English classicist, writer, and translator (1905–1986)
Reginald "Rex" Ernest Warner (9 March 1905 – 24 June 1986) was an English classicist, writer, and translator who is best remembered for The Aerodrome (1941).[1][2] Warner was described by V. S. Pritchett as "the only outstanding novelist of ideas whom the decade of ideas produced".[3]
After his graduation, Warner spent time teaching, some of it in Egypt.[8] Warner's debut story, "Holiday", appeared in the New Statesman in 1930.[6] His first collection, Poems, appeared in 1937. His poem, "Arms in Spain", a satire on Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy's support for Francoist Spain and the Nationalist faction in the Spanish Civil War, has often been reprinted.[9] He was also a contributor to Left Review. Warner was a great admirer of Franz Kafka and his fiction was "profoundly influenced" by Kafka's work.[5] Warner's first three novels all reflect his anti-fascist beliefs; The Wild Goose Chase is in part a dystopian fantasy about the overthrow of a tyrannical government in a heroic revolution.[10][11] His second novel, The Professor, published around the time of the Nazi Anschluss, is the story of a liberal academic whose compromises with a repressive government lead eventually to his arrest, imprisonment, and murder "while attempting to escape". Contemporary reviewers saw parallels with the Austrian leaders Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt Schuschnigg.[2][10]
Although Warner was initially sympathetic to the Soviet Union, "the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact left him disillusioned with Communism".[6]The Aerodrome is an allegorical novel whose young hero is faced with the disintegration of his certainties about his loved ones, and with a choice between the earthy animalistic life of his home village and the pure, efficient, and emotionally detached life of an airman.[2]The Times described The Aerodrome as Warner's "most perfectly accomplished novel".[5]Why Was I Killed? (1943) is an afterlife fantasy with an anti-war theme.[6]
Warner then abandoned contemporary allegory in favour of historical novels about Ancient Greece and Rome, including Imperial Caesar, for which he was awarded the 1960 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction. Imperial Caesar was praised by John Davenport as "delightfully perceptive and funny" and by Storm Jameson as "brilliant, intelligent, continuously interesting. It has everything."[12]The Converts, a novel about Saint Augustine and dedicated it to the Greek poet and diplomat George Seferis, reflected Warner's own increasing devotion to Christianity.[5]
Warner served in the Home Guard during the Second World War and also worked as a Latin teacher at a Grammar School in Morden as there was a shortage of teachers.[5] From 1945 to 1947, he was in Athens as director of the British Institute. At that time, he became involved in numerous translations of classical Greek and Latin authors. His translation of Thucydides' History of the Peloponnesian War for Penguin Classics sold over a million copies.[6] He also translated Poems of George Seferis (1960). Warner's time in Greece coincided with the early stages of the Greek Civil War, which ended with the Greek Communists defeated and suppressed. This formed the background to his book Men of Stones: A Melodrama (1949), depicting imprisoned leftists presenting King Lear in their prison camp. In 1961, Warner was appointed Tallman Professor of Classics at Bowdoin College. From 1962 to 1973, he was a professor at the University of Connecticut. While he was in the United States, he was interviewed for the book Authors Take Sides on Vietnam (1967) and argued for withdrawal from Indochina.[13]
Personal life
Warner retired to England in 1973 and died in Wallingford, Oxfordshire, in 1986. He was married three times but to two women. His first marriage was to Frances Chamier Grove in 1929.[5] Their marriage ended in divorce and in 1949 Warner married Barbara, Lady Rothschild, formerly the wife of Baron Victor Rothschild.[5] Warner and his wife Frances had three children. He had further children including a daughter Anne, who wrote about the relationship between Warner and her mother (when he was not married) in the book The Blind Horse of Corfu. After his second divorce, he remarried his first wife in 1966.[3]
Works
Novels
The Wild Goose Chase (1937)
The Professor (1938)
The Aerodrome (1941)
Why Was I Killed? (1943; US title: Return of the Traveller, 1944)
On the Greek Style: Selected Essays in Poetry and Hellenism by George Seferis (1967, translated by Warner and T. D. Frangopoulos, with an introduction by Warner)
↑"The Aerodrome". Trash Fiction. 2004. Retrieved 15 December 2025.
123Hopkins, Chris (2007). English Fiction in the 1930s: Language, Genre, History. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp.138–157. ISBN0826489389.
↑Hoskins, Katharine Bail (1969). Today the Struggle: Literature and Politics in England during the Spanish Civil War. University of Texas Press. p.230.
12Montefiore, Janet Montefiore (1996). Men and Women writers of the 1930s: The Dangerous Flood of History. Routledge. pp.16, 170, 201. ISBN0415068924.
↑Clute, John (1994). "Warner, Rex". In Clute, John; Nicholls, Peter (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. London: Orbit. pp.1299–1300. ISBN1-85723-124-4.
↑"Advertisement for Imperial Caesar". Encounter. November 1960. p.81.
↑Woolf, Cecil; Bagguley, John, eds. (1967). Authors Take Sides on Vietnam. Peter Owen. p.47).
Further reading
Flynn, James (1974). Politics in the Novels of Rex Warner (1974).
Reeve, N. H. (1989). The Novels of Rex Warner: An Introduction (1989).
Tabachnick, Stephen E. (2002). Fiercer Than Tigers: The Life and Works of Rex Warner.
Papers Pertaining to Rex Warner, MSS 6251; 20th Century Western and Mormon Americana; L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University