Derek Stanley Savage (6 March 1917 â 14 October 2007) was an English Christian anarchist, a pacifist poet and critic. British historian David Goodway described him as 'one of the most highly regarded literary critics of the 1940s'. He was General Secretary of the Anglican Pacifist Fellowship from 1960 to 1962.
Savage was born in Essex and brought up in Cheshunt in Hertfordshire. He went to Hertford Grammar School and the Latymer School, Edmonton and then a commercial college. He became a convinced Christian pacifist. In 1938 he married Constance Kiernan. They had six children.
In the Second World War a tribunal accepted his conscientious objection to conscription. In a letter written in 1942, he informed George Orwell that Hitler required "not condemnation, but understanding". In 1947 the family moved to Cornwall, initially to a dilapidated cottage in the Heligan Woods and then into the village of Mevagissey. Savage died in 2007, aged 90.
According to Trevor Tolley, Savage was associated with the following 'leftist' writers in the 1940s: George Woodcock, Alex Comfort, J. F. Hendry, Norman McCaig, Derek Stanford. In Cornwall, his associates included Louis Adeane, Dick Kitto, Mary Lee Settle, W. S. Graham, Nessie Dunsmuir, Frank Baker, Lionel Miskin and Bernie Moss.
His 1944 book The Personal Principle: Studies in modern poetry gave his strong views on contemporary poetry. His controversial critical book The Withered Branch (1950) attacked the twentieth-century novels of Ernest Hemingway, E. M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, Margiad Evans, Aldous Huxley and James Joyce. His last book of poetry, Winter offering: selected poems 1934âÂÂ1953, was issued by the Leavisite Brynmill Press in 1990.
He contributed chapters to books, for example, , , and . Also he contributed many articles, reviews and poems to magazines such as Twentieth Century Verse, Life and letters today and The Phoenix, of which he became European Editor, in succession to Henry Miller. From Mevagissey he contributed many book reviews for The Spectator and Time and Tide.
Savage wrote as 'D.S. Savage'.