
709:In 1921, Davies moved to 13 Avery Row,
378:And watch her feet, how they can dance.
3080:Welsh expatriates in the United States
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2871:Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer
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2683:
2496:"Poetry plan for historic Stroud home"
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2297:"Charles Kitterbell Historical Marker"
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1989:
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1500:The Adventures of Johnny Walker, Tramp
1012:These people have no work, thought I,
995:Before the cocks in farmyards crowed,
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1646:(ed., anthology, Jonathan Cape, 1938)
1566:(ed., anthology, Jonathan Cape, 1930)
1470:(Jonathan Cape, 1925; illustrated by
1014:And long before their time they die.
929:, drew a comparison with the work of
452:
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2498:. Gloucester Citizen. Archived from
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2089:
1917:
1800:, Bridgend: Poetry Wales Press Ltd,
1351:) (Melrose, 1918) (autobiographical)
1311:(Duckworth, 1912) (autobiographical)
1287:(Duckworth, 1909) (autobiographical)
1243:The Soul's Destroyer and Other Poems
1029:In 1926 Davies received a degree of
1010:Huddled in rags and sleeping there:
1006:This morning, in the cold damp air,
925:Davies' friend and mentor, the poet
872:Davies himself confided in Sitwell:
830:
123:Nature, begging, the life of a tramp
2134:W. H. Davies – A Critical Biography
2034:. Newport: R. H. Johns. p. 31.
2008:, Bridgend: Poetry Wales Press Ltd.
1815:W. H. Davies – A Critical Biography
1723:, London: Greenwich Exchange Ltd.,
1518:The Collected Poems of W. H. Davies
1323:(Batsford, 1914) (autobiographical)
1067:, statue by Paul Bothwell-Kincaid,
999:Before the hour of five was struck
993:This silent morning, wet and dark;
883:Bouncer's Lane Cemetery, Cheltenham
388:We have no time to stand and stare.
376:No time to turn at beauty's glance,
371:No time to see, in broad day light,
366:No time to see, when woods we pass,
363:And stare as long as sheep or cows.
361:No time to stand beneath the boughs
358:We have no time to stand and stare.
356:What is this life if, full of care,
13:
2821:Ellis, Steffan (6 February 2013).
2600:The Complete Poems of W. H. Davies
2158:
2147:The Autobiography of a Super Tramp
1269:(Fifield, 1908) (autobiographical)
1266:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
1174:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
1140:The experimental Irish folk group
1091:The Autobiography of a Super-tramp
1001:By old Westminster's mighty clock:
936:Daniel George, reviewing the 1943
885:, and his remains interred there.
731:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
477:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
386:A poor life this if, full of care,
381:No time to wait till her mouth can
291:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
284:After school, Davies worked as an
190:
143:The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
14:
3091:
3060:British writers with disabilities
2888:
2840:Somerset, Adam (20 August 2010).
2760:The Encyclopedia of Popular Music
2702:
2399:. thetablet.co.uk. Archived from
2332:London, Lucy (29 February 2016).
897:
383:Enrich that smile her eyes began.
16:Welsh poet and writer (1871–1940)
2969:"Poet's clock to be sent 'home'"
2961:
2808:"Statues - Hither & Thither"
2338:forgottenpoetsofww1.blogspot.com
1922:
1844:Rory Waterman, ed. and introd.,
1373:The Captive Lion and Other Poems
1085:In 1951 Jonathan Cape published
674:and others at The Mont Blanc in
254:Collected Poems of W. H. Davies,
2859:
2833:
2814:
2799:
2777:
2763:. Omnibus Press. p. 1988.
2747:
2722:
2696:
2677:
2655:
2630:
2593:
2580:
2559:
2536:
2514:
2487:
2465:
2436:
2389:
2380:
2360:
2351:
2325:
2289:
2280:
2271:
2242:
2221:
2204:
2195:
2169:
2139:
2099:, London: Thornton Butterworth.
