Friday, August 01, 2014

Q&A…

… World War I Poets: An Interview With Alfred Corn — Jonathan Hobratsch. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Actually, poems about what is sometimes called "the Great War" continued to be written for decades after the fact, by poets who were not contemporaries of the event. The best-known example is Philip Larkin's "MCMXIV," with the famous lines "Never such innocence,/Never before or since."

1 comment:

  1. Rupert Brooke died early in the war, without seeing action, so he seems an odd choice to include. David Jones ought to make the list, for In Parenthesis, whatever its faults, is a remarkable work. And it is worth mentioning that Robert Graves eventually omitted his WW I poetry from his Collected Poems. "Remembering War" stuck through the 1940s but was gone by the 1960s.

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