The Poet & the Baroness

Michael O'Sullivan
Title
The Poet & the Baroness
Subtitle
W.H. Auden and Stella Musulin, a Friendship
Price
€ 8,99
ISBN
9789633866566
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
216
Language
English
Publication date
Imprint
Also available as
Paperback - € 17,95
Table of Contents
Show Table of ContentsHide Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 

I. Discovering Auden: A Personal Journey

II. Funeral Blues 

III. Leaving the Mezzogiorno. Finding Home 

IV. Stella 

V. Stella’s Journals and Auden’s Letters 
The Years in Austria 
In Retrospect 
Auden’s Letters

Photo Credits
Index of Names

Michael O'Sullivan

The Poet & the Baroness

W.H. Auden and Stella Musulin, a Friendship

For long periods in history, the Austrian capital found itself on the geographical edge of western civilisation. Yet from the 18th century on, Vienna has been a vibrant centre of European culture. This city is the scene of the formidable meeting of the two outstanding intellectuals that are at the core of this book. 

The warm relationship between W.H. Auden, the celebrated British-American poet (1907–1973), and his fellow expatriate, the Welsh-Austrian journalist, translator and writer Stella Musulin (1915–1996) lasted while Auden resided in the nearby small town of Kirchstetten starting in 1958. It was here that the poet was laid to rest in the autumn of 1973. This book is based on the unpublished letters of Auden to Musulin and her private journals.  

The study of this inspiring material yields new insights into Auden’s last, prolific, creative period and underscores the ‘Austrian Auden.’ In addition, Michael O’Sullivan pays tribute to the closest ‘Austrian’ friend of the poet. Baroness Stella von Musulin was an intellectual whose two books for Faber & Faber are acknowledged as classics: Vienna in the Age of Metternich and Austria: People & Landscape (with a foreword by Auden). The author situates the close relationship of two individuals in the context of Austria’s complex political, social, and cultural history in the Cold War years.

Please note: to open this eBook you need Adobe Digital Editions
Author

Michael O'Sullivan

He was Vienna correspondent of the London Independent and later worked on both the Foreign and Parliamentary desks of Ireland's national broadcasting service RTE. He is the author of bestselling biographies of Mary Robinson, Ireland's first woman president and later UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. He has also written biographies of the founding father of the modern Irish state, Sean Lemass and of the playwright Brendan Behan.