Elizabeth Jennings

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This article is about the English poet. See Lizzie Jennings for the American civil rights figure of the same name.

Elizabeth Jennings (July 18, 1926October 26, 2001) was an English poet, noted for her clarity of style and simplicity of literary approach. Her Roman Catholicism coloured much of her work. She always made it clear that, whilst her life, which included a spell of severe mental illness, contributed to the themes contained within her work, she did not write explicitly autobiographical poetry.

She was born in Lincolnshire, but her family moved to Oxford when she was six. There she later attended St Anne's College. After graduation, she became a librarian.

She is not generally regarded as an innovator. Her work displays a simplicity of metre and rhyme that she shares with Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis and Thom Gunn, all members of the group of English poets known as The Movement.

Her works include An Anthology of Modern Verse 19401960 (1961), and a revised and updated collection, Collected Poems 19531985, (1986) that won the 1987 WH Smith Literary Award.

She is buried in Wolvercote Cemetery, Oxford.

[edit] Works

  • Poems (1953)
  • A Way of Looking at Penus (1955)
  • A Sense of the World (1958)
  • Song For a Birth or a Death (1961)
  • Recoveries (1964)
  • The Mind has Tities (1966)
  • Collected Poems 1967 (1967)
  • The Animals' Arrival (1969)
  • Lucidities (1970)
  • Relationships (1972)
  • Growing Points (1975)
  • Consequently I Rejoice (1977)
  • After the Ark (1978)
  • Moments of Grace (1980)
  • Celebrations and Elegies (1982)
  • Extending the Territory (1985)
  • Collected Poems (1953-1985) (1986)