Notice: Use of undefined constant _WEBSITE - assumed '_WEBSITE' in /var/www/dynamic/-agonia.v1/www/templates/author.php on line 126 Dylan Thomas (Dylan_Thomas) : Poemas, Prosa, Biografía, comentarios, textos

Poemas (0.090s) Poesía, prosa, comentarios, críticas - Literatura y Cultura Espanola

agonia Agonia.Net | Reglas | Publicidad Contacto | Regístrate


romana Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature english Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature francais Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature italiano Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature deutsch Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature espanol Poetry, prose, essays, comments, poems - International Culture and Literature



[ Creación ][ Internet ][ Cultura ][ Sociedad ][ Acontecimientos ][ Artes ][ Libro ][ Polémica ][ Presa ][ Regional ][ Contact ]

poezii




Dylan Thomas [Dylan_Thomas]
 I hold a beast, an angel, and a madman in me, and my enquiry is as to their working, and my problem is their subjugation and victory, downthrow and upheaval, and my effort is their self-expression
 !!No has inscrito ninguna foto!



Ciudad de residencia: Swansea, Wales
Tiene una lengua materna Tiene una lengua materna


Biografía Dylan Thomas

_WEBSITE Dylan Thomas


 
La dirección directa de este autor es : 

 Active compilations of this author::

Los textos màs recientes de este autor:

Poemas (25)
Todos (25)

Los textos màs recientes de este autor:

Comentarios:

Textos inscritos por este autor en la biblioteca:

Pàgina: 1

A process in the weather of the heart :
Poemas 2006-08-20 (536 senalas)

A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London :
Poemas 2006-05-18 (778 senalas)

Aceastã pâine ce’o rup :
Poemas 2005-10-25 (1436 senalas)

All All and All the Dry Worlds Lever :
Poemas 2006-08-20 (492 senalas)

And Death Shall Have No Dominion :
Poemas 2003-11-05 (1143 senalas)

And death shall have no dominion :
Poemas 2006-03-04 (698 senalas)

Before I Knocked :
Poemas 2004-07-01 (805 senalas)

Clown in the Moon :
Poemas 2006-08-20 (603 senalas)

Deaths and Entrances :
Poemas 2005-10-25 (1397 senalas)

DO NOT GO GENTLE INTO THAT GOOD NIGHT :
Poemas 2003-11-08 (910 senalas)

Dragoste într-un ospiciu :
Poemas 2006-03-29 (769 senalas)

Fern Hill :
Poemas 2005-05-25 (622 senalas)

From Love's First Fever to Her Plague :
Poemas 2006-08-19 (476 senalas)

IN MY CRAFT OR SULLEN ART :
Poemas 2006-03-04 (671 senalas)

Light breaks where no sun shines :
Poemas 2005-06-29 (623 senalas)

Love in the Asylum :
Poemas 2006-02-12 (1516 senalas)

Mi’am visat naºterea :
Poemas 2005-11-12 (1315 senalas)

My Hero Bares His Nerves :
Poemas 2005-10-10 (694 senalas)

Now :
Poemas 2006-09-03 (1157 senalas)

Poem In October :
Poemas 2006-02-12 (1207 senalas)

Qui in primavera :
Poemas 2005-07-07 (774 senalas)

The force that through the green fuse drives the flower :
Poemas 2005-10-25 (1249 senalas)

Then was my Neophyte :
Poemas 2006-08-20 (478 senalas)

Where Once the Waters of your Face :
Poemas 2006-08-20 (448 senalas)


Pàgina: 1





Biografía Dylan Thomas

Dylan Marlais Thomas was born on October 27, 1914 in Swansea, Glamorganshire (Wales). He was educated at Swansea Grammar School and became well-known for his obscure poetry and amusing plays and prose. Before the publishing of Thomas\' first book in 1934, he worked as a reporter for The South Wales Daily Post, in Swansea, (1931-1932) and as a free-lance writer from 1933.

\"18 Poems\", Thomas\' first book, was published as the result of a prize. Thomas was only 19 when this volume of poetry was released. He wrote nearly 30 poems in late 1933 and early 1934, of which 13 were published in this volume. Between May and October 1934, he completed another five for inclusion in the book. The Thomas\' poems first appeared in the Sunday Referee in 1933 in a feature column called the \"Poets\' Corner,\" edited by Victor Neuburg and Runia Sheila MacLeod. Neuburg began to award prizes to poets whose work was judged to be the finest printed in the column over a period of six months. The prize was that the Sunday Referee would publish the winning poet\'s work in book form. Dylan Thomas became the second recipient of the prize, which he won for the second of seven poems he published in \"Poets\' Corner,\" the poem, \"The Force that through the Grass Fuse Drives the Flower.\" The editors had some difficulty getting Thomas\' manuscript accepted by a publisher, until David Archer of the Parton Bookshop agree d to have the book printed. Five hundred copies were printed, but only 250 were bound and issued in December 1934. The remaining half, constituting the second issue, were bound and put on sale on February 21, 1936. It was praised by few because it was so obscure.

He followed \"18 Poems\" with \"25 Poems\" in 1936. He lived his life in poverty in England and Wales, while married to Caitlin Macnamara (they were wed in 1937). They had two sons and one daughter. Then he began to concentrate on prose, with such works as \"Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog\", \"Adventures in the Skin Trade\", and \"Quite Early One Morning\". He had wanted to serve in World War II, but was rejected so during the war, he worked with a documentary film unit. He also published many short stories, wrote film scripts, broadcast stories and talks, did a series of lecture tours in the United States and wrote \"Under Milkwood\", the radio play for voices. In 1949, he began frequent visits to the US, touring colleges to read poetry. He was also the recipient of the Foyle Prize in 1953.

During his fourth lecture tour of the United States in 1953, after a long period of depression and drinking and a few days after his 39th birthday, he collapsed in his New York hotel and died on November 9th at St Vincents Hospital. He is said to have died from alcoholic poisoning. His body was sent back to Laugharne, Wales, where his grave is marked by a simple wooden cross. In July 1994 his wife, Caitlin died in Italy, where she had spent most of the years of her life after the death of Thomas. Her body is buried next to his.

Thomas was a man with a Keatsian style and manner, being both energetic and vivid when it came to his imagery. He was Welsh and his voice brought many to enjoy poetry through his readings, he also used words not just for the denotation or connotation meaning, but also for the sound of the word and the meaning that sound creates. The key to Dylan Thomas is reading him aloud, slowly, hitting every vowel and consonant, and worrying about what it all means later.




shim La casa de la literatura shim
shim

Agonia  Busca  Agonia.Net  Foro  

La reproducción de cualquier texto que pertenece al portal sin nuestro permiso està estrictamente prohibida.
Copyright 1999-2003. Agonia.Net

E-mail | Política de publicación et confidencialidad

Poemas (0.090s) Poesía, prosa, comentarios, críticas - Literatura y Cultura Espanola

# You own a cultural website? Join the Cultural Topsites!