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Day-Lewis gives father's papers to Oxford

Actor Daniel Day-Lewis and sister Tamasin have donated the literary archive of their father poet Cecil Day-Lewis to Oxford University's Bodleian Library. 2009 file photo. UPI/Rune Hellestad
Actor Daniel Day-Lewis and sister Tamasin have donated the literary archive of their father poet Cecil Day-Lewis to Oxford University's Bodleian Library. 2009 file photo. UPI/Rune Hellestad | License Photo

OXFORD, England, Oct. 30 (UPI) -- Actor Daniel Day-Lewis and sister Tamasin have donated the literary archive of their father poet Cecil Day-Lewis to Oxford University's Bodleian Library.

Cecil Day-Lewis, one of the most notable Angle-Irish poets of the 20th Century, was a member of the Auden group of poets and intellectuals in the 1930s, the BBC reported.

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He was elected professor of poetry at Oxford in 1951 and appointed Poet Laureate in 1968.

Day-Lewis also wrote mystery novels and short stories under the pseudonym of Nicholas Blake.

A symposium celebrating his life and work opened at the Bodleian Library Tuesday, The Guardian reported.

Chris Fletcher, keeper of special collections, said a number of items are being displayed for the first time, including a letter from W.H. Auden that contains constructive criticism of a poem Day-Lewis sent him.

Also being displayed is a limited edition of a poem Day-Lewis wrote to mark the birth of his son Daniel.

Fletcher admitted the competition for the Day-Lewis archives was strong with U.S. institutions having much more money at their disposal.

"If the manuscripts had ended up outside the country it would have saddened us all as a family," Tamasin and Daniel Day-Lewis said.

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