Though later known for his essays and novels, Aldous Huxley started his writing career as a poet. Published in 1918, The Defeat of Youth and Other Poems is his third compilation of poetry.
The volume begins with "The Defeat of Youth", a sequence of twenty-two sonnets that explores irreconcilability of the ideal and the disappointing reality. Jerome Meckier called it “the century’s most successful sonnet sequence, better than Auden’s or Edna St. Vincent Millay’s.” In the rest of the volume, Huxley continues to explore themes started in The Burning Wheel, his first volume of poetry, including vision, blindness, and other contrasts.
link to the free audiobook
The Defeat of Youth and Other Poems [by Aldous Huxley]
Pages
- Home
- About Me
- Henry Abbey
- Thomas Bailey Aldrich
- Jean Blewett
- William Allen Butler
- Bliss Carman
- Emily Dickinson
- Robert Frost
- Adam Lindsay Gordon
- Elizabeth Gordon
- Alfred Perceval Graves
- David Gray
- John Harris
- Ralph Hodgson
- Laurence Hope
- Helen Hunt Jackson
- John Keats
- Rudyard Kipling
- Lucy Larcom
- Robert Loveman
- Ernest McGaffey
- Harriet Monroe
- James Oppenheim
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Cecil Roberts
- Edwin Arlington Robinson
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti
- Robert W. Service
- Richard Henry Stoddard
- Katharine Tynan
- Richard Watson Dixon
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