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D. B. Wyndham-Lewis (1891–1969)

Author of The Stuffed Owl: An Anthology of Bad Verse

30+ Works 767 Members 22 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Sometimes wrote as Timothy Shy. Not to be confused with the painter and novelist Wyndham Lewis.

Works by D. B. Wyndham-Lewis

The Stuffed Owl: An Anthology of Bad Verse (1930) — Editor — 246 copies
The Man Who Knew Too Much [1934 film] (1934) — Screenwriter — 166 copies
The world of Goya (1968) 28 copies
Ronsard (1944) 20 copies
Charles of Europe, (1931) 19 copies
Beyond the Headlines (1941) 6 copies
Molière, the comic mask (1959) 5 copies

Associated Works

Dandyism (PAJ Books) (1845) — Translator, some editions — 106 copies
Saints for Now (1952) — Contributor — 103 copies
The St Trinian's Story (1959) — Contributor — 96 copies
Murder for Christmas, Vol. 2 (1982) — Contributor — 87 copies
A Century of Humour (1934) — Contributor — 42 copies
The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor (1963) — Contributor — 5 copies
Arthur Machen: A Biography (1963) — Introduction — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Wyndham-Lewis, D. B.
Legal name
Wyndham-Lewis, Dominic Bevan
Other names
Shy, Timothy
Mustard and Cress
Birthdate
1891-03-09
Date of death
1969-11-21
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK
Places of residence
Cardiff, Wales, UK
Paris, France
Seaforth, Merseyside, England, UK
Occupations
columnist
journalist
biographer
humorist
screenwriter
Organizations
Welch Regiment, British Army (WWI)
Daily Express
Daily Mail
Awards and honors
Royal Society of Literature (Fellow)
Disambiguation notice
Sometimes wrote as Timothy Shy. Not to be confused with the painter and novelist Wyndham Lewis.

Members

Reviews

2023 movie #167. 1935. Hitchcock remade this movie in '55 with Doris Day and Jimmy Stewart. The '35 version has a great performance by Peter Lorre (as the bad guy of course). Apparently Lorre's 1st English role, he learned his lines phonetically. Pretty good film.
 
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capewood | 2 other reviews | Nov 4, 2023 |
Strangely lacking in modulation. Characters' emotions barely flutter when they or their loved ones are threatened. Even a massive shootout is just a dragged out series of intermittent shots -- no escalation, no buildup; every once in a while someone drops dead. The 1956 version isn't my favorite Hitchcock, but it's a thousand times more kinetic.
 
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gretchgriff | 2 other reviews | Oct 10, 2023 |
Illus by Beerbohm. J.M. Dent: London, 1930. 2nd edition, purchased Tavistock, 2004. Earlier edition.

Though many bad verses here derive from lesser poets like Dyer, Colley Cibber, M. Cavendish (Duchess of Newcastle), Cottle, Dobell and R. Montgomery, big names abound: Cowley, Dryden, Longfellow, Addison, Isaac Watts, even Keats, Browning and Tennyson. Longfellow he faults for a single Latin comparative, “Excelsior.”
Cowley you recall starred in Sam Johnson’s critique of the metaphysicals. Curiously, Abraham opposed Donne’s preferred puns in his "Ode. Of Wit,"
"’Tis not when like words make up one noise;
Jests for Dutch Men, and English Boys."
Oddly, he adds,
"Nor upon all things to obtrude
And force some odd similitude."
“Evidently he considered his own ‘odd similitudes’— very largely drawn, by Donne’s example, from the learned languages of science and religion—conventional comparisons” —quoted from my Ph.D. thesis, This Critical Age, p.76. In “Friendship in Absence,” Cowley’s poem on being separated from his love, he compares their love to stars’ conjunctions, but soon uses classical allusion defending wit:
’tis not without Cause that she,
Who fled the God of Wit, was made a tree.”
Or as Marvell has it, “Apollo hunted Daphne so/ Only that she might Laurel grow,” wittily arguing that A desired poetry, the Laurel, not Daphne herself. (My This Critical Age focused on metapoetry in mid-17C England— Cleveland and Marvell, following 16C Berni and DuBellay “Contre Les Petrarquistes.”)
Wyndham Lewis includes Cowley’s “Ode Upon Dr. Harvey,” starting with Nature a virgin, unknown, until Harvey appeared, and Nature
"Began to tremble and to flee,
Took sanctuary, like Daphne, in a tree;
There Daphne’s lover stop, and thought it much
The very leaves of her to tourh,
But Harvey, our Apollo, stops not so,
Into the bark and root he after her did go..

He so exactly does the work survey
As if he hired the workers by the day." (p.25)

Others besides Shelley wrote of the Skylark, like James Hogg,
"Bird of the wilderness,
Blithesome and cumberless." (3)

R.W. Emerson is included, his verse, not essays. His bust features in my U.U Church, New Bedford MA, because he was our interim minister in 1831; he may have learned to reject communion from our own Mary Rotch, who left the service when communion was served. (Forgive making communion sound like a restaurant.) Emerson’s “Efficiency,”
Earth, crowded, cries, “Too many men!”
My counsel is, kill nine in ten,
And bestow the shares of all
On the remnant decimal.
Add their nine lives to this cat.. (165)
Contrast his great poem, “The Titmouse,” (chickadee) where he concludes that a Chickadee saved him, miles from home in a blizzard, its birdtalk very like Caesar’s:
I, who dreamed not when I came here
to find the antidote of fear
Now hear thee say in Roman key,
Paean! Veni, Vidi, Vici.
(Poems of R.W.Emerson.Walter Scott: London, n.d)

D.B. Wyndham Lewis fully expects a few readers to “dash this volume to the book-shop floor, crying derisively that one might as well pay admission to South Kensington to find the glass cases full of dead mice and little bits of string” (vii). He does not include faults in verse craftsmanship, suggests what makes it bad, “The most obvious tint is bathos: that sudden slip and swoop and slither as down a well-buttered slide”(x).
… (more)
 
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AlanWPowers | 8 other reviews | Apr 6, 2022 |

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