Paul Selver


Paul Selver was an English writer and translator. A prolific translator of Czech literature into English, he was best known as the translator of Karel Čapek.

Life

Paul Selver was born to a Jewish family, the son of Wolfe and Catherine Selver. He gained a B.A. in English and German from the University of London. After serving in the army during World War I he became a translator, novelist, and contributor to Alfred Richard Orage's magazine The New Age.
Selver spoke and translated from several Germanic and Slavonic languages. In World War II he was a linguistic assistant to the exiled Czech government, but was dismissed when the Communists took over. In 1968 he was awarded a Civil List pension for his services to literature. He died on 6 April 1970, his wife having died six months earlier.

Works

Translations

An anthology of modern Bohemian poetry. London: Henry J. Drane, 1912Modern Russian poetry: texts and translations, London & New York: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, & co., 1917.

Novels

Schooling, London: Jarrolds, 1924.One, Two, Three, London : Jarrolds, 1926.Private Life, London : Jarrolds Publishers Ltd, 1929.

Poetry

Personalities, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1918A baker's dozen of tin trumpets, and two others of different metal, London, S. Nott, 1935.

Autobiography

First movement. London, 1937.

Other

The chameleon and four other tales by Anton Chekhov. London: Kegan Paul & Co., 1916.
  • 'London mourning', Today, No. 30, Vol. 5 Otakar Březina : a study in Czech literature, Oxford : B. Blackwell, 1921.Czech self-taught by the natural method with phonetic pronunciation: Thimm's system. London: E. Marlborough & Co, ltd., 1927.Masaryk: a biography, London: M. Joseph, 1940Czechoslovak literature, an outline, London : G. Allen & Unwin, 1942Slovníček Anglického Slangu. Glossary of English slang with Czech equivalents. London: G. Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1942A century of Czech and Slovak poetry, London: New Europe Publishing Co.; Prague Press, 1946.English phraseology. A dictionary containing more than 5,000 idiomatic and colloquial words and expressions, London, J. Brodie, 1957.Orage and the New Age circle: reminiscences and reflections, London: Allen & Unwin, 1959France under Napoleon III', London: James Brodie, 1961.
  • 'Preface' to Song out of darkness: selected poems by Vera Rich. London : Mitre Press, 1961.More English phraseology : a supplementary volume to the popular 'English phraseology', Bath: James Brodie, 1965The Art of Translating Poetry, London: John Baker Publishers Ltd., 1966