(sitting) and Beazley (standing) in 1908. Beazley was born in
Glasgow, Scotland on 13 September 1885, to Mark John Murray Beazley (died 1940) and Mary Catherine Beazley née Davidson (died 1918). He was educated at
King Edward VI School, Southampton and
Christ's Hospital, Sussex. certainly their relationship took place within what one biographer has described as "an aura of bisexuality". Among Beazley's other friends during this time were
John Maynard Keynes,
Lytton Strachey, and
Rupert Brooke. Beazley was a keen poet in his youth but abandoned it (and ceased even to speak of it) as his scholarly pursuits begun to take up all his time. Flecker addressed a poem to Beazley, an "invitation to a young but learned friend to abandon archaeology for the moment, and play once more with his neglected Muse".
T. E. Lawrence once commented of Beazley that "if it hadn't been for that accursed Greek art, he'd have been a very fine poet". Beazley and Flecker drifted apart as Beazley drifted away from poetry. ==Academic career==