ABSTRACT

First published in 1976. Poets from Homer and Virgil to Tennyson and Hardy have written much about armed conflict on land and sea but it was not until the end of the First World War that the term War Poetry was used to describe not merely that verse which took war as its subject but a kind of poetry which had not been written before, a literature which did not celebrate the martial virtues but one which was created by those who had endured battle and described in exact and often brutal terms just what it was like to be a fighting man in the first Great War of the twentieth century. This is a collection of essays on the following poets: Keith Douglas; Alun Lewis; Sidney Keyes; Roy Fuller; Alan Ross and Charles Causley; Henry Reed and others and American Poets of the Second World War.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction: Setting the Scene

chapter |29 pages

Keith Douglas

chapter |22 pages

Alun Lewis

chapter |21 pages

Sidney Keyes

chapter |18 pages

Roy Fuller

chapter |21 pages

Alan Ross and Charles Causley

chapter |38 pages

Henry Reed and others

chapter |66 pages

American Poets of the Second World War

chapter |2 pages

Notes

chapter |3 pages

Select Bibliography