20th C British and American Poetry
20th C British and American Poetry
Introduction
The centrality of Ezra Pound as the chief facilitator and proselytiser of modernity in Anglo-American
poetry is evident a century later. Pounds prescriptions for a musicalised prosody, that would free
English verse from the metronomic beat of the iambic pentameter, and the emphasis he placed on the
clarification of the poetic image, provide a definitive influence for the development and practice of
twentieth century verse. His explorations of simultaneist collage techniques, utilising the field of the
page as a template for composition, were encapsulated in the cardinal text of Modernist poetry,
T.S. Eliots The Waste Land, featured here in its 1922 edition.
In spite of the misguided allegiances of his later political associations, the Pound influence endures
across several generations. A second wave of American modernists emerged in the 1930s, labelling their
work Objectivist: the valuable edition of the Active Anthology included here is signed by Pounds great
contemporary, William Carlos Williams, and features major voices such as Louis Zukofsky, Basil Bunting
and George Oppen whose work has only recently come to prominence. The post-war explosion in
American poetry, best known for its counter-cultural emanation in the Beat movement, was equally
indebted to the pioneering experiments of the first wave of Modernists: Allen Ginsberg was a protg of
Williams, who modelled his declamatory style on Pounds expansionary experiments with the
potentialities of poetic rhythm.
An alternative pathway for this history can be identified through the French Symbolist inflection evident in
Wallace Stevens work. The New York poets who emerged contemporaneously with the Beats, including
John Ashbery and Frank OHara, incorporated European avant garde modes of composition, especially
those of Surrealism: their coolly ironic and intellectual poetry provides an obvious contrast to the
expressive and overtly political approach of Gregory Corso and Ginsberg. The exhibition presents an
extremely rare edition of Ashberys first volume, Turandot (1953), alongside Stevens important 1923
collection, Harmonium, to demonstrate this lineage of inheritance. The Cubist style of Gertrude Stein also
responded to the revolution in visual arts that was occurring on the continent, and provides another line
of influence for Ashbery and his tribe of contemporary followers, as well as for a range of visual and
sound poetries.
Yet the formalist approach which can be identified in the two great voices of early twentieth century
poetry, W.B. Yeats and Thomas Hardy, was never erased by these waves of poetic Modernism. The
Georgian style, of which Pound was so dismissive, can be traced in the work of the American, Robert
Frost; and it has a continuing relevance for English poets in particular (Philip Larkin was notably sustained
by the poetry of Hardy). The stark realities of World War One, as described by Siegfried Sassoon, and the
political exigencies of the Spanish conflict delineated by W.H. Auden and Roy Campbell (from opposing
sides) - required a more direct and traditional response. The same might be said for other great poetries
of witness, including those of the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s, which spoke for the first time of
African American experience in a language of candid expression.
These contending currents which emerged in poetry at the beginning of the twentieth century,
exemplified in the documents collected in this exhibition, therefore have a continuing significance for the
manifold controversies of poets in the present day.
Dr John Hawke,
School of English,Communications and Performance Studies
7. Pound, Ezra,
1885-1972.
Active anthology / edited
by Ezra Pound. (London :
Faber and Faber, 1933)
In a note to this publication Pound states, I am
presenting an assortment
of writers, mostly ill known
in England, in whose verse
The Imagists
23. Imagist anthologies
The Imagists were a group of poets who
gathered in London around 1910. Their aim
was to seek clarity and precision in their works,
avoiding emotional language and allowing their
ideas to communicate through the image itself.
The Japanese haiku flavour was apparent. T.
E. Hulme was the first of these, but the group
included, Ezra Pound, Richard Aldington,
D. H. Lawrence, F. S. Flint, Amy Lowell and
Hilda Doolittle (H.D.) They published annual
anthologies from 1914-1917. The first,
Des Imagistes, was edited by Pound; later
anthologies by Amy Lowell.
Penguin Poets
Wall Case 1
Poems in the shape of their subjects, and concrete poems which form patterns on their own,
have long been features of modern poetry. This
Arion Press portfolio includes many historical
examples, including possibly the most famous,
Mallarmes Un Coup de Des (1897). On
display are Gertrude Steins A Rose is a Rose
(1920), and Ian Hamilton Finlays Redboat
(1963).
Wall Case 2
32. OHara, Frank, 1926-1966.
Biotherm : (For Bill Berkson), lithographs
by Jim Dine ; essay by Bill Berkson. (San
Francisco : Arion Press, 1990)
Frank OHara was at Harvard with John Ashbery and later joined him in New York, where
they became part of the avant-garde art scene.
His poetry is urban in focus and more colloquial
than Ashberys. OHara died after he was hit
by a dune buggy at Fire Island Beach on Long
Island. The long poem, Biotherm, was published in Audit magazine in 1964.
