美國 人物列錶
非馬 William Marr愛倫·坡 Edgar Alan Poe愛默生 Ralph Waldo Emerson
惠特曼 Walt Whitman狄更生 Emily Dickinson斯蒂芬·剋蘭 Stephan Crane
史蒂文斯 Wallace Stevens弗羅斯特 Robert Frost卡爾·桑德堡 Carl Sandberg
威廉斯 William Carlos Williams龐德 Ezra Pound杜麗特爾 Hilda Doolittle
奧登 Wystan Hugh Auden卡明斯 E. E. Cummings哈特·剋萊恩 Hart Crane
羅伯特·鄧肯 Robert Duncan查爾斯·奧爾森 Charles Olson阿門斯 A. R. Ammons
金斯堡 Allen Ginsberg約翰·阿什伯利 John Ashbery詹姆斯·泰特 James Tate
蘭斯敦·休斯 Langston Hughes默溫 W. S. Merwin羅伯特·勃萊 Robert Bly
畢肖普 Elizabeth Bishop羅伯特·洛威爾 Robert Lowell普拉斯 Sylvia Plath
約翰·貝裏曼 John Berryman安妮·塞剋斯頓 Anne Sexton斯諾德格拉斯 W. D. Snodgrass
弗蘭剋·奧哈拉 Frank O'Hara布洛茨基 L.D. Brodsky艾米·洛威爾 Amy Lowell
埃德娜·聖文森特·米蕾 Edna St. Vincent Millay薩拉·梯斯苔爾 Sara Teasdale馬斯特斯 Edgar Lee Masters
威廉·斯塔福德 William Stafford艾德裏安娜·裏奇 Adrienne Rich大衛·伊格內托 David Ignatow
金內爾 Galway Kinnell西德尼·拉尼爾 Sidney Lanier霍華德·奈莫洛夫 Howard Nemerov
瑪麗·奧利弗 Mary Oliver阿奇波德·麥剋裏許 阿奇波德麦 Kerry Xu傑弗斯詩選 Robinson Jeffers
露易絲·格麗剋 Louise Glück凱特·萊特 Kate Light施加彰 Arthur Sze
李立揚 Li Young Lee斯塔夫理阿諾斯 L. S. Stavrianos阿特 Art
費翔 Kris Phillips許慧欣 eVonne傑羅姆·大衛·塞林格 Jerome David Salinger
巴拉剋·奧巴馬 Barack Hussein Obama朱瑟琳·喬塞爾森 Josselson, R.詹姆斯·泰伯 詹姆斯泰伯
威廉·恩道爾 Frederick William Engdahl馬剋·佩恩 Mark - Payne拉吉-帕特爾 Raj - Patel
康拉德·艾肯 Conrad Potter Aiken
美國 冷戰中的美國  (1889年八月5日1973年八月17日)


康拉德·艾肯(出生於喬治亞州的薩凡納,1889­­——1973)

當他12歲的時候,康拉德﹒艾肯就成為一個最重要的源頭性的和現代美國詩人中的一個,以這樣的詩行開始寫下一首詩:

         整天隱藏在纏結的草叢裏

         獅子蹲伏於為捕食的等待

因為這首詩學校授予一枚刻着他名字的金質奬章。他决心成為一個詩人。

此後很短時間,他的父母親都突然不幸辭世,他被帶到馬薩諸塞州新貝德福德,在那裏他跟他的曾姑奶奶一起生活,有一個像小了望塔一樣的房間,面朝大海和海港裏的魚腥味。這兒他讀詩人們的詩,夢想“大海裏的城市”。

當他進了哈佛大學,他仍然寫着詩,學院出版印刷了它們。一首詩花費了他十天時間。當局反對他曠課十天(在那兒他的聲望高)。這位詩人被激怒了,離開學院六個月,利用這個時間到意大利旅行。此後1911年他回到哈佛,成了一個校園詩人,在一個學院的一代人裏包括範威剋﹒布魯剋斯,沃爾特﹒李普曼,T﹒S﹒艾略特,晚一點的艾倫﹒西格,約翰﹒瑞德,和海伍德﹒布朗。

