MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD


Meaning of MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD in English

born May 7, 1892, Glencoe, Ill., U.S. died April 20, 1982, Boston U.S. poet, playwright, teacher, and public official, whose concern for liberal democracy figured in much of his work, although his most memorable lyrics are of a more private nature. Educated at Yale, after three years as an attorney in Boston, MacLeish went to France in 1923 to perfect his poetic craft. The verse he published during his expatriate yearsThe Happy Marriage (1924), The Pot of Earth (1925), Streets in the Moon (1926), and The Hamlet of A. MacLeish (1928)shows the fashionable influence of Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot. During this period he wrote his frequently anthologized poem Ars Poetica (1926; The Art of Poetry). After returning to the United States in 1928, he published New Found Land (1930), which reveals the simple lyric eloquence that is the persistent MacLeish note. It includes one of his best-known poems, You, Andrew Marvell. In the 1930s MacLeish became increasingly concerned about the menace of fascism. Conquistador (1932), about the conquest and exploitation of Mexico, was the first of his public poems. Other poems were collected in Frescoes for Mr. Rockefeller's City (1933), Public Speech (1936), and America Was Promises (1939). His radio verse plays include The Fall of the City (1937), Air Raid (1938), and The Great American Fourth of July Parade (1975). MacLeish served as librarian of Congress (193944) and assistant secretary of state (194445) and in various other governmental positions until 1949, when he became Boylston professor at Harvard, where he remained until 1962. He published his Collected Poems: 19171952 in 1952, and his New and Collected Poems 19171976 appeared in 1976. His verse drama J.B., based on the biblical story of Job, was performed on Broadway in 1958. Riders on the Earth (1978) is a collection of essays.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.