Kenneth Slessor

Kenneth Adolf Slessor OBE (27 March 1901  30 June 1971)[1] was an Australian poet, journalist and official War Correspondent in World War II. He was one of Australia's leading poets, notable particularly for the absorption of modernist influences into Australian poetry.[2] The Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry is named after him.

Early life

Slessor was born Kenneth Adolphe Schloesser[3] in Orange, New South Wales.[1] As a boy, he lived in England for a time with his parents[4][5] and in Australia visited the mines of rural New South Wales with his father, a Jewish mining engineer whose father and grandfather had been distinguished musicians in Germany (Dutton 1991, 1–2).

His family moved to Sydney in 1903. Slessor attended Mowbray House School (1910–1914) and the Sydney Church of England Grammar School (1915–1918),[1] where he began to write poetry. His first published poem was in 1917 about a digger in Europe, remembering Sydney and its icons. Slessor passed the 1918 NSW Leaving Certificate with first-class honours in English and joined the Sydney Sun as a journalist. In 1919, seven of his poems were published. He married for the first time in 1922.[2]

Career

Slessor made his living as a newspaper journalist, mostly for the Sydney Sun, and was a war correspondent during World War II (1939–1945).[1] Slessor counted Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Jack Lindsay among his friends.

As the Australian Official War Correspondent during World War II, Slessor reported not only from Australia but from Greece, Syria, Libya, Egypt, and New Guinea.[4][6]

Slessor also wrote on rugby league football for the popular publication Smith's Weekly.[7]

Poetry

The bulk of Slessor's poetic work was produced before the end of the Second World War. His poem "Five Bells"—relating to Sydney Harbour, time, the past, memory, and the death of the artist, friend and colleague of Slessor at Smith's Weekly, Joe Lynch—remains probably his best known poem, followed by "Beach Burial", a tribute to Australian troops who fought in World War II.

In 1965, Australian writer Hal Porter wrote of having met and stayed with Slessor in the 1930s. He described Slessor as:

...a city lover, fastidious and excessively courteous, in those qualities resembles Baudelaire, as he does in being incapable of sentimentalizing over vegetation, in finding in nature something cruel, something bordering on effrontery. He prefers chiselled stone to the disorganization of grass.[8]

Awards

In the New Year's Honours of 1959, Slessor was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) for services to literature.[9]

Personal life

At the age of 21, Slessor married 28-year old Noëla Glasson in Ashfield, Sydney, on 18 August 1922. Noëla died of cancer on 22 October 1945.[2]

He married Pauline Wallace in 1951; and a year later celebrated the birth of his only child, Paul Slessor,[4] before the marriage dissolved in 1961.

Death

He died alone and suddenly of a heart attack on 30 June 1971[4] at the Mater Misericordiae Hospital, North Sydney.

Bibliography

Poetry collections

Essays/prose

Edited

Recognition

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "MS 3020 Papers of Kenneth Adolf Slessor (1901–1971)". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Haskell, Dennis (2002). "Slessor, Kenneth Adolf (1901–1971)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: Australian National University.
  3. "Incandescent Ivor Indyk turns down the heat" by Miriam Cosic, The Australian (26 February 2011);
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Stewart 1977, 52; Slessor, Haskell, and Dutton 1994; Haskell 2002, 16:261 via Adele J. Haft "Introduction to Maps and Mapping in Kenneth Slessor's Poetic Sequence The Atlas"
  5. A. Haft article refs (1908–1910: Slessor 1970, 253)
  6. A. Haft article refs (1940–1944: Slessor 1970, 67; Dutton 1991, 120)
  7. Headon, David (October 1999). "Up From the Ashes: The Phoenix of a Rugby League Literature" (PDF). Football Studies Volume 2, Issue 2. Football Studies Group. Retrieved 7 July 2009.
  8. Porter (1965) p. 40
  9. It's an Honour

Sources

External links