Wall Case 3
Flat Case 1
Hardy, Yeats and Frost
Yeats changed his poetic style from the dreamlike verse of the Celtic twilight to a tougher,
more colloquial diction expressing personal and
contemporary themes. The war poem, An Irish
Airman Foresees His Death is a dramatic monologue which builds perfectly from its beginning,
I know that I shall meet my fate / Somewhere
among the clouds above; / Those I fight I do not
hate, / Those that I guard I do not love to its
end, A lonely impulse of delight / Drove to this
tumult in the clouds; / I balanced all, brought all
to mind, / The years to come seemed waste of
breath, / A waste of breath the years behind / In
balance with this life, this death.
Wall Case 4
34. Bishop, Elizabeth, 1911-1979
Visits to St. Elizabeths : (Bedlam) : for medium voice and piano / music by Ned Rorem ;
text by Elizabeth Bishop. (New York : Boosey
& Hawkes, 1964.)
In a note printed inside the cover, the composer
writes, The words of this song were written
after a visit by the poet to her colleague Ezra
Pound in the mental institution of Saint Elizabeths where Pound was interned for many years
after World War II. Elizabeth Bishop visited several times and wrote her poem in 1950. It was
first published in The Partisan Review, 1957.
The cover illustration is by Jean Cocteau.
During the war, Pound stayed in Italy where he
gave radio broadcasts critical of the US. He was
afterwards imprisoned and returned to Washington in 1945. Found mentally unfit for trial,
he was confined to St. Elizabeths Hospital for
the insane where he was visited by some of his
old friends. Pound was released in 1958, and
returned to Italy, where he died in 1972.
6
Flat Case 2
Georgian Poetry
41. Georgian poetry, 1911-1912;
1913-1915. (London : Poetry Bookshop,
1912, 1915)
These are the first two of five anthologies of
Georgian poetry, the final volume, for 19201922, appeared in 1922. It was edited by
Edward Marsh and published by Harold Monros
Poetry Bookshop. In the tradition of the Victorians and the poets of the 1890s, the poetry
rhymed and scanned. Nature and beauty were
the typical themes. The anthologies included
most of the major names of the time, Rupert
Brooke, W. H. Davies, Walter de la Mare, James
Elroy Flecker and John Masefield. D. H. Lawrence contributed to four of the five volumes.
Flat Case 3
World War I
47. Lest we forget ; a war anthology /
edited by H.B. Elliott ; foreword by Baroness Orczy. (London : Jarrold, 1915)
Baroness Orczy, famous for her novel The
Scarlet Pimpernel, writes in her Foreword,
This book is inscribed to every individual woman and girl of Great Britain, and the constant
theme in the poems is that of the noble sacrifice
women must accept. Maurice Hewlett in his
ballad, Soldier, Soldier, addresses the soldiers
sweetheart, and ends, Poor child, poor child,
go to church and pray, / Pray God to spare you
your sweetheart O. / But if he live or die / The
English flag must fly, / And England take care of
his sweetheart O!
Over the brazier. (London : Poetry Bookshop, 1916) [Donor: Jack Bradstreet]
Flat Case 4
The Twenties
52. Cullen, Countee, 1903-1946.
Color. (New York ; London :
Harper & Brothers, 1925)
Countee Cullen was the
best-known poet of the
Harlem Renaissance. He
was African-American, born
in Louisville and brought
up in Harlem. Color, his
first volume of verse, was
published while he was in
his final year at New York
University. Cullen was among the first to write
poems that dealt with problems of race. He
was also bi-sexual. His poem, Tableau alludes
to both issues, Locked arm in arm they cross
the way, / The black boy and the white, / The
golden splendour of the day, / The sable pride
of night. / From lowered blinds the dark folk
stare, / And here the fair folk talk, / Indignant
that these two should dare / In unison to walk.
Flat Case 5
The Thirties
57. Turner, W. J. (Walter James),
1889-1946.
Miss America : Altiora
in the Sierra Nevada.
(London : Mandrake
Press, 1930)
W. J. Turner was born in
Melbourne and educated
at Scotch College. He
left for London in 1907
to establish himself as a
writer, and became the music critic
for the New Statesman and the theatre
critic for the London Mercury. He had a great
facility for poetry, publishing sixteen volumes
in twenty years. Yeats admired him, saying
Turners verse left him lost in admiration
and astonishment.
10
Flat Case 6
The Forties
63. Mogg, R. P. L.
For this alone : and other
poems / by R.P.L. Mogg.
Germany. 1943 ; [illustrated
by Sgt. J. W. Lambert] 2nd
ed. (Oxford : B. H. Blackwell,
1945)
Sgt. Mogg was a journalist
who joined the R.A.F. during
the war. He was shot down
over Germany and taken
prisoner. While in the POW camp he wrote
these poems and had them smuggled back
to England. They were published in 1943,
handwritten as received and with coloured
lithographic illustrations from drawings done by
one of his fellow prisoners. His poems capture
the excitement of the war in the air, No time /
for thoughts of peace / or home, or gentleness.
