The War Poetry of Siegfried Sassoon | |
Siegfried Sassoon | |
The First World War gave rise to a large body of deeply | |
poignant poets; but few can claim the moving profundity of | |
Siegfried Sassoon. The son of the disinherited scion of a | |
wealthy Jewish family, Alfred Sassoon, and an Anglican, | |
Theresa Thornycroft, Sassoon had enough independent wealth | |
that before the war he mostly played cricket and wrote | |
traditional, nature-focused, Romantic-style verse. Upon | |
enlistment, however, and his lengthy stints on the Western | |
front, his poetry rapidly became dark, tormented verse, | |
contemplating the nightmare of the trenches, staring down | |
the barrels of guns and the glinting points of | |
bayonets---and driving them into enemies, as well. Haunted | |
by the war his whole life, Sassoon found peace and solace | |
only in his later years, upon conversion to the Catholic | |
religion; but his poetry of the war years, his most powerful | |
and affective work, should be mandatory reading for those | |
who have the public trust, and is profitable for the rest of | |
us, as well. 65pp., index of first lines. | |
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