Clifford Bax


Clifford Bax was a versatile English writer, known particularly as a playwright, a journalist, critic and editor, and a poet, lyricist and hymn writer. He also was a translator. The composer Arnold Bax was his brother, and set some of his words to music.

Life

He was born in Upper Tooting, south London. Education was at the Slade and the Heatherley Art School. He gave up painting to concentrate on writing.
Independent wealth gave Bax time to write, and social connections. He had an apartment in Albany, the apartment complex in Piccadilly, London. He was a friend of Gustav Holst, whom he introduced to astrology, the critic James Agate, and Arthur Ransome, among others. He met and played chess with Aleister Crowley in 1904, and kept up an acquaintance with him over the years, later in the 1930s introducing both the artist Frieda Harris and the writer John Symonds to him. An early venture was Orpheus, a theosophical magazine he edited. His interest in the esoteric extended to editing works of Jakob Boehme, and helping Allan Bennett, the Buddhist.
His first play on the commercial stage was The Poetasters of Ispahan, and he became a fixture of British drama for a generation. He was involved in the Phoenix Society, concerned with reviving older plays, and the Incorporated Stage Society.
He also edited, with Austin Osman Spare, Golden Hind, an artistic and literary magazine that appeared from October 1922 to July 1924.
A cricket enthusiast, he was a friend of C. B. Fry and wrote a biography of W. G. Grace.

Family

He married actress and jewellery-maker Gwendolen Daphne Bishop, née Bernhard-Smith, on 28 September 1910. Their daughter, Undine, was born 6 August 1911.
In 1927, Bax married Vera, née Rawnsley, a painter and poet. Rawnsley was previously married to Stanley Kennedy North, an artist, and Alexander Bell Filson Young, a journalist with whom she had two sons: William David Loraine Filson-Young and Richard Filson-Young; they—Bax's stepsons—were both killed in World War II.

Works