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International Poetry of the First World War

by Dr Constance M. Ruzich

Ranging far beyond the traditional canon, this ground-breaking anthology casts a vivid new light on poetic responses to the First World War. Bringing together poems by soldiers and non-combatants, patriots and dissenters, and from all sides of the conflict across the world, International Poetry of the First World War reveals the crucial public role that poetry played in shaping responses to and the legacies of the conflict.Across over 150 poems, this anthology explores such topics as the following:· Life at the Front· Psychological trauma· Noncombatants and the home front· Rationalising the war· Remembering the dead· Peace and the aftermath of the warWith contextual notes throughout, the book includes poems written by authors from America, Australia, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Russia, and South Africa.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Author Biography

Constance M. Ruzich is a Professor of English at Robert Morris University, USA. She runs the popular blog Behind Their Lines , dedicated to the discussion of the poetry of World War I.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents IntroductionSoldiers' Lives Fragment Rupert BrookeThe Transport John Allan WyethThe Night Patrol Arthur Graeme WestIn No Man's Land Ewart Alan MackintoshOn Patrol in No Man's Land James Reese EuropeWar Song Albert-Paul Granier (trans. Ian Higgins)Dance of Death 1916 Hugo Ball (trans. Edmund Potts)Trench Poets Edgell RickwordVigil Giuseppe Ungaretti (trans. Jonathan Griffin)The Moles Cyril Morton HorneThe Song of the Mud Mary BordenStill Raining… Noël Garnier (trans. Ian Higgins)The Boys Who Live in the Ground Donald S. WhiteA Digger's Disillusion K.L. TrentDuring the Bombardment Theodore Percival Cameron WilsonCricket: The Catch Frederick William HarveyThe Rainbow Leslie CoulsonThe Star-Shell Patrick MacGillBack to Rest William Noel HodgsonAfter the "Offensive" Theodore Herman van BeekBeaucourt Revisited A.P. HerbertRelieved Frederic ManningPicnic: Harbonnières to Bayonvillers John Allan WyethThe Bathe A.P. HerbertGoing In Henry Lamont SimpsonA Song of the Air Gordon AlchinTo a Taube Jessie PopeThe Hill Mary BordenAmmunition Column Gilbert FrankauUnloading Ambulance Train Carola OmanGramophone Tunes Eva DobellQuinze Vingt Helen MackayLittle Song of the Maimed Benjamin Péret (trans. David Gascoyne)Minds at WarStanding To Anton Schnack (trans. Patrick Bridgwater)Night Watch John Allan WyethNothing Much Guillaume Apollinaire (trans. Martin Sorrell)The Face Frederic ManningIII.—Fear Herbert ReadFever Albert-Paul Granier (trans. Ian Higgins)Prayer before Battle Alfred Lichtenstein (trans. by Sheldon Gilman, Robert Levine, and Harry Radford)Retreat Wilfrid Wilson GibsonThere is a healing magic in the night Colwyn PhilippsBivouacs Gilbert WaterhouseGoing Over Charles G.D. RobertsHome Francis LedwidgeOn the Plains of Picardy Hugh Stewart SmithPicardy Parodies No. 2 (W.B. Y--ts) William Oliphant DownA Lament and Sing Me to Sleep Patrick MacGillSelections from "Rhymes from a New Nursery" and "Alphabet of Limericks" Robert EassiePershing at the Front Arthur GuitermanLeft Behind Harry L. ParkerA Kiss Bernard Freeman TrotterAlbade Ford Madox Hueffer (Ford Madox Ford)To C.H.V. Robert Ernest VernèdeThe Raindrops on Your Old Tin Hat John Hunter WickershamCamouflage M.G.Picnic Rose MacaulaySeptember, 1918 Amy LowellHome Is Where the Pie Is AnonymousThe Soldier Mood William Kersley HolmesNoncombatants The Leaf Burners Ernest RhysBurning Beehives Edmond Rostand (trans. Ian Higgins)Going to the Front Hardwicke Drummond RawnsleyHymn of