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The War Poems

The War PoemsAuthor: Siegfried Sassoon
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Category: Book

List Price: £9.99  (EUR14.67)
Buy New: £3.75  (EUR5.50)
as of 7/2/2012 13:04 UTC details
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New (21) Used (25) Collectible (1) from £1.35  (EUR1.98)

Seller: AMT1982
Sales Rank: 22,240

Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Pages: 160
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.9 x 0.5

ISBN: 0571130151
EAN: 9780571130153
ASIN: 0571130151

Publication Date: March 14, 1983
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Also Available In:

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  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Paperback - War Poems
  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Hardcover - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Paperback - War Poems (1919)
  • Paperback - War Poems (1919)
  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
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  • Paperback - War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon (Dover Books on Literature & Drama)
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  • Paperback - The War Poems of Siegfried Sassoon
  • Hardcover - The War Poems
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Poems portray the author's experiences as a soldier during World War I and explore the horrors of war.

Amazon.co.uk Review
Sassoon, who lived through Word War One and who died in 1967, was, as the introduction to this book tells us, irritated in his later years at always being thought of as a "war poet". Understandable perhaps from the point of view of the poet: readers on the other hand might wish to demur. The poems gathered here and chronologically ordered, thereby tracing the course of the war, are an extraordinary testimony to the almost unimaginable experiences of a combatant in that bitter conflict. Moving from the patriotic optimism of the first few poems (" ... fighting for our freedom, we are free") to the anguish and anger of the later work (where "hope, with furtive eyes and grappling fists / Flounders in mud ... "), there comes a point when the reality of trench-warfare and its aftershocks move beyond comprehension: Sassoon knows this, and it becomes a powerful element in his art. As a book, the images have a cumulative relentlessness that make it almost impossible to read more than a few poems in one sitting.

Unlike the avant-garde experiments developing in Europe in the first decades of this century, Sassoon's verse is formally conservative--but this was perhaps necessary, for as one reads the poems, one feels that the form, the classically inflected tropes, the metre and rhyme, apart from ironising the rhetoric of glory and battle were necessary techniques for containing the emotion (and indeed, a tone of barely controlled irony may have been the only means by which these angry observations would have been considered publishable at the time). When Sassoon's line begins to fragment, as it does in several of the later poems, it is under the extreme pressure to express the inexpressible. Compassion and sympathy are omnipresent here, in their full etymological sense of suffering with or alongside others--something the higher echelons of command (those " ... old men who died / Slow, natural deaths--old men with ugly souls") were never able or willing to contemplate. But Sassoon intuited the future of warfare, could sense that this was not "the war to end all wars": the mock-religious invocation of the final poem prefigures the vicious euphemisms of more recent conflicts: "Grant us the power to prove, by poison gases, / The needlessness of shedding human blood." Sassoon's bile-black irony signals a deep-felt pessimism: it was with good reason. --Burhan Tufail

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