Women, London (19361940). From 1941 he wrote and produced radio plays for the BBC, including The Dark Tower (1947), and translated Goethe's Faust . His first book of poetry, Blind Fireworks (1929), was followed by several volumes, including Letters from Iceland with Auden (1937), and Collected Poems, 192548 (1949).
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Christopher Marlowe (15641593) Born in Kent, Marlowe received his M.A. from Cambridge (1587) and may have served in Elizabeth I's secret service. Marlowe was killed in a tavern brawl in 1593. Known for his atheism, Marlowe translated Ovid and Lucan and wrote several plays, including Tamburlaine, Dr. Faustus , and The Jew of Malta . Marlowe's narrative poem, Hero and Leander , was "completed" by George Chapman.
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Andrew Marvell (16211678) Born in Yorkshire and educated at Cambridge (1639), Marvell visited the Continent (16431647), possibly to avoid the civil war. He wrote verses for Lovelace's Lucasta (1649), an elegy on Lord Hastings (1649), and "An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland" (1650). Marvell composed "Upon Appleton House" while serving as tutor to Lord Fairfax's daughter (1650); he was also tutor to William Dutton, a ward of Cromwell's (16531656), and a Latin Secretary to the Council of State (16571661). Elected M.P. for Hull (16591661), Marvell traveled to Holland (16621663) and, as secretary to the earl of Carlisle, visited Russia, Sweden, and Denmark (16631665). His satires include "The Last Instructions to a Painter'' (1667) and The Rehearsal Transpros'd (16721673).
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John Masefield (18781967) John Edward Masefield was born at Ledbury and educated at King's School, Warwick; he trained for the merchant navy. After voyages to Chile, and across the Atlantic (1895), he deserted ship and lived in New York (18951897). In England again, he joined The Manchester Guardian (1907). Appointed poet laureate (1930), Masefield wrote Salt-Water Ballads (1902), long narrative poems such as The Everlasting Mercy (1911), as well as novels, plays, and numerous volumes of verse.
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George Meredith (18281909) Born in Portsmouth, Meredith worked for a London solicitor (1845). At Chapman and Hall publishers, he encouraged Thomas Hardy and George Gissing. Meredith's poetic works include Poems (1851), Modern Love (1862), and Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth (1883). Described by Wilde as "a prose Browning," Meredith wrote over ten novels including The Egoist (1879).
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