Hate Ernst Lissauer (trans. Barbara Henderson)New Year's Wishes to the German Army Émile Cammaerts (trans. Tita Brand-Cammaerts)Regiments Lucie Delarue-Mardrus (trans. Ian Higgins)Penelope Dorothy ParkerVisé Maria Dobler Benemann (trans. Margaret Higonnet)Homes Margaret WiddemerAfter the Retreat May SinclairA Memory Margaret SackvilleMay, 1915 Charlotte MewAny Englishwoman Evelyn UnderhillI know the truth! Renounce all others! Marina TsvetaevaIn Hospital Edith NesbitSomme Film, 1916 C.H.B. KitchinThe Ballad of Bethlehem Steel Grace Isabel ColbronThe Farmer, 1917 Fredegond ShoveSpreading Manure Rose MacaulayI Sit and Sew Alice Moore Dunbar-NelsonTo the Patriotic Lady Across the Way Zelda (Rose Pastor Stokes)Portrait of a Mother Violet GillespieThe Mourners Robert W. ServiceWhen Will the War Be By? Charles MurrayWar Time Mary E. FullertonGone to the War Bernard Samuel GilbertSic Transit— Vera BrittainFrance May Wedderburn CannanMaking Sense of WarI Saw a Man This Morning Patrick Shaw-StewartA Meditation upon the Return of the Greeks Ivar CampbellA Litany in the Desert Alice Corbin (Henderson)He Went for a Soldier Ruth Comfort MitchellWar Mary GilmoreWar Hedd Wyn (trans. Gillian Clarke)The Falling Leaves Margaret Postgate (Cole)Eastern Front Georg Trakl (trans. Christopher Middleton)The Camp Follower Maxwell BodenheimThe Other Side Alec WaughA Letter from the Front Henry NewboltSinging "Tipperary" William Kersley HolmesO Little David, Play on Your Harp Joseph Seamon Cotter, Jr.To the Memory of Some I Knew Who Are Dead and Who Loved Ireland A.E. (George William Russell)America at War Gertrude SmithViolets—April 1915 Roland LeightonHigh Barbary James Howard StablesEpiphany Vision Mary-Adair MacdonaldAt Bethlehem—1915 Egbert T. SandfordVeni, Sancte Spiritus! Yann-Ber Kalloc'h/Jean-Pierre Calloc'h (trans. Ian Higgins)Solomon in All His Glory Geoffrey Studdert KennedyTo My Daughter Betty, the Gift of God Thomas M. Kettle'Since They Have Died' May Wedderburn CannanThe Gift of India Sarojini NaiduIn the Ypres Sector Carola OmanRemembering the DeadLet Us Tell Quiet Stories of Kind Eyes Geoffrey Bache SmithFéri Bekassy Frances CornfordTelling the Bees Katharine TynanIn Memoriam Ewart Alan MackintoshAt the Front Wilhelm Klemm (trans. Patrick Bridgwater)To L.H.B. (1894 – 1915) Katherine MansfieldTo John William GrenfellSoldier-Poet Hervey AllenVictory Wilfrid Wilson GibsonThe Son Clifford DymentOut in a Gale of Fallen Leaves Marian AllenXX. Jo's Requiem Ernest RhysAnzac Cove Leon GellertTo One Dead Francis Ledwidge1914 Ferenc BékássyRed Cross John MasefieldOnly a Boche Robert W. ServiceGlad That I Killed Yer and The Bullet Joseph LeeHallow-e'en, 1915 Winifred M. LettsHis Latch-Key John OxenhamTo the Dead Gerald Caldwell SiordetPerhaps— Vera BrittainNew Year, 1916 Ada May HarrisonReported Missing…. Anna Gordon Keownfrom "An Epilogue": The Fluke and The Landscape J.C. SquireElegy on the Death of Bingo, Our Trench Dog Edward de SteinAftermathNovember Eleventh Hilmar R. BaukhageParis, November 11, 1918 May Wedderburn CannanRemembrance Day Marion AngusVictory, whose calm gaze… Anna de Noailles (trans. Ian Higgins)To the Survivors Carola OmanThe Extra Gladys CromwellRecall-Up Marcel Sauvage (trans. Ian Higgins)Saturdays E.W. PigottThe Mascot Speaks RagsThe Heart of the World Joshua Henry Jones, Jr.The Dead René Arcos (trans. Ian Higgins)Reconciliation Margaret SackvilleEverything's looted, betrayed and traded Anna Akhmatova (trans. A.S. Kline)The Other Possibility Erich Kästner (trans. Walter Kaufmann)High Wood John Stanley Purvis/Philip JohnsonEnvoie Edward de SteinAcknowledgmentsPrimary SourcesFurther ReadingIndex of Poets, Translators, and PoemsIndex of Poem Titles and First Lines

