
“In Stephen Spender’s garden in London, the poet W. H. Auden talked about ‘coming home.’ The Oxford University he knew, which he had longed for during bouts of deep nostalgic depression while living in New York, no longer existed for him when he returned to England. He spent two hours talking to my wife – prophetically – about friends who had died. He smoked incessantly, his conversation punctuated by wracking coughs. Meanwhile the light was gone from the garden, and I could take only a quick photograph of a beautiful and ravaged face. ‘Come soon, come soon,’ he invited, but I knew I would never see him again.” Auden died in September, 1973 (b. 1907).
Auden was photographed on this day, October 30, in 1972. Spender was an English poet, novelist and essayist whose work concentrated on themes of social injustice and the class struggle.
