Strange Meetings provides a highly original account
of the War Poets of 1[zasłonięte]914-19, written through a series
of actual encounters, or near-encounters, from Siegfried
Sassoon's first, blushing meeting with Rupert Brooke
over kidneys and bacon at Eddie Marsh's breakfasts
before the war, through famous moments like Sassoon's
encouragement of Owen when both are in hospital at the
same time; on to the poignant meeting between Edward
Thomas's widow and Ivor Gurney in 1932; and the last,
strange lunch and 'longish talk' of Sassoon and David
Jones in 1964, half a century after the great war began.
Among the other poets and writers we encounter are Vera
Brittain, Roland Leighton, Robert Graves, Isaac
Rosenberg, Robert Nichols and Edmund Blunden. Ricketts's
unusual approach allows him to follow their
relationships, marking their responses to each other's
work and showing how these affected their own poetry -
one potent strand, for example, is the profound
influence of Brooke, both as a model to follow and a
burden to reject. The stories become intensely personal
and vivid - we come to know each of the poets, their
family and intellectual backgrounds and their very
different personalities.And while the accounts of
individual lives achieve the imaginative vividness of a
novel, they also give us an entirely fresh sense of
Georgian poetry, conveying all the excitement and
frustration of poetic creation, and demonstrating how
the whole notion of what poetry should be 'about' became
fractured and changed for ever by the terrible
experiences of the war. |
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