Review

[Includes] some first-class verse unfamiliar to many readers ... well worth reading. * Times Literary Supplement *
Here is a superb anthology and work of scholarship that, in an astonishing feat of literary archaeology, cuts through the smoke and noise of the First World War to present us with poems that have been hidden in history's unforgiving mud for far too long. The poems are illuminated and set in context and I hope that they will now take their place alongside the small number of First World War poems that everyone knows so well. Here is poetry's abundance in the face of horror. * Ian McMillan, Poet *
Ruzich successfully broadens the scope of First World War poetry and has created an important volume of both literary and historic value. * The Great War Group *
A rich, valuable, and rare collection of poetry from the Great War. * Roads to the Great War *
Their experiences were real; their suffering immense, yet the works of Owen, Sassoon and Graves represent a narrow aperture of wartime experience. In her extraordinary new anthology, Constance Ruzich brings together some of these familiar figures with an impressive range of lesser known voices. * Verseville *
Constance Ruzich tells the story of the Great War through an astonishingly wide array of poetic voices of different races, nationalities, and temperaments. After each poem, Ruzich paints short, penetrating portraits of these poets, their world, and the insights they captured in verse. We are in Ruzich's debt for expanding the canon and for enabling us to hear wonderful voices most of us have never heard before. * Jay Winter, Charles J. Stille Professor of History Emeritus, Yale University, USA *

Promotional

Brings together 140 poems from across the world to take readers beyond the narrow canon of First World War Poetry.

Review Quote

"Ruzich successfully broadens the scope of First World War poetry and has created an important volume of both literary and historic value." -- The Great War Group "Here is a superb anthology and work of scholarship that, in an astonishing feat of literary archaeology, cuts through the smoke and noise of the First World War to present us with poems that have been hidden in history's unforgiving mud for far too long. The poems are illuminated and set in context and I hope that they will now take their place alongside the small number of First World War poems that everyone knows so well. Here is poetry's abundance in the face of horror." -- Ian McMillan, Poet "A rich, valuable, and rare collection of poetry from the Great War." -- Roads to the Great War "Their experiences were real; their suffering immense, yet the works of Owen, Sassoon and Graves represent a narrow aperture of wartime experience. In her extraordinary new anthology, Constance Ruzich brings together some of these familiar figures with an impressive range of lesser known voices." -- Verseville

Promotional "Headline"

Brings together 140 poems from across the world to take readers beyond the narrow canon of First World War Poetry.

Feature

Brings together in one volume a an innovative selection of 140 poems about the First World War

Details

ISBN1350226068
Short Title International Poetry of the First World War
Pages 416
Language English
Year 2022
ISBN-10 1350226068
ISBN-13 9781350226067
Format Paperback
Publication Date 2022-04-21
Subtitle An Anthology of Lost Voices
DEWEY 808.819358
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Place of Publication London
Country of Publication United Kingdom
NZ Release Date 2022-04-21
UK Release Date 2022-04-21
Author Dr Constance M. Ruzich
Edited by Constance M. Ruzich
Audience Tertiary & Higher Education
AU Release Date 2022-04-20

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