A. R. D. Fairburn
A. R. D. Fairburn | |
---|---|
Born |
Arthur Rex Dugard Fairburn February 2, 1904 Auckland, New Zealand |
Died |
March 25, 1957 53) Auckland, New Zealand | (aged
Nationality | New Zealander |
Other names | "Rex" Fairburn |
Occupation | Poet |
Arthur Rex Dugard "Rex" Fairburn (2 February 1904 – 25 March 1957) was a New Zealand poet who was born and died in Auckland.
He attended Auckland Grammar School, where he first met R. A. K. Mason, and worked at various jobs, including relief work on the roads. Later he tutored in English and lectured on the history and theory of Art at Elam School of Art, Auckland University College. His poetry was initially influenced by the (then unfashionable) Georgian poets.
Works
- He Shall Not Rise (1930)
- Dominion (1938)
- Poems 1929-41
- Walking on my Feet (1945)
- Strange Rendezview (1952)
- Three Poems including Dominion, The Voyage, To a Friend in the Wilderness (1952)
- plus satirical and light verse including:
- The Sky is a Limpet (A Polytickle Parrotty)
- How to Ride a Bicycle (In Seventeen Lovely Colours)
- The Rakehelly Man
- Poetry Harbinger
"Reverie on the Rat"
External links
- Biography in the 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand
- Interview with A.R.D Fairburn's daughters Dinah Holman and Janis Fairburn about their father for Cultural Icons project. Audio.
- Poems in Kowhai Gold (1930)
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