Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Gavin Ewart

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Name
  
Gavin Ewart


Role
  
Poet


Died
  
October 25, 1995, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
All my little ones, Selected Poems 1933-1993

Education
  
Christ's College, Cambridge, Wellington College, Berkshire

Awards
  
Michael Braude Award for Light Verse

The flamingo poem by gavin ewart alto and guitar wmv


Gavin Buchanan Ewart (4 February 1916 – 25 October 1995) was a British poet who contributed to Geoffrey Grigson's New Verse at the age of seventeen.

Contents

Poem into song the ending by gavin ewart


Life

Ewart was born in London and educated at Wellington College before entering Christ's College, Cambridge where he received a B.A. in 1937 and an M.A. in 1942.

After active service as a Royal Artillery officer during World War II, he worked in publishing and with the British Council before becoming an advertising copywriter in 1952. He lived at Kenilworth Court in Putney, London, and a blue plaque at Kenilworth Court commemorates this.

Poetry

From the age of 17, when his poetry was first printed in Geoffrey Grigson's New Verse, he acquired a reputation for wit and accomplishment through such works as Phallus in Wonderland and Poems and Songs, which appeared in 1939 and was his first collection.

The Second World War disrupted his development as a poet, however, and he published no further volumes until Londoners of 1964, although he did write the English lyrics for the "World Song" of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. From 1964 he produced many collections, which included The Gavin Ewart Show (1971), No Fool like an Old Fool (1976), All My Little Ones (1978), The Ewart Quarto (1984), and Penultimate Poems (1989). The Collected Ewart: 1933-1980 (1980) was supplemented in 1991 by Collected Poems: 1980-1990.

The intelligence and casually flamboyant virtuosity with which he framed his often humorous commentaries on human behaviour made his work invariably entertaining and interesting. The irreverent eroticism for which his poetry is noted resulted in W. H. Smith's banning of his The Pleasures of the Flesh (1966) from their shops.

As an editor he produced numerous anthologies, including the Penguin Book of Light Verse (1980). He was the 1991 recipient of the Michael Braude Award for Light Verse.

Ewart's life and poetry are the subject of a book entitled Civil Humor: the Poetry of Gavin Ewart by Stephen W. Delchamps (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002).

Honours

  • Cholmondeley Award, 1971
  • References

    Gavin Ewart Wikipedia