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・ Charles Castonguay
・ Charles Castronovo
・ Charles Casuscelli
・ Charles Cathcart
・ Charles Cathcart, 2nd Earl Cathcart
・ Charles Cathcart, 7th Earl Cathcart
・ Charles Cathcart, 8th Lord Cathcart
・ Charles Cathcart, 9th Lord Cathcart
・ Charles Cathmer Ross
・ Charles Catlow
・ Charles Catteau
・ Charles Catterall
・ Charles Catton
・ Charles Catton the younger
・ Charles Caulfield
Charles Causley
・ Charles Cave
・ Charles Cavendish
・ Charles Cavendish (general)
・ Charles Cavendish (Nottingham)
・ Charles Cavendish Boyle
・ Charles Cavendish, 1st Baron Chesham
・ Charles Cavendish, 3rd Baron Chesham
・ Charles Cavendish, 7th Baron Chesham
・ Charles Cavendish, Viscount Mansfield
・ Charles Cavendish-Bentinck (priest)
・ Charles Cavilla
・ Charles Cawetzka
・ Charles Cawley
・ Charles Cawthorne


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Charles Causley : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Causley

Charles Stanley Causley, CBE, FRSL (24 August 1917 – 4 November 2003) was a Cornish poet, schoolmaster and writer. His work is noted for its simplicity and directness and for its associations with folklore, especially when linked to his native Cornwall.
== Life and work ==

Causley was born at Launceston in Cornwall and was educated there and in Peterborough. His father died in 1924 from long-standing injuries from the First World War. Causley had to leave school at 15 to earn money, working as an office boy during his early years. He served in the Royal Navy during the Second World War, as a coder, an experience he later wrote about in a book of short stories, ''Hands to Dance and Skylark''. His first collection of poems, ''Farewell, Aggie Weston'' 〔(Aggie Weston )〕 (1951) contained his "Song of the Dying Gunner A.A.1":

Farewell, Aggie Weston, the Barracks, at Guz,
Hang my tiddley suit on the door
I'm sewn up neat in a canvas sheet
And I shan't be home no more.

"Survivor's Leave" followed in 1953, and from then until his death Causley published frequently. He worked as a teacher at a school in Launceston, leaving the town seldom and reluctantly, though he twice spent time in Perth as a visiting Fellow at the University of Western Australia, and worked at the Banff School of Fine Arts in Canada, and especially after his retirement which taken early in 1976 〔''Guardian'' obituary; by Wendy Trewin〕 was much in demand at poetry readings in the United Kingdom. He made many broadcasts.
An intensely private person, he was nevertheless approachable. He was a friend of such writers as Siegfried Sassoon, A. L. Rowse, Jack Clemo and Ted Hughes (his closest friend). His poems for children were popular, and he used to say that he could have lived comfortably on the fees paid for the reproduction of "Timothy Winters":

Timothy Winters comes to school
With eyes as wide as a football-pool,
Ears like bombs and teeth like splinters:
A blitz of a boy is Timothy Winters.
--first verse
So come one angel, come on ten:
Timothy Winters says "Amen
Amen amen amen amen."
Timothy Winters, Lord. Amen.
--last verse

In 1958, Causley was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and was awarded a CBE in 1986. When he was 83 years old he was made a Companion of Literature by the Royal Society of Literature: he greeted this award with the words, 'My goodness, what an encouragement!' Other awards include the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 1967 and a Cholmondeley Award in 1971. In 1973/74 he was Visiting Fellow in Poetry at the University of Exeter, receiving an honorary doctorate from that university on 7 July 1977.〔Laurence Green (2013) ''All Cornwall Thunders at My Door: A Biography of Charles Causley.'' Sheffield: The Cornovia Press, p173 ISBN 978-1-908878-08-3〕 He was presented with the Heywood Hill Literary Prize in 2000. Between 1962 and 1966 he was a member of the Poetry Panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain. He was twice awarded a travelling scholarship by the Society of Authors. There was a campaign to have him appointed Poet Laureate on the death of John Betjeman, but to the people of his home town, he became "the greatest poet laureate we never had". He was interviewed by Roy Plomley on ''Desert Island Discs'' on 1 December 1979: his music choices included five classical selections and three others while his chosen book was ''Boswell's Life of Johnson''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher = Charles Causley Society )

In 1982, on his 65th birthday, a book of poems was published in his honour that included contributions from Ted Hughes, Seamus Heaney, Philip Larkin and twenty-three other poets, testifying to the respect and indeed love that the British poetry community had for him. His work, influenced by W. H. Auden, is intensely original and many consider him to be, as Betjeman was, a man working outside of the dominant trends of the poetry of his day. Because of this, academia has paid less attention to his work than it might have done. His popularity, particularly among the Cornish, remains high.

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