2050:Collected Poems of W. H. Davies
1896:
1877:
1828:Collected Poems of W. H. Davies
1672:Collected Poems of W. H. Davies
1638:The Romance of the Echoing Wood
1004:As I walked down the waterside
997:Before the dogs began to bark;
991:As I walked down the waterside
976:In an introduction to his 1951
861:. They enjoyed walks along the
522:and he later described Davies'
461:, then literary critic for the
3055:Welsh people with disabilities
2945:Works by or about W. H. Davies
2913:Gloucestershire County Council
2806:Davies, William Henry (1871).
2684:Davies, William Henry (1914).
2068:
2055:
2020:
2011:
1972:
1868:
1791:, London: Thornton Butterworth
1682:Complete Poems of W. H. Davies
1452:(Teachers World 29, June 1923)
1433:(illustrated with woodcuts by
1273:How It Feels To Be Out of Work
1249:, 1907), (Jonathan Cape, 1921)
1208:Newport Museum and Art Gallery
1076:Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
1031:Doctor Litteris, honoris causa
1008:I saw a hundred women and men
457:On 12 October 1905 Davies met
1:
3020:20th-century Welsh memoirists
2543:Falconer, Ben (22 May 2017).
2368:W. H. Davies – A Bibliography
2165:– via Internet Archive.
2065:, London: Melrose, pp. 42–44.
1856:
1830:, London: Jonathan Cape, 1940
1735:W. H. Davies – a Bibliography
1228:. It was first staged at the
984:Honours, memorials and legacy
954:– of whom it was said, as of
666:. He also met regularly with
510:helped him to obtain that of
439:, then a journalist with the
195:
115:Lyrical poetry, autobiography
2637:Nicholson, Virginia (2003).
2616:""W. H. Davies Manuscripts""
2586:Quoted in P. Howarth, 2003,
2475:. BBC News. 1 September 2010
2231:, Edinburgh, Tragara Press,
1913:
1759:, (limited edition of 750),
1183:Commemorative postmark, 1971
888:
7:
3035:Writers from Newport, Wales
2960:(public domain audiobooks)
2827:tredegarhouse.wordpress.com
2618:. National Library of Wales
1662:Common Joys and Other Poems
1644:An Anthology of Short Poems
1425:Collected Poems, 2nd Series
1419:Collected Poems, 1st Series
825:An Anthology of Short Poems
474:In 1907, the manuscript of
10:
3096:
2909:W. H. Davies archive items
2785:"Ulster '71 Paintings set"
2641:. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
2320:The Essential W. H. Davies
2032:The Pleasant Land of Gwent
1835:The Essential W. H. Davies
1695:
1200:Commercial Street, Newport
1087:The Essential W. H. Davies
1069:Commercial Street, Newport
978:The Essential W. H. Davies
280:Delinquent to "supertramp"
83:, Gloucestershire, England
3050:History of Newport, Wales
3040:Culture in Newport, Wales
2993:"The Kingfisher" read by
2931:National Library of Wales
2922:National Library of Wales
2571:University of Wales Press
2286:Stonesifer (1963), p. 87.
2277:Stonesifer (1963), p. 86.
2080:University of Wales Press
1753:University of Wales Press
1656:The Poems of W. H. Davies
1046:National Library of Wales
610:, impressing fellow poet
155:
137:
127:
119:
111:
103:
95:
87:
70:
48:
30:
23:
3025:20th-century Welsh poets
2443:Hooper, Barbara (2004).
2229:A Memory of W. H. Davies
1883:the address was used by
1861:
1558:Ambition and Other Poems
1544:), Medici Society, 1928)
1446:, 21, (8 September 1923)
1235:
1219:Supertramp, Sickert and
1217:In August 2010 the play
1195:for Davies's centenary.
