Dannie Abse (born September 22, 1923, Cardiff, Wales—died September 28, 2014) was a Welsh poet, playwright, essayist, and novelist, known for his unique blend of Welsh and Jewish sensibilities.
Abse was reared in Cardiff. He trained as a physician at King’s College, London, and qualified as a doctor at Westminster Hospital in 1950. From 1949 to 1954 he edited a literary magazine, Poetry and Poverty, and from 1951 to 1955 he served in the Royal Air Force, working as a chest-medicine specialist at the Central Medical Establishment in London. He remained there as a civilian physician—all the while pursuing his writing career—until 1989.
Best known for his poetry, Abse wrote his first book of verse, After Every Green Thing (1949), in a declamatory style. Walking Under Water (1952) followed. He established his mature voice and his reputation with Tenants of the House (1957), in which he addressed moral and political concerns with parables. Poems, Golders Green (1962) explores the poet’s outsider identities: as a Welshman and Jew in London, as a suburban householder with a poet’s temperament, and as a doctor in a gritty urban neighbourhood. With that volume, Abse’s work became increasingly personal, a trend continued in A Small Desperation (1968) and the acclaimed Funland (1973), a nine-part extended allegory on the quest for meaning in a madhouse world.
Way Out in the Centre (1981; U.S. title, One-Legged on Ice) further explores, with his characteristic dark wit, Abse’s life as a doctor. White Coat, Purple Coat: Collected Poems, 1948–1988 was published in 1989 and Remembrance of Crimes Past: Poems 1986–1989 in 1990. He ruminated on his youth in Wales in Welsh Retrospective (1997). Later collections include Arcadia, One Mile (1998), New and Collected Poems (2003), Running Late (2006), and New Selected Poems (2009). Abse reminisced about his nearly 60-year marriage in the collections Two for Joy: Scenes from Married Life (2010) and Speak, Old Parrot (2013); the latter, published the year he turned 90, also contained meditations on aging and loss.
Among Abse’s works in prose, the most noted of his novels is Ash on a Young Man’s Sleeve (1954). There Was a Young Man from Cardiff (1991) is a sequel. The Strange Case of Dr. Simmonds & Dr. Glas (2002) concerns a disfigured physician influenced by the Swedish novel Doktor Glas (1905). Abse’s theatrical works include House of Cowards (1960), a darkly comic examination of the expectation of salvation; The Dogs of Pavlov (1973), an exploration of how average men allow themselves to do evil; and Pythagoras (1979), in which he used archetypal characters to dramatize the conflict between the rational and the magical. Abse wrote a memoir of his early years, A Poet in the Family (1974), which was later republished as part of the more-expansive autobiography Goodbye, Twentieth Century (2001). The Presence (2007) is a record of his grief over the death of his wife in 2005. He also published several volumes of essays (many on medical themes) and edited a number of poetry anthologies.
Abse was president of the British Poetry Society in 1978–92. He was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2012.