Thomas
Hardy and Cecil Day LewisCecil Day Lewis was a great admirer of Thomas Hardy and had arranged that he should be buried as close as possible to the author's grave in Stinsford churchyard.
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The inscription on the stone reads
Cecil Day Poet Laureate Shall I be gone long? |
C(ecil) Day Lewis (1904-1972) - pseudonym NICHOLAS BLAKE

Anglo-Irish poet, critic, and educator. Cecil Day Lewis was appointed Poet
Laureate in 1968. He also gained fame as a detective story writer under the
name Nicholas Blake. In sixteen of his twenty mystery novels the hero was
Nigel Stangeways, an Oxford graduate. Lewis was married twice and fathered
five children, one of whom is the Academy Award-winning actor Daniel Day-Lewis.
"Nigel's six feet sprawled all over the place; his gestures were nervous and little uncouth; a lock of sandy coloured hair dropping over his forehead, and the deceptive naïveté of his face in repose gave him a resemblance to an overgrown prep. schoolboy. His eyes were the same blue as his uncle's, but shortsighted and noncommittal. Yet there was an underlying similarity between the two. A latent, sardonic humor in their conversation, a friendliness and simple generosity in their smiles, and that impression of energy in reserve which is always given by those who possess an abundance of life directed towards consciously-realised aims." (from Thou Shell of Death, 1936) C. D. Lewis was born at Ballintubber, Queen's County (now county Laois), Ireland. His father was a Protestant clergyman. After his mother died, he was brought up in London by his father, with the help of an aunt. Day Lewis graduated from Wadham College, Oxford, in 1927. In Oxford he became part of the circle that gathered around W.H. Auden and helped him to edit Oxford Poetry 1927. His own first collection of poems, BEECHEN VIRGIL, appeared in 1925.
Tempt me no more, for I
Have known the lightning's hour,
The poet's inward pride,
The certainty of power.
(from 'Tempt Me No More')
In his youth Cecil Day Lewis adopted communist views but after the late 1930s
he gradually became disillusioned. In 1928 he married Mary King, the daughter
of a Sherborne master, and worked as a schoolmaster at three schools. In 1935
Day Lewis decided to supplement his income from poetry by writing a detective
novel. He needed money to repair the roof of the cottage he was then living
in. His agent advised him to separate the roles of detective novelist and
poet. Thus he created Nigel Strangeways, the hero of sixteen of his twenty
books. The first novel, A QUESTION OF PROOF, written under the pseudonym Nicholas
Blake, was followed by nineteen more crime novels. From the mid-1930s Day
Lewis was able to earn his living by writing.
'Well, I've not been in jail yet. I did get fined for sitting in Trafalgar
Square. It was one of those Committee of a Hundred picnics.'
'I see. You believe in unilateral disarmament?' 'Every sensible person does.'
Cherry took a deep breath, about to launch on a political speenc, but Sparkes
forestalled her. 'Would you say that betraying your country's secrets to an
enemy advanced the cause of nuclear disarmament?' (from Ask Me Another, 1964)
By the end of the decade Day Lewis was living in Devon. He had published several
collections of poems under the influence of Auden, among others FROM FEATHERS
TO IRON (1932), COLLECTED POEMS (1935), and A TIME TO DANCE AND OTHER POEMS
(1935). From 1941 he worked at the Ministry of Information as an editor in
the publication department. At the end of the war he joined the firm Chatto&Windus
as a director and senior editor. In WORD OVER ALL (1943) Day Lewis distanced
him from Auden and reached his full stature as a poet. The poems also reflected
his personal life, an affair which resulted in a son, and the relationship
with the novelist Rosamund Lehmann.
In 1951 Day Lewis married actress Jill Balcon, with whom he lived in a large Georgian house in Greenwich. He was professor of poetry at Oxford in 1951-56, and a lecturer in the 1950s and 1960s at several universities. In succession to John Masefield he was appointed Poet Laureate in 1968. Day Lewis was chairman of the Arts Council Literature Panel, vice-president of the Royal Society of Literature, Honorary Member of the American Academy, Member of the Irish Academy of Letters. Day Lewis died on May 22, 1972, in the Hertfordshire home of Kingsley Amis and Elisabeth Jane Howard, where he and his wife were staying. A great admirer of Thomas Hardy, he had arranged that he should be buried as close as possible to the author's grave in Stinsford churchyard.
Day Lewis's early mystery novels are full of literary references, from Shakespeare to Blake, Keats, Arthur Hugh Clough and A.E. Housman. Among his best works are THE BEAST MUST DIE (1938), a story of a father seeking revenge on the hit and run driver who killed his child, THE CASE OF THE ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN (1941), A TANGLED WEB (1956), and END OF CHAPTER (1957). The critic and award-winning mystery writer H.R.F. Keating included in 1987 The Beast Must Die among the 100 best crime and mystery books ever published. Day Lewis's own son was almost run over in a circumstance similar to that which the story describes. It begins with the promise: "I am going to kill a man... I have no idea what he looks like. But I am going to find him and kill him." The title of the story was taken from the text of Brahm's Four Serious Songs, a paraphrase of the Book of Ecclesiastes: "The beast must die, the man dieth also, yea both must die." THE PRIVATE WOUND (1968) concerns the problems that divide Ireland, and was considered the most autobiographical of the author's works in the mystery genre. THOU SHELL OF DEATH (1936) was a contemporary version of Cyril Tourneur's gory 1607 play, The Revenger's Tragedy. Day Lewis's best-known children's book is THE OTTERBURY INCIDENT (1948), a story of a group of kids, who outwit criminals. In DICK WILLOUGHBY (1933) Day Lewis depicted the life of a young Elizabethan, adding into his adventures secret tunnels, sword-play, an evil Catholic kinsman, and an innocent romance.