962:Appearance and character
301:" to pass the winter in
3075:Simple living advocates
3045:British homeless people
2665:. The LiederNet Archive
2524:. BBC. 24 December 2012
2017:Stonesifer (1963) p. 15
1931:Some of this article's
1297:Songs of Joy and Others
1172:named themselves after
1022:Songs of Joy and Others
867:Violet Gordon-Woodhouse
742:Marriage and later life
693:Songs of Joy and Others
620:Lady Randolph Churchill
398:Songs of Joy and Others
341:
252:, introducing the 1943
3065:People from Nailsworth
2547:. Gloucestershire Live
2357:(Harlow, 1993, p. 157)
2318:B. Waters, ed., 1951,
1904:Dame Veronica Wedgwood
1705:, Manchester: Fyfield/
1678:, Jonathan Cape, 1943)
1674:(with Introduction by
1650:The Loneliest Mountain
1596:(Gregynog Press, 1933)
1590:, Jonathan Cape, 1931)
1440:'Poets and Critics' –
1437:, Jonathan Cape, 1923)
1415:, Jonathan Cape, 1923)
1399:, Jonathan Cape, 1922)
1363:(Beaumont Press, 1918)
1315:Foliage: Various Poems
1189:commemorative postmark
1184:
1071:
1017:
923:
879:
843:
839:W.H. Davies, 1916, by
755:
691:", first published in
588:
480:drew the attention of
393:
213:
66:, Monmouthshire, Wales
2977:BBC, 1 September 2010
2971:BBC, 21 December 2009
2954:Works by W. H. Davies
2936:Works by W. H. Davies
2690:The LiederNet Archive
2449:Peter Owen Publishers
2130:Richard J. Stonesifer
1848:(Manchester: Fyfield/
1811:Richard J. Stonesifer
1775:Peter Owen Publishers
1658:(Jonathan Cape, 1940)
1652:(Jonathan Cape, 1939)
1633:(Jonathan Cape, 1936)
1627:(Jonathan Cape, 1935)
1621:(Jonathan Cape, 1934)
1594:The Lover's Song Book
1560:(Jonathan Cape, 1929)
1520:(Jonathan Cape, 1928)
1514:(Jonathan Cape, 1927)
1508:(Jonathan Cape, 1927)
1496:(Jonathan Cape, 1926)
1458:(Jonathan Cape, 1924)
1427:(Jonathan Cape, 1923)
1421:(Jonathan Cape, 1923)
1397:Sir William Nicholson
1377:Yale University Press
1349:A Pilgrimage In Wales
1317:(Elkin Mathews, 1913)
1255:(Elkin Mathews, 1907)
1182:
1142:Dr. Strangely Strange
1063:
1020:from "The Sleepers",
988:
919:
874:
838:
749:
723:BBC broadcast archive
586:
579:Social life in London
437:Arthur St John Adcock
346:
331:Richard J. Stonesifer
203:
2927:W. H. Davies Letters
2502:on 19 September 2012
2421:W. H. Davies, 1980,
2403:on 19 September 2015
2227:Helen Thomas, 1973,
2210:W. H. Davies, 1914,
2145:W. H. Davies, 1908,
2061:W. H. Davies, 1918,
1588:Elizabeth Montgomery
1530:No. 10 in the Faber
1411:(illustrated by Sir
1327:The Bird of Paradise
1093:, and extracts from
593:Great Russell Street
447:The Soul's Destroyer
423:The Soul's Destroyer
168:William Henry Davies
161:(m. 5 February 1923)
52:William Henry Davies
41:Alvin Langdon Coburn
2846:Theatre-wales.co.uk
2183:on 23 February 2012
2159:Davies, William H.
