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Edward Thomas volunteered when he was 37 years old and a father of three and was killed, as an artillery officer, during the first hour of the Arras offensive, on April 9th, 1917. In the two years before his death, he wrote the 144 poems which ensured a place for him among the poets of his generation. Though all his poems had been written "under storm's wing", Thomas was not a war poet in the sense that Owen, Sassoon or Rosenberg were war poets. Before he turned to poetry in December 1914, he...
Thomas, Edward, --- Eastaway, Edward, --- Criticism and interpretation.
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Whilst out walking one day in the shade at the age of thirty-six, with the First World War looming, Edward Thomas decided to become a poet. In the few years that followed, believing he belonged nowhere, he tramped across rolling chalk downland, stitching himself to the landscape. Gently slanting from the door of his stone cottage, the South Downs - a range of chalk hills that extend across the southeastern coastal counties of England from Hampshire in the west to Sussex in the east - became day by day the mainspring of his poetry. As a perennial poet and essayist of the South Downs, Edward Thomas remains an enduring presence a century later in the downland he trampled daily, treading and documenting a series of paths around the village of Steep, East Hampshire, where he lived until enlisting. Arranging itself around a number of journeys in pursuit of the early twentieth century poet and nature writer, this book provides a personal and moving tale of encountering literature in landscape, retreading Edward Thomas's footprints from the beginning of his epically creative final four years, to the site where he died in 1917, during the Battle of Arras.
Thomas, Edward, --- Eastaway, Edward, --- Criticism and interpretation.
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Edward Thomas: The Origins of his Poetry builds a new theoretical framework for critical work on imaginative composition through an investigation of Edward Thomas's composing processes, on material from his letters, his poems and his prose books. It looks at his relation to the land and landscape and includes detailed and illuminating new readings of his poems. It traces connections between Thomas's approach to composition and the writing and thought of Freud, Woolf and William James, and the influence of Japanese aesthetics, and draws surprising and far-reaching conclusions for the study of p
Poets, English --- Thomas, Edward, --- Eastaway, Edward, --- Wales --- Pastoral poetry, English --- Soldiers' writings, English --- English poetry --- History and criticism.
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English poetry --- War poetry, English --- World War, 1914-1918 --- World War, 1939-1945 --- History and criticism --- Literature and the war --- Thomas, Edward, --- Eastaway, Edward, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Northern Ireland --- In literature. --- Poetry --- Thematology --- English literature --- anno 1900-1999 --- Ireland
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