Basil Payne

Life
1928- ; b. 23 June, Dublin; ed. CBS Synge St. and UCD; worked as a health insurance administator level (snr. management), to 1971; winner of Guinnes International Poetry Prize, 1964; became full-time writer, 1972; lectured in English at at Rutgers Univ., and Univ. of California; Governor’s Special Citation for unique contribution to the Arts in New Jersey, USA, 1975; poetry coll. inc. Sunlight on a Square (1961); Love in the Afternoon (1971); Another Kind of Optimism (1974); Voyage à Deux (1974); Why are There So Many Blind People in Philadelphia (1979), and Aspects of Love (1979); short stories and plays, In Dublin’s Quare City; My Dublin, My America, and I Celebrate Myself and You; contrib. num. reviews to Irish Times and film reviews for RTE Radio, resp. in 1960s and 1970s; reputation injured by reckless and illiberal profile in Robert Hogan’s Dictionary of Irish Literature (1979); recipient of Arts Council Bursaries in the 1980s; wrote and performed solo, Be Free With Me (Abbey 1984); also Songs of Love, solo recital (National Concert Hall, 1989). DIW DIL

[ top ]

Notes
A website (authorised) at www.basilpayne.net contains a page entitled “Literary Assassination” and dealing with the anonymous entry in Robert Hogan, ed., Dictionary of Irish Literature (1979) - quoted in full - which the poet abstained from suing solely on account of the financial costs involved. The site contains numerous poems.

[ top ]


Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)