自從他有獨立的收入,他從來沒覺得有必要僅僅為錢寫作。他到處旅行,而一次次地回到劍橋。他出版了十六本詩集,一本選集,一些短篇故事和小說,很多批評文章。他曾經寫了一個殘忍的人,一個匿名的人評論他的書《記憶的春天夜景》,揭露他文學上的錯誤。他出版過艾米莉﹒迪金森詩選的英語版本,他說這著作“也許是一個女人用英語寫的最好的。”

1930年他帶着他的第二個妻子和三個孩子到了英國,在蘇塞剋斯的那兒買了一所房子。1940年他勉強地逃脫轟炸。在此期間他用筆名寫作,為紐約寫“倫敦來信”。

現在他帶着第三個妻子藝術傢瑪麗﹒鬍沃﹒艾肯轉回美國;“裝模作樣地自豪於在海德角叢林的最中間,一塊八英畝有毒的常春藤的種植園。”

艾肯先生一個重要貢獻是在現代詩歌創造了中心主題,“混亂的旋律”,休斯頓﹒彼得森說。

他的書有:《地球勝利》(1914年),《車床和電影》(1916),《弗斯林的吉格舞麯》(1916),《記憶裏的春天晚禱》(1917),《莎奈爾玫瑰》(1918年);《約翰 德斯》(1930年);《布朗斯頓田園詩》(1942);《士兵》1944年);《羊圈山》(1957年);《您》(1968年)。小說《科芬王》(1935年)和《談話》(1940年)。《阿善特隨筆》(1952年)是一部自傳性作品。


Conrad Potter Aiken (August 5, 1889 – August 17, 1973) was an American writer and poet, honored with a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award, and was United States Poet Laureate from 1950 to 1952. His published works include poetry, short stories, novels, literary criticism, a play, and an autobiography.

Biography
Early years
Aiken was the eldest son of William Ford and Anna (Potter) Aiken. In Savannah, Aiken's father became a respected physician and eye surgeon, while his mother was the daughter of a prominent Massachusetts Unitarian minister. On February 27, 1901, Dr. Aiken murdered his wife and then committed suicide. According to his autobiography, Ushant, Aiken, then 11 years old, heard the two gunshots and discovered the bodies immediately thereafter. After his parents' deaths, he was raised by his great-aunt and uncle in Cambridge, Massachusetts, attending Middlesex School, then Harvard University.

At Harvard, Aiken edited the Advocate with T. S. Eliot, who became a lifelong friend, colleague, and influence. It was also at Harvard where Aiken studied under another significant influence in his writing, the philosopher George Santayana.

Adult years
Aiken was strongly influenced by symbolism, especially in his earlier works. In 1930 he received the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for his Selected Poems. Many of his writings had strong psychological themes. He wrote the widely anthologized short story "Silent Snow, Secret Snow" (1934), partially based on his childhood tragedy.

Other influences were Aiken's grandfather, Potter, who had been a church preacher, as well as Whitman's freestyle poetry. This helped Aiken shape his poetry more freely while his recognition of a God grounded his more visually rich explorations into the universe. Some of his best-known poetry, such as "Morning Song of Senlin", uses these influences to great effect.

His collections of verse include Earth Triumphant (1914), The Charnel Rose (1918) and And In the Hanging Gardens (1933). His poem "Music I Heard" has been set to music by a number of composers, including Leonard Bernstein, Henry Cowell, and Helen Searles Westbrook. Aiken wrote or edited more than 51 books, the first of which was published in 1914, two years after his graduation from Harvard. His work includes novels, short stories (The Collected Short Stories appeared in 1961), reviews, an autobiography, and poetry. He received numerous awards and honors for his writing, though for most of his lifetime, he received little public attention.

