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W. h. auden

 

A third reason was the original failure of his first collection of poems, which were rejected by numerous publishers. He expressed these reasons and others in "Journey to Iceland." In this poem he clearly complains about the harshness of England and therefore gave his reasoning for choosing Iceland, he wrote, "Faintly, his limited hope, as he nears the glitter of glaciers." This line shows that his move to Iceland in 1936 was a move of desperation looking for any sign that things in his life would turn around. .
             Perhaps from that point things did turn around, at least in terms of Auden's poetry career. Starting in 1936 his first large scale success, Look Stranger, was published. This was followed by On This Island (1937), and Another Time (1940). His only earlier success previous to the publishing of those books was his 1930 verse play Paid on Both Sides, which was published by T. S. Elliot. Only a year after moving to Iceland Auden left for Spain as a civilian. There he gave radio broadcasts to help the republican forces. This was all in accordance with his leftist intellectual views. However by the time Another Time was published his poems were considered more comically toned than leftist intellectual. This could be one of the reasons for his current success. .
             Auden depicted his work in Spain in his poem Spain 1937. There he wrote about what he did and why he felt that that was important. He wrote in the poem about other modern inventions and theories that are in other countries. Auden then wrote about Spain, "But today the struggle." He felt that it was time that Spain had a revolution of their own. Towards the end of the poem he portrayed a feeling that the Spanish revolution was a success and changes the tense from past tense to a future tense starting each stanza with the word "tomorrow".
             After Auden's work in Spain he teamed up with Christopher Isherwood on a play writing expedition to China.


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