John Streeter Manifold (21 April 1915 – 19 April 1985) was an Australian poet and critic. He was born in Melbourne, into a well known Camperdown family. He was educated at Geelong Grammar School, and read modern languages at Jesus College, Cambridge. While in Cambridge he joined the Communist Party of Great Britain. He was involved in an attempt to create a successor (Poetry and the People) to Left Review, when the latter folded in 1938.
He then worked in Germany, in publishing. During World War II, he served in intelligence in the British Army, in the Middle East, Africa and France. He was a published war poet; Trident, with Hubert Nicholson and David Martin, was published by Randall Swingler's Fore Publications in 1944.
In 1949, he returned to Australia, settling in Brisbane. He was a founder in 1950 of the Realist Writers Group. He died in Brisbane.
| Collected Verse, University of Queensland Press, pp. 73–75
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| "On the Boundary"
| 1959
| Overland, Autumn 1959
| Nightmares and Sunhorses, Overland Press, 1961, p. 13
|-
|}
References
- Rodney Hall (1978), John Manifold: an introduction to the man and his work
- Ian Hamilton (editor) (1994), The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Poetry in English, p. 338.