Though Aiken was reluctant to speak of his early trauma and ensuing psychological problems, he acknowledged that his writings were strongly influenced by his studies of Sigmund Freud, Carl G. Jung, Otto Rank, Ferenczi, Adler, and other depth psychologists. It wasn't until the publication of his autobiography, Ushant, that Aiken revealed the emotional challenges that he had battled for much of his adult life. During the 1920s Freud heard of him and offered to psychoanalyze him. While aboard a Europe-bound ship to meet with Freud, Aiken was discouraged by Erich Fromm from accepting the offer. Consequently, despite Freud's strong influence on Aiken, Aiken never met the noted psychoanalyst. As he later said, "Freud had read Great Circle, and I’m told kept a copy on his office table. But I didn't go, though I started to. Misgivings set in, and so did poverty."

Personal life
Aiken had three younger siblings, Kempton Potter (K. P. A. Taylor), Robert Potter (R. P. A. Taylor), and Elizabeth. After their parents' deaths, the four children were adopted by Frederick Winslow Taylor and his wife Louise, their great-aunt. His siblings took Taylor's last name. Kempton helped establish the Aiken Taylor Award for Modern American Poetry.

He was married three times: firstly to Jessie McDonald (1912–1929); secondly to Clarissa Lorenz (1930–1937) (author of a biography, Lorelei Two); and thirdly to the painter Mary Hoover (1937–1973). He fathered three children by his first wife Jessie: John Aiken, Jane Aiken Hodge and Joan Aiken, all of whom became writers.

Aiken married Jessie McDonald in 1912, and the couple moved to England in 1921 with their older two children; John (born 1913) and Jane (born 1917), settling in Rye, East Sussex (where the American novelist Henry James had once lived). The couple’s youngest daughter, Joan, was born in Rye in 1924. Conrad Aiken returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts, as a tutor at Harvard from 1927 to 1928. For many years, he divided his time between Rye, New York, and Boston. In 1931 he was introduced by the artist Paul Nash to Edward Burra, a painter also living in Rye. That year Burra painted his gouache "John Deth", inspired by Aiken's poem of that name and originally intended to illustrate a projected edition that was never realised. Nevertheless, the two men maintained a lifelong friendship thereafter.

In 1936, Aiken met his third wife, Mary, in Boston. In the following year the couple visited Malcolm Lowry in Cuernavaca, Mexico, where Aiken divorced Clarissa and married Mary. The couple moved to Rye, where they remained until the outbreak of World War II in 1940. The Aikens settled in Brewster, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod, where he and his wife Mary later ran a summer program for writers and painters named after their antique farmhouse, "Forty-One Doors". Despite living for many years abroad and receiving recognition as a Southern writer, Aiken always considered himself an American, and, in particular, a New Englander.

Over the years, he served in loco parentis as well as mentor to the English author Malcolm Lowry. In 1923 he acted as a witness at the marriage of his friend, poet W. H. Davies. From 1950 to 1952, he served as Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, more commonly known as Poet Laureate of the United States. In 1960 he visited Grasmere in the Lake District, England (once the home of William Wordsworth), with his friend Edward Burra.


Bench at grave of Conrad Aiken in Bonaventure Cemetery in Savannah, Georgia
The Aikens lived primarily at their farmhouse in West Brewster, and wintered in Savannah in a home adjacent to his early childhood house.

Aiken died on 17 August 1973 and was buried in Bonaventure Cemetery in Savannah, Georgia on the banks of the Wilmington River, and so was Mary after her death in 1992. The burial site was featured in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt. According to local legend, Aiken wished to have his tombstone fashioned in the shape of a bench as an invitation to visitors to stop and enjoy a martini at his grave. The bench is inscribed with "Give my love to the world", and "Cosmos Mariner—Destination Unknown".

A primary source for information on Aiken's life is his autobiographical novel Ushant (1952), one of his major works. In it, he wrote candidly about his various affairs and marriages, his attempted suicide and fear of insanity, and his friendships with T. S. Eliot (who appears in the book as the Tsetse), Ezra Pound (Rabbi Ben Ezra), Malcolm Lowry (Hambo), and others.

