Peter Levi

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Peter Levi

Frampton-on-Severn
, Gloucestershire, England
EducationHeythrop College,
Campion Hall
GenrePoetry

Peter Chad Tigar Levi,

Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford
(1984–1989).

Early life and education

Levi was born in

religious orders
.

He was educated in private

Campion Hall. During his teenage years he suffered from polio
and as an undergraduate was knocked down by a car – the after-effects of these were to affect him throughout his life. [3][1]

While at Heythrop, then a country house near

Chipping Norton
in Oxfordshire, he was not the most ruly of seminarians. This and possible doubts about his vocation led to his ordination being delayed for a year:

"We used to translate psalm [119] Beati immaculati in via at Heythrop as Blessed are those who are not spotted on the way out. I was spotted too often...."[2]

This delay had the side effect of enabling his first visit to Greece in 1963. He travelled through Afghanistan with Bruce Chatwin in 1970, looking for traces of Greek culture.

After the priesthood

He left the priesthood in 1977. He subsequently married Deirdre Craig (granddaughter of Lord Craigavon), widow of Cyril Connolly.

He spent a year as archaeological correspondent for

Oxford Professor of Poetry
, an appointment requiring only a minimal number of public lectures.

In 1988, he claimed to have found a previously unknown poem by William Shakespeare in a manuscript at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California.[4] However, the claim has not been accepted by most scholars.

Works

Most of this data retrieved from British Library catalogue July 2006.

Poetry

Autobiography and travel

Greece and the ancient world

Biography and literature

Translations

Religious

Articles and lectures

Novels

References

  1. ^ a b Forbes, Peter (3 February 2000). "Peter Levi". The Guardian. London.
  2. ^ a b Levi, Peter. (1980) The Hill of Kronos.
  3. ^ Mitchell J (3 February 2000). "Obituary: Peter Levi". The Independent (London). Retrieved 14 June 2007. [dead link]
  4. ^ Raines, Howell (22 April 1988). "Obscure Poem, Oxonian Argues, Is Shakespeare's". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 May 2010.

External links