Nobel laureate & Caribbean poet Derek Walcott dies
2017-03-18 19:09:53 GMT+814035km to Beijing
EditorZhang Ruijun
Poet, playwright and Nobel laureate Derek Walcott died Friday after a long illness at his home on the Caribbean island of St Lucia at the age of 87.
Born on St Lucia on January 23, 1930, Walcott started writing as a young child, encouraged by his teachers, and published his first collection of poems in his late teens.
After studying in Jamaica he moved to Trinidad, where he worked as an arts critic and in 1959 set up the Trinidad Theatre Workshop, which produced a number of his plays.
He leapt to prominence in the literary world with the 1962 publication of "In a Green Night", which brought together poems he wrote between 1948 and 1960.
Derek Walcott, a Saint Lucian poet, playwright, writer and visual artist, is pictured here in the Lakeside Theatre, University of Essex, where he was a professor of Poetry. /CFP Photo
He went on to become hugely prolific, publishing around 20 books of poetry and dozens of plays, with recurring themes including the Caribbean and its turbulent history, colonialism and post-colonialism.
His best-known work is his epic poem "Omeros", published in 1990 and freely inspired by Homer's Iliad and Odyssey.
Walcott won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1992 "for a poetic oeuvre of great luminosity, sustained by a historical vision, the outcome of a multicultural commitment," the committee said.
Even then he remained relatively little known, even if fellow writers had long recognized his talent.
Nobel Literary Prize Winner Derek Walcott at home /CFP Photo
"He has a better command of the English language than any living English writer," said British poet and novelist Robert Graves.
Walcott never published a novel during his career, which spanned nearly seven decades.
"Towards my 20th year, I wrote the worst novel that could be written, and it was a blessing to lose the manuscript," he told France's Le Figaro newspaper, shortly after his Nobel win was announced.
St Lucia, which is home to fewer than 200,000 inhabitants, has produced two Nobel laureates, the other being Arthur Lewis, who won the prize for economics in 1979 and died in 1991.