2063:A Poet's Pilgrimage
1822:Notable anthologies
1701:R. Waterman, 2015,
1615:, (1 November 1933)
1345:A Poet's Pilgrimage
1126:Boosey & Hawkes
1099:A Poet's Pilgrimage
1055:William Rothenstein
1035:University of Wales
915:University of Wales
787:George Bernard Shaw
729:, a 1925 sequel to
644:William Rothenstein
482:George Bernard Shaw
159:Helen Matilda Payne
91:Poet, writer, tramp
2873:. 11 November 1925
2575:Welsh Arts Council
2573:(on behalf of the
2258:The New York Times
2095:Moult, T. (1934),
2084:Welsh Arts Council
2082:(on behalf of the
2004:L. Normand, 2003,
1794:L. Normand, 2003,
1757:Welsh Arts Council
1309:The True Traveller
1281:, 1 December 1908)
1278:The English Review
1230:Edinburgh Festival
1191:was issued by the
1185:
1164:. In 1970 British
1135:J. Curwen and Sons
1072:
844:
756:
589:
572:The English Review
490:Duckworth and Sons
453:Rural life in Kent
308:Memphis, Tennessee
214:
3030:Anglo-Welsh poets
2940:Project Gutenberg
2895:Davies collection
2770:978-0-85712-595-8
2648:978-0-14-028978-7
2565:L. Hockey, 1971,
2366:S. Harlow, 1993,
2074:L. Hockey, 1971,
1969:
1968:
1961:
1769:B. Hooper, 2004,
1765:978-0-900768-84-2
1755:on behalf of the
1747:L. Hockey, 1971,
1733:S. Harlow, 1993,
1729:978-1-906075-88-0
1719:M. Cullup, 2014,
1715:978-1-78410-087-2
1631:The Birth of Song
1506:A Poet's Calendar
1468:A Poet's Alphabet
1413:William Nicholson
1393:The Hour of Magic
1305:(Duckworth, 1911)
1291:Farewell to Poesy
1212:Viscount Tredegar
1187:On 3 July 1971 a
850:; poet laureate,
831:Decline and death
754:, Gloucestershire
704:Erskine Macdonald
652:William Nicholson
601:
274:Poet's Pilgrimage
165:
164:
128:Literary movement
74:26 September 1940
3087:
2965:
2964:
2949:Internet Archive
2883:
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2745:
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2742:
2740:
2734:classicbands.com
2726:
2720:
2719:
2717:
2715:
2705:"The First Snow"
2700:
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1926:
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1907:
1900:
1894:
1881:
1875:
1872:
1833:B. Waters, ed.,
1787:T. Moult, 1934,
1586:(illustrated by
1574:Fytton Armstrong
1538:Forty Nine Poems
1524:Moss and Feather
1494:The Song of Love
1395:(illustrated by
1385:(ed. Davies and
1367:The Song of Life
1025:
848:Church House Inn
600:
401:
323:Renfrew, Ontario
238:Church House Inn
77:
60:
58:
35:
21:
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2876:
2874:
2867:"Short Notices"
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2451:. p. 156.
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2205:
2201:(Harlow, 1993).
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2056:
2048:
2039:
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2021:
2016:
2012:
2003:
1990:
1982:, died 1979 in
1977:
1973:
1965:
1954:
1948:
1945:
1942:
1927:
1916:
1911:
1910:
1901:
1897:
1890:Sketches by Boz
1885:Charles Dickens
1882:
1878:
1873:
1869:
1864:
1859:
1824:
1698:
1693:
1666:Faber and Faber
1528:Faber and Gwyer
1387:Austin O. Spare
1369:(Fifield, 1920)
1357:(Fifield, 1918)
1355:Forty New Poems
1341:(Fifield, 1916)
1339:Collected Poems
1335:(Fifield, 1916)
1329:(Methuen, 1914)
1299:(Fifield, 1911)
1293:(Fifield, 1910)
1261:(Fifield, 1908)
1238:
1221:Jack the Ripper
1065:Stand and Stare
1027:
1019:
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1011:
1009:
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1003:
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986:
964:
938:Collected Poems
900:
891:
833:
815:, Shakespeare,
744:
713:, renting from
684:Georgian Poetry
581:
464:Daily Chronicle
455:
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191:Life and career
160:
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132:Georgian poetry
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56:
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3072:
3070:Welsh amputees
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2918:Davies archive
2915:
2906:
2901:
2899:Newport Museum
2890:
2889:External links
2887:
2885:
2884:
2858:
2832:
2823:"W. H. Davies"
2813:
2798:
2787:. 16 June 1971
2776:
2769:
2757:, ed. (2011).
