The Trench Poets of Modernism

Origins and Characteristics

  • The First World War (1914-18) gave rise to war poetry.
  • Poets who wrote about the war and its horrors, especially in the trenches, are called the War Poets or Trench Poets.
  • War poetry continued the tradition of Georgian poetry, characterized by an escape from actuality.
  • Example: E. W. Tennant describes soldiers in "Home Thoughts in Laventie" as "Dancing with a measured step from wrecked and shattered town. Away upon the Downs."
  • Approach and Style

  • Trench Poets viewed the horrors of war as a mere dream and considered the world of imagination as the only reality.
  • Following the Georgian tradition, they described incidents of war and the simple men caught in the catastrophe.
  • Their method was descriptive and impressionistic, lacking intense, sincere, and realistic approaches, thus failing to evoke the desired emotions in readers.
  • Notable Poets

    Siegfried Sassoon
  • Initially part of the Georgian group but shifted to a satiric and rebellious mood.
  • Believed soldiers were sacrificed for false idealism.
  • Example: "A decent chap who did his work and hadn't much to say" (A Working Party).
  • Described trench warfare horrors in "Suicide in Trenches" and public memory of war in "Song Books of the War".
  • Wilfred Owen
  • Influenced by Sassoon, expressed the harsh truth about war.
  • Believed poetry's purpose was to warn about the realities of war.
  • His poems combined disillusioned irony with hope for humanity.
  • Example: "I am the enemy you killed, my friend... Let us sleep now." (Strange Meeting).
  • Contributed to modern English poetry by introducing balance and parallelism.
  • William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939)

    Life and Influences

  • One of the most important modern poets, influenced his contemporaries and successors.
  • Irish by nationality, he couldn't reconcile with English habits and thinking.
  • A dreamer and visionary, believed in Irish folk-lore, fairies, gnomes, demons, and the truth of dreams.
  • Felt a stranger in a world dominated by science, technology, and rationalism.
  • Poetic Beliefs

  • Believed modern civilization effaced fundamental consciousness.
  • Trusted in imagination and admired ages when it reigned supreme.
  • Delved into folklore and mythology, discovering the primitive and perennial throb of life.
  • Anti-rationalist, believed in magic, occult influences, and hypnotism.
  • Led the 'revolt of the soul against the intellect', seeking a more conscious exercise of human faculties.
  • Symbolism

  • Believed in the magic of words, rediscovering symbols that appealed to common humanity.
  • Evoked a complex of emotions through indirect strokes, sometimes requiring commentary.
  • Example: "Do you not hear me calling white deer with no horns? I have been changed to a hound with one red ear!" (The Poet Pleads with the Elemental Powers).
  • Common symbol: 'the moon', representing life's mystery.
  • Yeats' Poetry

  • Aimed to reform poetry by connecting the ancient with the present.
  • Early poems like "The Wanderings of Oisin" express deep idealism in primitive tales.
  • WWI and Irish disturbances directed him towards more realism.
  • Combined earthly passions with unearthly visions in lyrics like "The Wild Swans at Coole", "The Tower", and "The Winding Stair".
  • Later poetry exhibited a hard, athletic, and metallic glint, influenced by Imagists.
  • Believed a revolutionary change was imminent, described in "Second Coming".
  • Influenced modern poetry with his sincerity, personality, and genius.
  • Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888)

    Life and Education

  • Greatest among modern English poets, influenced modern poetry significantly.
  • Born in 1888 in the USA, educated at Harvard, Paris, and Oxford, settled in England.
  • Poetic Philosophy

  • Combines traditional classicism with innovative styles.
  • Sees literature as a continuous process where the present contains the past.
  • Classicism stands for order, poise, and right reason, following the permanent spirit of tradition.
  • Innovations

  • Rejected traditional literary language, creating a new medium for modern life.
  • Influenced by Ezra Pound, introduced colloquial and archaic words for profound effects.
  • Major Works

    The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (1917)
  • Expresses disillusionment, irony, and disgust at modern life.
  • The Waste Land
  • Surveys the desolate world, seeking meaning amid chaos.
  • The Hollow Men (1925)
  • Reflects on the emptiness and futility of modern existence.
  • Four Quartets
  • Burnt Norton, East Coker, The Dry Salvages, and Little Gidding explore the eternal Now where past, present, and future blend.
  • Influence and Legacy

  • A many-sided personality: classicist, innovator, critic, poet, social philosopher, and mystic.
  • Made the age conscious of itself, highlighting the dangers of modern civilization.
  • Expressed ideas in a language devoid of superfluous ornamentation, conveying the terrifying aspects of modern life.
  • Poets after T. S. Eliot

    W. H. Auden

  • Settled in America before WWII, viewed the Waste Land as symbolic of modern civilization's depression.
  • Early poetry reflects imminent crisis; later poetry adopts a contemplative, religious approach.
  • Uses symbols and images from everyday life.
  • Stephen Spender

  • Initially influenced by Auden, expressed sympathy for the working classes.
  • Developed a quiet, autobiographical style.
  • Cecil Day Lewis

  • Early poetry influenced by Auden, later reflective and reminiscent with Victorian diction.
  • Known for profound knowledge of technique, imagery primarily rural, and elegiac tone.
  • Other Important Poets

  • Louis MacNeice, Edith Sitwell, Robert Graves, Roy Campbell, Geoffrey Grigson, George Barker, and Dylan Thomas.
  • Tendency towards Romanticism, influenced by Blake rather than Donne.
  • Dylan Thomas emphasizes unity of man with nature and the cosmic cycle of life and death.
  • Despite Romantic tendencies, Eliot's intellectual toughness and classicism still dominate.
  • Modern poetry trends towards Wordsworthian quietness.
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