Auden and the Inklings: An Alliterative Revival
Carl Phelpstead, Cardiff
University
Recent criticism has done a great deal to illuminate W. H. Auden's medievalism,
and especially his Anglo-Saxonism. Auden's revival and adaptation of the
alliterative meter of Old and Middle English (and Old Norse) poetry is
one of the most striking instances of his debt to medieval literature.
Discussions of Auden's alliterative poetry have, however, treated it as
an isolated and idiosyncratic phenomenon; the aim of this article is to
contextualize Auden's use of alliterative meter by comparing it with alliterative
verse by C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Nevill Coghill, three members
of an informal group of academics and writers called the "Inklings, "
who met regularly in C. S. Lewis's rooms in Magdalen College, Oxford,
to read and discuss their work.
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