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1933:listed sources
1930:
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1908:
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1876:
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1853:
1850:Carcanet Press
1842:
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1823:
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1792:
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1745:
1731:
1717:
1707:Carcanet Press
1697:
1694:
1692:
1691:
1685:
1679:
1676:Osbert Sitwell
1669:
1659:
1653:
1647:
1641:
1636:'Epilogue' to
1634:
1628:
1622:
1616:
1609:
1603:
1597:
1591:
1581:
1578:Edward Carrick
1567:
1564:Jewels of Song
1561:
1555:
1552:Edward Garnett
1548:Selected Poems
1545:
1535:
1521:
1515:
1509:
1503:
1497:
1491:
1481:
1475:
1465:
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1431:Selected Poems
1428:
1422:
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1406:
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1237:
1234:
1226:Walter Sickert
1193:UK Post Office
1162:The First Snow
1039:Westgate Hotel
989:
987:
985:
982:
967:Osbert Sitwell
963:
960:
899:
898:Literary style
896:
890:
887:
852:John Masefield
832:
829:
813:Thomas Campion
805:Jewels of Song
769:Davies's book
760:East Grinstead
743:
740:
672:Edward Garrett
648:Walter Sickert
616:Arthur Balfour
604:Hilaire Belloc
587:Davies in 1915
580:
577:
512:D. H. Lawrence
454:
451:
411:Salvation Army
409:, including a
347:
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250:Osbert Sitwell
216:The son of an
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78:(aged 69)
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37:Davies in 1913
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2995:Siân Phillips
2992:
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2828:
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2817:
2809:
2802:
2786:
2780:
2772:
2766:
2762:
2761:
2756:
2755:Larkin, Colin
2750:
2735:
2731:
2725:
2710:
2706:
2699:
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2596:
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2568:
2562:
2546:
2539:
2523:
2517:
2501:
2497:
2490:
2474:
2468:
2460:
2458:0-7206-1205-5
2454:
2450:
2446:
2439:
2432:
2431:0-340-32115-6
2428:
2424:
2418:
2402:
2398:
2392:
2383:
2377:
2376:1-873040-00-8
2373:
2369:
2363:
2354:
2339:
2335:
2328:
2321:
2315:
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2311:
2309:
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2259:
2252:
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2237:0-902616-09-9
2234:
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2224:
2217:
2213:
2207:
2198:
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2135:
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2110:
2108:
2106:
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2077:
2071:
2064:
2058:
2051:
2046:
2044:
2042:
2033:
2029:
2023:
2014:
2007:
2001:
1999:
1997:
1995:
1993:
1985:
1981:
1978:Born 1899 in
1975:
1971:
1963:
1960:
1952:
1940:
1939:
1934:
1929:
1925:
1920:
1919:
1905:
1899:
1893:
1891:
1886:
1880:
1871:
1867:
1851:
1847:
1843:
1840:
1839:Jonathan Cape
1836:
1832:
1829:
1826:
1825:
1816:
1812:
1809:
1807:
1806:1-85411-260-0
1803:
1799:
1798:
1793:
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1786:
1784:
1783:0-7206-1205-5
1780:
1776:
1772:
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1762:
1758:
1754:
1750:
1746:
1744:
1743:1-873040-00-8
1740:
1736:
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1645:
1642:
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1635:
1632:
1629:
1626:
1623:
1620:
1617:
1614:
1611:'Memories' –
1610:
1607:
1604:
1601:
1598:
1595:
1592:
1589:
1585:
1584:Poems 1930–31
1582:
1579:
1575:
1571:
1568:
1565:
1562:
1559:
1556:
1553:
1550:(arranged by
1549:
1546:
1543:
1539:
1536:
1533:
1529:
1525:
1522:
1519:
1516:
1513:
1510:
1507:
1504:
1501:
1498:
1495:
1492:
1489:
1485:
1482:
1479:
1476:
1473:
1469:
1466:
1463:
1462:Moll Flanders
1460:
1457:
1454:
1451:
1448:
1445:
1444:
1443:New Statesman
1439:
1436:
1432:
1429:
1426:
1423:
1420:
1417:
1414:
1410:
1407:
1404:
1401:
1398:
1394:
1391:
1388:
1384:
1381:
1378:
1374:
1371:
1368:
1365:
1362:
1359:
1356:
1353:
1350:
1346:
1343:
1340:
1337:
1334:
1331:
1328:
1325:
1322:
1319:
1316:
1313:
1310:
1307:
1304:
1301:
1298:
1295:
1292:
1289:
1286:
1283:
1280:
1279:
1274:
1271:
1268:
1267:
1263:
1260:
1257:
1254:
1251:
1248:
1247:Alston Rivers
1244:
1241:
1240:
1233:
1231:
1227:
1223:
1222:
1215:
1213:
1210:, donated by
1209:
1205:
1201:
1196:
1194:
1190:
1181:
1177:
1175:
1171:
1167:
1163:
1159:
1155:
1154:Fleetwood Mac
1151:
1147:
1146:Heavy Petting
1143:
1138:
1136:
1132:
1127:
1124:, whose 1929
1123:
1119:
1114:
1112:
1108:
1104:
1100:
1096:
1092:
1088:
1083:
1082:(1894–1987).
1081:
1080:Gerald Brenan
1077:
1070:
1066:
1062:
1058:
1056:
1052:
1051:Quiet Streams
1047:
1042:
1040:
1036:
1032:
1026:
1023:
1015:
981:
979:
974:
972:
968:
959:
957:
953:
949:
945:
944:
939:
934:
932:
928:
927:Edward Thomas
922:
918:
916:
911:
909:
908:George Borrow
905:
895:
886:
884:
878:
873:
870:
868:
864:
860:
855:
853:
849:
842:
841:Jacob Epstein
837:
828:
826:
822:
818:
814:
810:
809:William Blake
806:
801:
799:
795:
790:
788:
784:
783:Jonathan Cape
780:
776:
772:
767:
765:
761:
753:
748:
739:
736:
732:
728:
724:
720:
716:
712:
707:
705:
701:
696:
694:
690:
686:
685:
679:
677:
673:
669:
665:
661:
660:Edith Sitwell
657:
653:
649:
645:
641:
640:Harold Gilman
637:
636:Augustus John
633:
629:
626:, Harold and
625:
624:Jacob Epstein
621:
617:
613:
609:
605:
598:
594:
585:
576:
574:
573:
568:
564:
560:
556:
552:
548:
544:
540:
536:
532:
527:
525:
521:
517:
513:
509:
505:
500:
498:
493:
491:
487:
483:
479:
478:
472:
470:
466:
465:
460:
459:Edward Thomas
450:
448:
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438:
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408:
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399:
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293:
292:
287:
277:
275:
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268:
262:
260:
255:
251:
247:
243:
239:
233:
231:
230:Monmouthshire
227:
223:
219:
211:
207:
202:
188:
186:
181:
177:
173:
169:
158:
154:
150:
145:
144:
140:
138:Notable works
136:
133:
130:
126:
122:
118:
114:
110:
106:
102:
98:
94:
90:
86:
82:
73:
69:
65:
51:
47:
42:
34:
29:
22:
19:
2875:. Retrieved
2870:
2861:
2849:. Retrieved
2845:
2835:
2826:
2816:
2801:
2789:. Retrieved
2779:
2759:
2749:
2737:. Retrieved
2733:
2730:"Supertramp"
2724:
2712:. Retrieved
2708:
2698:
2689:
2679:
2667:. Retrieved
2657:
2638:
2632:
2620:. Retrieved
2599:
2595:
2587:
2582:
2567:W. H. Davies
2566:
2561:
2549:. Retrieved
2538:
2526:. Retrieved
2516:
2504:. Retrieved
2500:the original
2489:
2477:. Retrieved
2467:
2444:
2438:
2422:
2417:
2405:. Retrieved
2401:the original
2391:
2382:
2367:
2362:
2353:
2341:. Retrieved
2337:
2327:
2319:
2291:
2282:
2273:
2261:. Retrieved
2257:
2244:
2228:
2223:
2218:, Chapter I.
