"Days Too Short" by William Henry Davies (read by Winston Tharp)

Subscribers:
10,000
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxJSQFOu7QA



Duration: 1:54
199 views
2


Despite living a significant part of his life without a home, W H Davies was one of the most popular poets of his time. Born in Newport, Wales, in 1871, the son of an iron worker, Davies lost his father when he was three years old and subsequently went to live with his grandparents. He was a troublesome child, attending Temple School but getting himself arrested with some class mates for stealing handbags – behavior that got him a reputation and 12 strokes of the birch.

Davies wrote his first poem, Death, when he was 14 which was prompted by the moment he was asked to sit with his grandfather who was dying at the time. He went to work at an early age, first for an ironmongers and then as a frame maker for which he was supposed to undertake a long term apprenticeship. The difficulty of his youth followed him into work though and he found it all but impossible to settle down to the life his grandmother wanted for him.

Determined to go to America, he left his apprenticeship and began to take casual jobs, crossing the Atlantic several times over the next five years. He lived largely as a tramp or hobo, taking casual work when he could but generally begging and even opting to spend some time in jail in Michigan to avoid the cold winter.

Intending to go to the Klondike and earn his fortune during the Gold Rush, Davies attempted to jump on board a train, lost his footing and fell. The resulting accident meant that his leg had to be amputated and was a major turning point in his life in more ways than one. Many observers suggest that it was this incident above all others that led him to become a working poet.

When he got back to Britain, Davies lived rough on the streets where he would compose several poems in his mind before eventually writing them down. His first collection was self-published. The Soul’s Destroyer marked a change in his fortunes and he would often individually post copies of the book to people he had picked out of Who’s Who.

One of those people was a journalist for the Daily Mail Arthur Adcock who arranged to meet with Davies and the first properly published edition of the collection came out in 1907 and would go through several imprints. Other help for Davies’ career came from Edward Thomas, a literary critic, who put him in lodgings in Kent, allowing him the time to devote to his writing.

In 1907, Davies wrote and published The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp which had a forward by George Bernard Shaw. Davies became well-known in the literary circles of London and would regularly give public readings of his poems alongside luminary greats such as Yeats and Ezra Pound. Most people will know the opening stanza of his most famous poem Leisure that was published in 1911 in the collection Songs of Joy and Others.

Davies married Helen Payne in 1923, a woman who was nearly thirty years younger than him. Helen was pregnant at the time he met her and suffered a miscarriage that nearly took her life though the couple lived together quite happily until Davies passed away. Davies was suffering from ill health which dogged him over his final years. He eventually died in 1940 at the age of 69.

******

If you like this video subscribe to my channel. There are many more videos like this one lovingly prepared and edited by myself for your enjoyment! Check out my extensive playlist collections as well.




Other Videos By Christopher MacIntyre


2016-09-05Sonnet 147 by William Shakespeare (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-09-05"Fear No More" by William Shakespeare (read by John Nixon)
2016-09-05"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe (read by Ruth Golding)
2016-09-05"The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" by Sir Walter Raleigh (read by Justin Brett)
2016-09-05"Song: Go & Catch a Falling Star" by John Donne (read by Peter Tucker)
2016-09-05"The Sun Rising" by John Donne (read by John Nixon)
2016-09-05"April Is In My Mistress' Face" by Thomas Morley (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-09-05"Unquiet Thoughts" by John Dowland (read by John Nixon)
2016-09-05"To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell (read by Brett Shand)
2016-09-05"To Daffodils" by Robert Herrick (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-09-05"Days Too Short" by William Henry Davies (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-09-04A Celebration of English Poetry (read by Librivox volunteers)
2016-08-22"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-08-22"Kubla Khan" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (read by Kristin Hughes)
2016-08-22"Waiting" by Meng Haoran (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-08-20"In the Desert" by Stephen Crane (read by Winston Tharp)
2016-08-19"War is Kind" by Stephen Crane (read by Kristin Hughes)
2016-08-15Debussy: Syrinx (Sarah Bassingthwaite, flute)
2016-08-12Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun (Natalia Ensemble)
2016-07-08Leroy Anderson: The Girl in Satin (Ion Bogdan Stefanescu, flute / Horia Maxim, piano)
2016-07-06Leroy Anderson: The Waltzing Cat (Markus Staab, piano)



Tags:
William Henry Davies
Days Too Short
Poem
Poetry
The Four Seasons
Le quattro stagioni
Antonio Vivaldi
La primavera
Spring