Hugh McCrae

Hugh Raymond McCrae OBE (4 October 1876 – 17 February 1958) was an Australian writer, noted for his poetry.

Life and career

McCrae was born in Melbourne, the son of the Australian author George Gordon McCrae and grandson of the painter and diarist Georgiana McCrae. Originally he trained as an architect, but later took up drawing, writing and acting,[1] settling eventually in Sydney and later in the New South Wales town of Camden. His works are notable for a sense of lightness and delicacy, and he produced, in addition to a volume of memoirs, a considerable body of verse, and a light operetta, an edition of his grandmother's journal, and a volume of prose pieces.[2]

McCrae starred as Australian poet Adam Lindsay Gordon in W. J. Lincoln's 1916 feature film The Life's Romance of Adam Lindsay Gordon, shot in and around Melbourne. In the 1920s, Australian-born composer John Gough set McCrae's poem "Song of the Rain" (from the collection Colombine) to music.[3] McCrae wrote a fantasy play, The Ship of Heaven, which was produced by the Independent Theatre in 1933, for which Alfred Hill composed and conducted the music.[4]

McCrae was well known to a number of distinguished figures in Australian artistic and literary circles. He is remembered for his friendships with Norman Lindsay and Kenneth Slessor, but he was also friendly with such figures as Christopher Brennan and Shaw Neilson.[2] At one time he shared an apartment in New York with Pat Sullivan, the creator of Felix the Cat. When a film about Felix the Cat was being planned, "Sullivan suggested that McCrae should do the drawings while he (Sullivan) supplied the ideas. McCrae refused and has regretted it ever since."[1]

McCrae was awarded the OBE in 1953.[1] Writing after his death in 1958, Mary Gilmore declared that he was Australia's "most outstanding poet", that his poetry "came diamond-like in its perfection of form". "Nothing was too small or too great to attract him," she wrote, adding that "no matter how swallow-like he skims a surface, the deeps are below; he never wrote the shallow."[5] However, he has not retained his critical standing, and is now esteemed mostly as the poet who first offered "an alternative to the balladry that had dominated Australian poetry".[6] Judith Wright called him "a singer, not a thinker, [who] freed the notion of poetry from the portentousness of the Nationalist and radical schools".[7]

After McCrae married Nancy Adams in Melbourne in May 1901, they moved at once to Sydney.[7] They had three daughters. She died in 1943. He married Janet Le Brun in July 1946, but their marriage was dissolved in 1948.[7]

Bibliography

  • Satyrs and Sunlight (1909)
  • Colombine (1920)
  • Idyllia (1922)
  • The Du Poissey Anecdotes (1922)
  • Satyrs and Sunlight (1928; Fanfrolico Press)
  • Georgiana's Journal (edited, 1934)
  • My Father and My Father's Friends (1935)
  • The Mimshi Maiden (1938)
  • Poems (1939)
  • Forests of Pan (1944)
  • Voice of the Forest (1945)
  • Story-Book Only (1948)
  • The Ship of Heaven (1951)
  • The Best Poems of Hugh McCrae (1961)
gollark: > December 2012, a massive solar storm knocks out the power grid. Three hundred million Americans are suddenly faced with a survival situation. They have no water, electricity or fuel. Food rapidly disappears from the store shelves, not to be replaced. Only three percent will survive. Those three percent will have much in common. What does it take to be one of them?
gollark: * e
gollark: Economics tend to happen regardless of your opinion on them.
gollark: Being fictional, that cannot actually tell you what would happen.
gollark: I acknowledge that it might in smallish groups, but we don't and can't live in those.

References

  1. Bradish, C. R. (2 May 1953). "Playboy of the Poetic World". Sydney Morning Herald: 9.
  2. "Biography of Hugh McCrae". PoemHunter. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  3. Penton, Brian (4 May 1929). "Australia: Discovered by England: The Work of John Gough". Sydney Morning Herald: 13.
  4. "Independent Theatre". Sydney Morning Herald: 10. 7 October 1933.
  5. Gilmore, Mary (26 February 1958). "Farewell, Hugh McCrae". Tribune: 7.
  6. Wilde, William H.; Hooton, Joy; Andrews, Barry (1994). The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature (2nd ed.). South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. p. 488. ISBN 978-0-19-553381-1.
  7. Martha Rutledge and Norman Cowper. "McCrae, Hugh Raymond (1876–1958)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
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