2211:
2206:
2197:
2185:. Retrieved
2181:the original
2171:
2161:
2154:
2146:
2141:
2133:
2097:W. H. Davies
2096:
2091:
2076:W. H. Davies
2075:
2070:
2062:
2057:
2049:
2031:
2022:
2013:
2006:W. H. Davies
2005:
1974:
1955:
1949:January 2024
1946:
1935:
1898:
1888:
1879:
1870:
1845:
1834:
1827:
1814:
1797:W. H. Davies
1795:
1789:W. H. Davies
1788:
1770:
1749:W. H. Davies
1748:
1734:
1720:
1702:
1687:
1681:
1671:
1661:
1655:
1649:
1643:
1637:
1630:
1624:
1618:
1612:
1605:
1599:
1593:
1583:
1569:
1563:
1557:
1547:
1542:Karl Parsons
1537:
1523:
1517:
1511:
1505:
1499:
1493:
1483:
1477:
1467:
1461:
1455:
1449:
1441:
1435:Stephen Bone
1430:
1424:
1418:
1408:
1402:
1392:
1382:
1372:
1366:
1360:
1354:
1348:
1344:
1338:
1333:Child Lovers
1332:
1326:
1320:
1314:
1308:
1303:A Weak Woman
1302:
1296:
1290:
1284:
1276:
1272:
1264:
1259:Nature Poems
1258:
1252:
1242:
1218:
1216:
1197:
1186:
1173:
1161:
1145:
1139:
1131:Arthur Bliss
1122:Michael Head
1115:
1110:
1106:
1102:
1098:
1094:
1090:
1086:
1084:
1075:
1073:
1064:
1050:
1043:
1028:
1021:
1018:
990:
977:
975:
971:Henry Irving
965:
941:
937:
935:
924:
920:
912:
901:
892:
880:
875:
871:
863:River Thames
856:
847:
845:
824:
804:
802:
791:
775:Edgware Road
770:
768:
764:Conrad Aiken
757:
730:
726:
711:Brook Street
708:
699:
697:
692:
682:
680:
668:W. H. Hudson
632:Nina Hamnett
628:Laura Knight
590:
570:
528:
524:Nature Poems
523:
519:
508:Edward Marsh
501:
494:
475:
473:
462:
456:
446:
440:
426:
422:
420:
404:
397:
394:
349:
348:
335:
316:
296:
289:
283:
273:
271:
263:
253:
246:Henry Irving
237:
234:
224:district of
218:iron moulder
215:
167:
166:
141:
76:(1940-09-26)
25:W. H. Davies
18:
3015:1940 deaths
3010:1871 births
2739:21 February
2028:Hando, Fred
1984:Bournemouth
1936:may not be
1532:Ariel poems
1512:Dancing Mad
1033:, from the
859:Sacheverell
821:W. B. Yeats
779:Marble Arch
706:of London.
608:W. B. Yeats
539:Worsdsworth
531:Shakespeare
407:doss-houses
222:Pillgwenlly
206:Pillgwenlly
96:Nationality
61:3 July 1871
3004:Categories
2791:14 October
2590:, Vol. 46.
2506:8 February
2447:. London:
2423:Young Emma
2407:31 January
2343:14 October
2214:, London:
1857:References
1837:, London:
1773:, London:
1688:Young Emma
1625:Love Poems
1478:Later Days
1472:Dora Batty
1170:Supertramp
1156:recorded "
1103:Later Days
931:Wordsworth
798:Nailsworth
771:Young Emma
752:Nailsworth
735:de la Mare
727:Later Days
664:Café Royal
612:Ezra Pound
597:Bloomsbury
497:Civil List
442:Daily Mail
433:half crown
413:hostel in
286:ironmonger
196:Early life
88:Occupation
81:Nailsworth
57:1871-07-03
2877:13 August
2622:7 January
2577:), p. 89.
