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| Sassoon, Siegfried (Lorraine) |
1886 -- 1967 |
| Poet, novelist. Born September 8, 1886 in Brenchley, Kent. Sassoon
spent his childhood at the family home in Weirleigh, in the protected and somewhat
rarefied atmosphere of a family near the center of the late Victorian and Edwardian
literary and artistic world. He was formally educated at Marlborough School and at Clare
College, Cambridge, and began publishing poems privately in 1906. However, Sassoon's
distinctive voice was not heard until the publication of his war poems--in The Old
Huntsman (1917) and Counter-attack (1918). He was the first of the younger
Georgian poets to react violently against sentimentally patriotic notions of the glories
of war; these poems have an extraordinary vigor--a stridency of tone, in fact--expressing
with unconcealed irony and in colloquial terms a passionate hatred of the horrors of war.
Some of Sassoon's contemporaries produced poems that addressed more seriously the
confusion of values that World War I revealed; but none responded with such passion or
with such hatred of the ignorance and folly that permitted such pain. Sassoon's poems of the 1920s--represented in Satirical
Poems (1926 and 1933) and in The Road to Ruin (1933--although they set out to
satirize the corruptions and the pretensions of a disintegrating and confused
materialistic society, were more controlled, artificial, less intense--and vastly less
effective than the war poems.
Perhaps Sassoon's reputation will ultimately rest on his prose
works. The Memoirs of George Sherston (1937), his three-volume fictional
autobiography, describes, on one level at least, the way of life and the decline in
influence of the educated, cultivated, English country gentry during the first quarter of
the 20th century. More significantly, it delineates the decay of a culture and the
character of an age. It is composed of Memoirs of a Foxhunting Man (1928), Memoirs
of an Infantry Officer (1930), and Sherston's Progress (1936). Sassoon later
wrote three volumes of direct autobiography to complement his Sherston trilogy. They are
brilliant evocations of characters and patterns of life in one period, but they remain
fundamentally the explorations of a man whose own experience, whose own alienation, is by
no means representative. These volumes are The Old Century and Seven More Years
(1938), The Weald of Youth (1942), and Siegfried's Journey (1945).
The latter half of Sassoon's life was lived in semiretirement
from the world of pressing public issues and changing literary values. His critical
biography of George Meredith, published in 1948, valued Meredith largely for his
"freedom of spirit" and for his unimpaired, instinctive love of nature. Sassoon
died in Warminster, Wiltshire, on September 1, 1967. |
| Owen,
Wilfred |
1893 -- 1918 |
| Poet, born near Oswestry, Shropshire, WC England, UK. He studied at the Birkenhead
Institute and at Shrewsbury Technical School, left England to teach English in Bordeaux
(1913), and began to write. Wounded in World War 1, he was sent to recuperate near
Edinburgh, where he met Siegfried Sassoon, who encouraged his poetry writing. His poems,
expressing a horror of the cruelty and waste of war, were first collected in 1920 by
Sassoon and reappeared in 1931 with a memoir by Edmund Blunden. Several were set to music
by Britten in his War Requiem (1962). The Collected Poems were published in 1963. He was
killed in action on the Western Front on his return to France, a week before the armistice |
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