/ Caught in this sharp surge of war, / only war
/ can hold the flickering thought, but, naturally
the ever-present threat of death is the main
theme. In the Introduction, Edward Aldington
writes, it is possible that he might be accused
of being morbid, but the dividing line between
operational flying and Death is of a very
nebulous character.
11
Flat Case 7
The Fifties
69. Barker, George, 1913-1991.
News of the world. (London : Faber & Faber,
1950)
George Barker was the son of a butler. He
became part of the literary set in London during
the 1930s and his first book of poetry appeared
in 1933. T. S. Eliot encouraged him to write for
Faber who published his subsequent books.
His poetry is similar to that of Dylan Thomas,
written in a booming style but rather opaque.
12
Flat Case 8
The Sixties
75. Beckett, Samuel, 1906-1989.
Poems in English. (London : Calder &
Boyars, 1961)
Samuel Beckett is best known as a
playwright and novelist but he also wrote
poetry, publishing Whoroscope in 1930 and
Echos Bones in 1935. These poems and
others appear in Poems in English. The best
of them draw on his life in Dublin, and the
depressing effects of his native city, On the
hill down from the Fox and Geese into Chapelizod / a small malevolent goat, exiled on the
road, / remotely pucking the gate of his field.
(Enueg I)
13
79. Horovitz, Michael, 1935Children of Albion: poetry of the Underground in Britain / edited and extradicted
by Michael Horovitz. (Harmondsworth,
Penguin, 1969)
This was a seminal work in
bringing the UK underground
poets to a wider audience. The
cover illustration is a detail from
Glad Day, by William Blake.
Blake was undergoing a revival
of interest in the 1960s. Poets,
and the young in general, saw
him as a visionary, inspiring them to cast off their
shackles and live as innocents. The anthology is
dedicated to Allen Ginsberg and begins with a
quote from a poem he read at the International
Poetry Incarnation, 1965, at which many of the
poets in Children of Albion performed.
Flat Case 9
The Seventies
80. Morrison, Jim, 1943-1971.
The lords, and, The new creatures : poems.
(New York : Simon and Schuster, 1970)
In the early seventies, Jim Morrison was still
alive and The Doors were about to make their
last album, LA Woman. In 1969, Jim had
privately published two slim volumes of verse
under his full name, James Douglas Morrison.
This 1970 edition was the first commercial
publication of his poetry. On The Doors second
album, Strange Days, (1967) Jim recited one of
14
Flat Case 10
The Eighties
85. Buck, Paul, 1946No lettuces for Miss Lush.
(Thornhill : Stingy Artist,
1981)
Paul Buck is a London poet,
author and translator, best
known as editor of the art and
literary magazine, Curtains in
the 1970s which published
work by Georges Bataille and Jacques Derrida.
Among his interests are outsiders such as criminals. He approaches poetry as performance art.
The cover shows a portrait of Buck with a gun
and cigarette smoke in a careful noir pose. The
88. Wright, Charles, 1935Five journals. (New York City : Red Ozier
Press, 1986)
Charles Wright shows the influence of Pound
and the ancient Chinese lyrical poets. Descriptions of landscape are used to convey his
personal meditations. Five Journals includes
poems written on trips to England, Italy and
Greece. He tells the story of Leonardo using
Flat Case 11
The Nineties
90. Heaney, Seamus, 1939The spirit level. (London : Faber and Faber,
1996)
Seamus Heaney was born in Northern Ireland
but now lives in Dublin. He won the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 1995, and is one of the major
poets of the 20th-century. He was inspired to
15
16
Screens
On the screens are reproduced images and
poems from the Faber series of Ariel Poems.
These were small booklets, each with a single
poem and a coloured illustration. 38 were produced from 1927 to 1931. They were intended
to be sent as gifts at Christmas. A new series
of eight appeared in 1954. Six of T. S. Eliots
poems have appeared. Many of the prominent
artists of the period were used as illustrators,
including Graham Sutherland, E. McKnight
Kauffer and Eric Ravilious.
Corridor Cases
On display in the corridor outside the Rare
Books Reading Room is a selection of poetry
magazines and anthologies. Perhaps the most
unusual is Locus Solus. This was published in
France, in five numbers (1961-62), edited by
Ashbery, Koch and Schuyler.
Also included are wartime magazines such as
Poetry London, with covers by Henry Moore
and Graham Sutherland, and New Writing and
Daylight.
New Writing and Daylight was a poetry magazine published between 1942 and 1946.
17
Cover: The Vorticists at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel, Spring 1915, (19612)
by William Roberts, Tate Gallery. Illustration The Estate of John David Roberts.
Reproduced with the permission of the William Roberts Society.
This group portrait shows the Vorticists, Cuthbert Hamilton, Ezra Pound, William
Roberts, Wyndham Lewis, Frederick Etchells (holding the first issue of Blast), Edward
Wadsworth, Jessie Dismoor and Helen Saunders, the waiter Joe and the Tour
Eiffels proprietor, Rudolph Stulik.
13P-400
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