2551:7 January
2086:), p. 16.
1914:Citations
1606:My Garden
1570:In Winter
1253:New Poems
1158:Dragonfly
1150:harmonium
1111:My Garden
1074:Davies's
956:Goldsmith
889:Glendower
827:in 1938.
559:Coleridge
504:autograph
486:Charlotte
469:Sevenoaks
428:Who's Who
415:Southwark
107:1905–1940
2958:LibriVox
2911:held by
2897:held by
2709:BandCamp
2216:Batsford
2132:(1963),
1938:reliable
1813:, 1963,
1600:My Birds
1361:Raptures
1107:My Birds
817:Tennyson
319:Klondike
303:Michigan
242:Cornwall
212:, Wales.
185:Georgian
120:Subjects
2991:YouTube
2947:at the
2920:at the
2851:18 June
2714:18 June
2703:Blake.
2669:25 July
2528:18 June
2479:18 June
2263:18 June
2187:18 June
2162:Foliage
1696:Sources
1668:, 1941)
1490:, 1925)
1456:Secrets
1285:Beggars
1204:Epstein
1148:, with
1118:G minor
1095:Beggars
948:Herrick
943:Tribune
689:Leisure
595:in the
567:Herrick
551:Shelley
520:Foliage
390:
351:Leisure
336:Foliage
312:malaria
259:Baptist
226:Newport
210:Newport
149:Leisure
64:Newport
2767:
2645:
2455:
2429:
2374:
2235:
2212:Nature
1980:Sussex
1852:, 2015
1841:, 1951
1804:
1781:
1763:
1741:
1727:
1713:
1613:School
1321:Nature
1024:(1911)
950:, now
715:Quaker
656:Osbert
650:, Sir
535:Milton
516:Frieda
400:(1911)
327:pegleg
299:boodle
156:Spouse
104:Period
2987:Video
2254:(PDF)
1862:Notes
1236:Works
1168:band
1120:, by
952:Blake
904:Defoe
794:Oxted
777:near
563:Blake
555:Keats
547:Burns
543:Byron
396:from
267:birch
176:tramp
172:Welsh
112:Genre
99:Welsh
2879:2017
2853:2014
2793:2023
2765:ISBN
2741:2021
2716:2014
2671:2013
2643:ISBN
2624:2024
2553:2024
2530:2014
2508:2015
2481:2014
2453:ISBN
2427:ISBN
2409:2015
2372:ISBN
2345:2023
2265:2014
2233:ISBN
2189:2014
1802:ISBN
1779:ISBN
1761:ISBN
1739:ISBN
1725:ISBN
1711:ISBN
1488:Benn
1383:Form
1347:(or
1166:rock
1109:and
1044:The
940:for
906:and
819:and
676:Soho
658:and
654:and
618:and
606:and
565:and
342:Poet
180:hobo
71:Died
49:Born
39:(by
2989:on
2956:at
2938:at
2929:at
1214:).
719:BBC
272:In
178:or
3006::
2869:.
2844:.
2825:.
2732:.
2707:.
2688:.
2607:^
2569:,
2336:.
2305:^
2256:.
2104:^
2078:,
2040:^
1991:^
1777:,
1751:,
1709:,
1232:.
1176:.
1137:.
1105:,
1101:,
1097:,
1057:.
811:,
678:.
670:,
646:,
642:,
638:,
634:,
630:,
561:,
557:,
553:,
549:,
545:,
541:,
537:,
533:,
314:.
228:,
208:,
2881:.
2855:.
2829:.
2810:.
2795:.
2773:.
2743:.
2718:.
2692:.
2673:.
2651:.
2626:.
2555:.
2532:.
2510:.
2483:.
2461:.
2433:.
2411:.
2347:.
2299:.
2267:.
2239:.
2191:.
1962:)
1956:(
1951:)
1947:(
1941:.
1892:.
1664:(
1572:(
1526:(
1486:(
1474:)
1375:(
1275:(
151:"
147:"
59:)
55:(
43:)
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