Ivor Gurney
by John Lucas 2021-01-10 06:22:47
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Drawing on biographical information, letters, reminiscences and anecdotes, John Lucas pieces together Gurney''s difficult, indeed tragic life, in order to show that Gurney''s poetry, while undoubtedly affected by his mental problems, his trench exper... Read more
Drawing on biographical information, letters, reminiscences and anecdotes, John Lucas pieces together Gurney''s difficult, indeed tragic life, in order to show that Gurney''s poetry, while undoubtedly affected by his mental problems, his trench experiences in World War One, and his complexrelationship to Gloucester, the Cotswalds and London, is the sane utterance of a deeply radicalized writer. There is no suggestion that Gurney''s experiences were unique. On the contrary, they were typical, as he well knew, and as he declares in poems which celebrate the implications of comradeship.What is unique is Gurney''s ability to turn these experiences into major poetry. Gurney is the greatest of all those poets who fought in and survived the war and his achievement drastically affects our understanding of twentieth century poetry. Less
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  • Print pages
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  • ISBN
  • 8.31 X 5.39 X 0.39 in
  • 144
  • Oxford University Press
  • January 22, 2001
  • English
  • 9780746308875
Author
John Lucas is an investigative journalist based in Essex, East of England. He was the chief crime correspondent for the region’s major newspaper, _The Echo_, and his work now regularly appears in na...
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