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A. E.

Housman Biography

Alfred Edward Houseman was born on March 26, 1859 in Fockbury, Worcestershire, England. He was an
English scholar and celebrated poet whose lyrics express a Romantic pessimism in a spare, simple style.

Housman, whose father was a solicitor, was one of seven children. He much preferred his mother; and
her death on his 12th birthday was a cruel blow, which is surely one source of the pessimism his poetry
expresses. While a student at Oxford, he was further oppressed by his dawning realization of
homosexual desires. These came to focus in an intense love for one of his fellow students, an athletic
young man who became his friend but who could not reciprocate his love. In turmoil emotionally,
Housman failed to pass his final examination at Oxford, although he had been a brilliant scholar.

From 1882 to 1892, he worked as a clerk in the Patent Office in London. In the evenings he studied Latin
texts in the British Museum reading room and developed a consummate gift for correcting errors in
them, owing to his mastery of the language and his feeling for the way poets choose their words.
Articles he wrote for journals caught the attention of scholars and led to his appointment in 1892 as
professor of Latin at University College, London.

Apparently convinced that he must live without love, Housman became increasingly reclusive and for
solace turned to his notebooks, in which he had begun to write the poems that eventually made up A
Shropshire Lad (1896). For models he claimed the poems of Heinrich Heine, the songs of William
Shakespeare, and the Scottish border ballads. Each provided him with a way of expressing emotion
clearly and yet keeping it at a certain distance. For the same purpose, he assumed in his lyrics the
unlikely role of farm laborer and set them in Shropshire, a county he had not yet visited when he began
to write the first poems. The popularity of A Shropshire Lad grew slowly but so surely that Last Poems
(1922) had astonishing success for a book of verse.

Housman regarded himself principally as a Latinist and avoided the literary world. In 1911 he became
professor of Latin at Cambridge, teaching there almost up to his death. His major scholarly effort, to
which he devoted more than 30 years, was an annotated edition of Manilius (1903-30), whose poetry he
did not like but who gave him ample scope for emendation. Some of the asperity and directness that
appears in Housman's lyrics also is found in his scholarship, in which he defended common sense with a
sarcastic wit that helped to make him widely feared. Housman died three years later, aged 77, in
Cambridge. His ashes are buried near St Laurence's Church, Ludlow, Shropshire. [4] The University of
Worcester has acknowledged Housman's local connection by naming a new building after him.

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