David McKee Wright was an Irish-born poet and journalist, active in and
Background
Wright was born at Ballynaskeagh, County Down, Ireland, the second son of Review William Wright, Doctor of Divinity (1837-1899), a Congregational missionary working in Damascus, scholar and author, and his wife Ann (d1877), née McKee, daughter of the Review David McKee, an educationist and author
David Wright was born while his parents were home on furlough and was left with a grandmother (Rebecca McKee) until he was seven years old.
Education
Wright was educated at the local Glascar School and then from 1876 in England at Mr Pope"s School and the Crystal Palace School of Engineering, London. He studied for the Congregational ministry and Wright studied divinity from 1896 at the University of Otago.
Career
Wright migrated to in 1887 and spent several years as a rabbiter on stations in Central Otago. During this time he wrote in both prose and verse for major provincial newspapers about station life. Wright had done a lot of private reading, but found that apart from English his education was generally below that of the other students.
Wright published four volumes of ballads, Aorangi and other Verses (1896), Station Ballads and other Verses (1897), Wisps of Tussock (1900), and Chimes (1900).
As a clergyman Wright was liked, but he found the work uncongenial and gave it up for journalism in which he had considerable experience in Wright married Elizabeth Couper at Dunedin on 3 August 1899. A son David was born in 1900, but the marriage failed.
Wright joined the Mail as parliamentary reporter in 1907. Wright moved to Sydney in 1910 and did a large amount of successful freelance work for the Sun, The Bulletin, and other papers.
Wright was editor of the Red Page of The Bulletin 1916–1926 and encouraged many of the rising writers of the time, and continued to do a large amount of writing himself in both prose and verse.
Much of this appeared over pen-names such as "Pat O"Maori" and "Mary McCommonwealth" and much was signed with his initials. As Wright grew older his mind turned more and more to the country of his birth, he published his most important volume, An Irish Heart (1918). Neither of these poems has been published in book form.
From 1912-1918 Wright lived with the writer "Margaret Fane" (Beatrice Florence Osborne, 1887-1962) in Sydney.
They had four sons. From 1918 Wright lived with Zora Cross in Greeanawn, Glenbrook, Blue Mountains. He died there on 5 February 1928.
The couple had two daughters, Davidina Wright and April McKee Wright (also known as April Hersey), who went on to write at least one wartime thriller. Though much of a Bohemian, something of the clergyman still clung to him.
Zora Cross, in An Introduction to the Study of n Literature, gave him a high position among n poets.
Charming though An Irish Heart may be, it is too derivative to be work of the highest kind. lieutenant is not a question of individual words or phrases, but rather of a man steeping himself in the modern Irish school of poetry, and with all the skill of his practised craftsmanship reproducing its spirit in another land. A large amount of his work, including some short plays, has never been collected.