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Vita Sackville-West’s book-length blank verse poems The Land (1926) and The Garden (1946) are unique in English poetry as the twentieth century’s sole exemplars of Virgilian formal georgic. This chapter discusses both poems in their historical context, reading them as distinguished receptions of classical as well as English literary models. The chapter focuses on Sackville-West’s recalibrations of Virgil, and assesses the implications of her work on conceptions of the georgic genre with regard to didacticism, linguistic experiment, aesthetic achievement and ideas about empire and national identity.
The poetry of the First World War would normally be seen in terms of a transition from the fantasies of war to the realities of war, or from the ‘pro-war’ to the ‘anti-war’, from immature Owen to mature Owen, from Rupert Brooke to Siegfried Sassoon. And yet some of the most important poetry to emerge during these years was arguably either unrelated to the realities of war or barely engaging with it: Edward Thomas’s poetry (published 1917 and 1918), for instance, does not easily fit into any critical approach that emphasises the blood and mud of the trenches. Or, as the title of Ivor Gurney’s collection Severn and Somme (1917) would suggest, any emphasis on the Western Front was seen in relation to home: an imagined home untouched by war, or a home of the past and future. This chapter shows how the poetry of the ‘war poets’ frequently has as much to do with Britain’s domestic affairs as with the fighting itself, exploring themes that all connect somehow to social inequality and social unrest: topics such as class, home ownership, poverty, the role of the Church, women’s careers, national identity, access to education, access to beauty, and the relationship between town and country.
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