William Jay Smith
- Died:
- August 18, 2015, Pittsfield, Massachusetts (aged 97)
William Jay Smith (born April 22, 1918, Winnfield, Louisiana, U.S.—died August 18, 2015, Pittsfield, Massachusetts) was an American lyric poet who was known for his precision and craftsmanship and for his variety of subjects and styles.
The son of an army officer, Smith spent much of his early life on a U.S. Army post, a period he recalled in Army Brat: A Memoir (1980; reissued 1991). After attending Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri (B.A., 1939; M.A., 1941), he served in the U.S. Navy from 1941 to 1945. He subsequently did graduate work at Columbia University and at the Universities of Oxford and Florence. He taught at several colleges and universities, served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1960 to 1962, and in 1968–70 was consultant in poetry to the U.S. Library of Congress (now poet laureate consultant in poetry).
Smith’s first published collections, Poems (1947) and Celebration at Dark (1950), reveal the breadth of his narrative range and his surprising fealty to metered and rhyming verse. He began to experiment with free verse in The Tin Can, and Other Poems (1966). Smith’s other works include Plain Talk: Epigrams, Epitaphs, Satires, Nonsense, Occasional, Concrete, and Quotidian Poems (1988), The World Below the Window: Poems, 1937–1997 (1998), The Cherokee Lottery: A Sequence of Poems (2000), and The Girl in Glass: Love Poems (2002).
Smith began collecting his whimsical and nonsense poems for children in Laughing Time (1955) and Boy Blue’s Book of Beasts (1957). His later collections of children’s poetry include Puptents and Pebbles: A Nonsense ABC (1959), Typewriter Town (1960), Ho for a Hat! (1964; rev. ed., 1989), Laughing Time: Collected Nonsense (1990), and Around My Room (2000). He also edited several volumes of children’s poetry.
Smith made a reputation as a translator with versions of Poems of a Multimillionaire by Valéry Larbaud (1955) and Selected Writings of Jules Laforgue (1956), and he edited and translated other poetry from several languages, including Federico García Lorca’s Songs of Childhood (1994). His The Spectra House (1961) is a study of well-known literary hoaxes and lampoons.