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  1. William Henry Davies (3 July 1871 [a] – 26 September 1940) was a Welsh poet and writer, who spent much of his life as a tramp or hobo in the United Kingdom and the United States, yet became one of the most popular poets of his time.

    • Welsh
    • Helen Matilda Payne, (m. 5 February 1923)
    • Poet, writer, tramp
  2. W. H. Davies (retrato de Harold Knight) Durante ese período inició su actividad como poeta. Gracias a la ayuda y al apoyo de George Bernard Shaw y de Edward Thomas, en 1905 consiguió publicar su primera colección de poemas, Soul's Destroyer and Other Poems, que obtuvo un éxito notable. William Henry Davies forma parte del movimiento de los ...

  3. In his poems, grounded in realism, Davies often engaged themes of hardship, the natural world, and city life. His 20 collections of poetry include The Soul’s Destroyer and Other Poems (1905), Nature...

  4. William Henry Davies (born July 3, 1871, Newport, Monmouthshire, Wales—died Sept. 26, 1940, Nailsworth, Gloucestershire, Eng.) was an English poet whose lyrics have a force and simplicity uncharacteristic of the poetry of most of his Georgian contemporaries.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The Complete Poems of W. H. Davies. Born in Chicago, scholar and poet Ralph Mills earned a BA from Lake Forest College and an MA and PhD from Northwestern University, and also studied at Oxford University. Mills is the author of 13 volumes of poetry, including Living with Distance (1979), winner of the Society of Midland Authors...

  6. DAVIES, WILLIAM HENRY (1871 - 1940), poet and author | Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Name: William Henry Davies. Date of birth: 1871. Date of death: 1940. Spouse: Helen Davies (née Payne) Parent: Mary Ann Davies. Parent: Francis Boase Davies. Gender: Male. Occupation: poet and author. Area of activity: Literature and Writing; Poetry.

  7. Biography. The Welsh poet William Henry Davies wrote the poem ‘Leisure’, which famously begins:‘What is this life if, full of care,/We have no time to stand and stare.’. The poem’s theme is reflected in Daviess own outdoor life, which was unconventional. Leaving Wales, he worked and begged his way across America, losing a leg in an ...