Alec Derwent Hope (21 July 190713 July 2000) was an Australian poet and essayist known for his satirical slant. He was also a critic, teacher and academic. He was referred to in an American journal as "the 20th century's greatest 18th-century poet". He was educated partly at home and in Tasmania, where they moved in 1911. Three years later they moved to Sydney.

He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1972 and a Companion of the Order of Australia in 1981 and awarded many other honours. He died in Canberra, having suffered dementia in his last years, and is buried at the Queanbeyan Lawn Cemetery.

Poet and critic

Although he was published as a poet while still young, The Wandering Islands (1955) was his first collection and all that remained of his early work after most of his manuscripts were destroyed in a fire. Its publication was delayed by concern about the effects of Hope's highly erotic and savagely satirical verse on the Australian public. His frequent allusions to sexuality in his work caused Douglas Stewart to dub him "Phallic Alec" in a letter to Norman Lindsay. His influences were Pope and the Augustan poets, Auden, and Yeats. He was a polymath, very largely self-taught, and with a talent for offending his countrymen. He wrote a book of "answers" to other poems, including one in response to the poem "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell.

The reviews he wrote in the 1940s and '50s were feared "for their acidity and intelligence. If his reviews hurt some writers – Patrick White included – they also sharply raised the standard of literary discussion in Australia." However, Hope relaxed in later years. As poet Kevin Hart writes, "The man I knew, from 1973 to 2000, was invariably gracious and benevolent". Cole suggests that Hope represented the three attributes that Vladimir Nabokov believed essential in a writer, "storyteller, teacher, enchanter".

Influence and impact

Kevin Hart, reviewing Catherine Cole's memoir of Hope, writes that "When A. D. Hope died in 2000 at the age of 93, Australia lost its greatest living poet". (Chicago)

  • 1969: Foundation Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities
  • 1972: Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)
  • 1976: The Age Book of the Year Award for A Late Picking
  • 1976: Robert Frost Award for Poetry
  • 1981: Companion of the Order of Australia (AC)
  • 1989: New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards Special Award
  • 1993: ACT Book of the Year Award for Chance Encounters
  • Honorary doctorates from four Australian universities

References

Sources

  • Five Poems
  • Poems of A. D. Hope
  • Some of Alec Derwent Hope Poems
  • Access to all Hope's poems