"Who's Who" is a biographical poem and W. H. Auden is among the best poets of the 20th century. The experimental traits in his poetry; Eliot-like modernism, his middle stage, included Marxist and Freudian themes. All these characterized his early stage, and his
W.H. Auden
W.H. Auden was born in York, in the United Kingdom. At Oxford, he became associated with many radical poets and authors. Many of his poems focus on social ills and
In W.H Auden's poem entitled "The Unknown Citizen". The speaker tells a narrative related to a citizen. The speaker is a bureaucrat who works for the government, for the state and
The poem "Partition" is written by W.H Auden. It is a political and historic poem. It is about partition of Indian subcontinent. It is criticism on the method of partition.
“Musée des Beaux Arts” is written in free verse, which means that the poem is actually “free” of meter, regular rhythm, or a rhyme scheme. The poem is split into
W.H. Auden is a philosophical and conversational modern poet, combining close commentary with nonchalant musings. Auden's poetry has a number of different themes which enriches his poetic style. From the
The unknown citizen is without doubt one of the vital poems of W.H Auden with a recurrent theme, the dilemma and chaos modern man faces within the quickly altering world.
“In Praise of Limestone” portrays a pure component (limestone) that results in an argument of the human transformation in relation with its (limestone’s) transformation. Auden begins with nature, a recognizable,








