War
Poets
26 July 2008 - 11 January
2009
Room 31 display case

Wilfred Owen
by John Gunston, 1916 |
This display marks the ninetieth
anniversary of Armistice Day, the symbolic end of the First World
War on 11 November 1918. The conflict was dominated by trench
warfare and the use of new military technology, including machine
guns, tanks and aeroplanes. It is estimated that nine million
soldiers died and a further eighteen million were wounded.
Many soldiers and civilians,
men and women, wrote and published verse between 1914 and 1918.
The term 'war poet' is most commonly associated with the soldier-poets,
many of whom died in combat. Their work is both poetry and testimony,
providing a voice for those who fought in the trenches on the
Western Front.
The small selection of war poets
represented in this display shared the experience of war, but
were separated by rank, age and class. Rupert Brooke, who did
not see active service, wrote of patriotism and hope, while others,
including Wilfred Owen and Isaac Rosenberg, were appalled by
the reality of the trenches and the violence they witnessed.
Other poets of the First World
War can be found on the Gallery's Portrait Explorer in the IT
Gallery.
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