Background of A. D Hope
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A.D. Hope, in full Alec Derwent Hope, (born July 21, 1907, Cooma, New South Wales, Australia—died July 13, 2000, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory), Australian poet who is best known for his elegies and satires.
Hope, who began publishing poems when he was 14 years old, was educated in Australia and at the University of Oxford. He taught at various Australian universities, including Sydney Teachers’ College and Melbourne University, until his retirement in 1972. Though traditional in form, his poetry is thoroughly modern, two outstanding examples being “Conquistador” (1947) and “The Return from the Freudian Isles” (1944). Both poems are typical in their satirical approach and striking clarity of diction. Hope also wrote religious and metaphysical poems, as well as erotic verse, which often attracted controversy, as did his attacks on the cultural establishment, which he considered pretentious and empty. His first book of poems, The Wandering Islands, appeared in 1955 and was followed by several volumes of new poems and of collected poems. He also wrote essays and criticism, including A Midsummer Eve’s Dream (1970), The Cave and the Spring (1965), and Native Companions (1974). He was made a member of the Order of the British Empire in 1972 and a Companion of the Order of Australia in 1981.
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