Peter Porter (born Feb. 16, 1929, Brisbane, Queen., Austl.—died April 23, 2010, London, Eng.) was an Australian-born British poet whose works are characterized by a formal style and rueful, epigrammatic wit.
Porter was educated in Australia and worked as a journalist before settling in 1951 in London, where he worked as a clerk, a bookshop assistant, an advertising copywriter, and a critic. His first volumes of poetry, beginning with Once Bitten, Twice Bitten (1961), reflect a satirical approach to modern society and to his own experiences. Porter’s other works include Poems Ancient & Modern (1964), A Porter Folio (1969), The Last of England (1970), Preaching to the Converted (1972), The Cost of Seriousness (1978), English Subtitles (1981), Fast Forward (1984), The Automatic Oracle (1987), Millennial Fables (1994), Afterburner (2004), and Better than God (2009). Two of his poetry collections were illustrated by famed Australian painter Arthur Boyd.
Porter received many honours, notably the Duff Cooper Prize (1983), the Whitbread (now Costa) Poetry Award (1988), the Gold Medal for Australian Literature (1990), and the Queen’s Gold Medal (2002). In 2007 he was made a Companion of the Royal Society of Literature.