Awards and recognition
Named Poetry Consultant (now U.S. Poet Laureate) of the Library of Congress from 1950 to 1952, Aiken earned numerous prestigious writing honors, including a Pulitzer Prize in 1930 for Selected Poems, the 1954 National Book Award for Collected Poems, the Bollingen Prize in Poetry, the National Institute of Arts and Letters Gold Medal in Poetry, and a National Medal for Literature. He was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in 1934, Academy of American Poets fellowship in 1957, Huntington Hartford Foundation Award in 1960, and Brandeis University Creative Arts Award in 1967. Aiken was the first Georgia-born author to win a Pulitzer Prize, and was named Georgia's Poet Laureate in 1973. He was the first winner of the Poetry Society of America (PSA) Shelley Memorial Award, in 1929.

In 2009, the Library of America selected Aiken's 1931 story "Mr. Arcularis" for inclusion in its two-century retrospective of American fantastic tales.

Selected works
Poetry collections
Earth Triumphant (Aiken, 1914) (available online at archive.org)
Turns and Movies and other Tales in Verse (Aiken, 1916, Houghton Mifflin) (available online at archive.org)
The Jig of Forslin: A Symphony, 1916
Nocturne of Remembered Spring: And Other Poems (Aiken, 1917) (available online at archive.org)
Charnel Rose (Aiken, 1918) (available online at archive.org)
The House of Dust: A Symphony, 1920
Punch: The Immortal Liar, Documents in His History, 1921
Priapus and the Pool, 1922
The Pilgrimage of Festus, 1923
Priapus and the Pool, and Other Poems, 1925
Selected Poems, 1929
John Deth, A Metaphysical Legacy, and Other Poems, 1930
The Coming Forth by Day of Osiris Jones, 1931
Preludes for Memnon, 1931
Landscape West of Eden, 1934
Time in the Rock; Preludes to Definition, 1936
And in the Human Heart, 1940
Brownstone Eclogues, and Other Poems, 1942
The Soldier: A Poem, 1944
The Kid, 1947
The Divine Pilgrim, 1949
Skylight One: Fifteen Poems, 1949
Collected Poems, 1953
A Letter from Li Po and Other Poems, 1955
Sheepfold Hill: Fifteen Poems, 1958
The Morning Song of Lord Zero, Poems Old and New, 1963
Thee: A Poem, 1967
Collected Poems, 2nd ed., 1970
Short stories
"Bring! Bring!"
"The Last Visit"
"Mr. Arcularis"
"The Bachelor Supper"
"Bow Down, Isaac!"
"A Pair of Vikings"
"Hey, Taxi!"
"Field of Flowers"
"Gehenna"
"The Disciple"
"Impulse"
"The Anniversary"
"Hello, Tib"
"Smith and Jones"
"By My Troth, Nerisa!"
"Silent Snow, Secret Snow"
"Round by Round"
"Thistledown"
"State of Mind"
"Strange Moonlight"
"The Fish Supper"
"I Love You Very Dearly"
"The Dark City"
"Life Isn't a Short Story"
"The Night Before Prohibition"
"Spider, Spider"
"A Man Alone at Lunch"
"Farewell! Farewell! Farewell!"
"Your Obituary, Well Written"
"A Conversation"
"No, No, Go Not to Lethe"
"Pure as the Driven Snow"
"All, All Wasted"
"The Moment"
"The Woman-Hater"
"The Professor's Escape"
"The Orange Moth"
"The Necktie"
"O How She Laughed!"
"West End"
"Fly Away Ladybird"
Novels
Blue Voyage (1927)
Great Circle (1933)
King Coffin (1935)
A Heart for the Gods of Mexico (1939)
The Conversation (1940)
Other books
Scepticisms: Notes on Contemporary Poetry (1919)
Ushant (1952)
A Reviewer's ABC: Collected Criticism of Conrad Aiken from 1916 to the Present (1958)
Collected Short Stories (1960)
Collected Short Stories of Conrad Aiken (1965)
    

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