Part of the problem with presenting
any brief survey of the poetry of the British
Isles in the 20th century (which
surely we must account an astonishingly energetic
one for the art, even after compensating for
our contemporary myopia) is that, as the century
has progressed, it has become increasingly difficult
to give a nonpartisan account of its evolution,
and provide a straightforward list of its most
important practitioners.
For one thing, developments since the 1960s
have introduced serious disagreements over how
the very idea of 'importance' should itself
be defined. A further distortion is introduced
by the national aspirations of the constituent
nations of these islands; these have led to
exhaustive and confusing surveys, often conducted
at a degree of resolution too high for the pool
of talent such small populations might reasonably
be expected to support. To take any random sample
of would-be disinterested accounts or anthologies
of 20thc poetry, then, can feel like walking
into a hall of mirrors; yet this very lack of
a reliable guide reflects the sheer variety,
invention and confused energy of the poetry
of the period. This short account should be treated with the
same scepticism as any other.
Modernism did not, for the most part, present
itself as the same revolutionary alternative
in these islands as it did in the US, where
a wholehearted embracing of the modernist vision
has always been closely allied to declarations
of cultural autonomy. In the British Isles,
the assimilation of the
innovations and freedoms of
Modernism into the river of the poetic
tradition has been, on the whole, a more organic
and less self-conscious process, and thus one
a little easier to chart, at least for the first
sixty years.
There is however at least one serious
lacuna in this narrative: the cull of the Great
War mean that between the ‘Georgian’ or post-Victorian
poets of the 1910s and early Modernism, there
is no easy segue (amongst the former group we
might include A.E.
Housman, Robert
Bridges, Walter
De La Mare, Charlotte
Mew and Elizabeth
Daryush; also Bridges' oddly time-delayed
release of that self-flagellant overstresser,
Gerard
Manley Hopkins, plus a great number of minor
poets such as Lascelles
Abercrombie and John
Drinkwater). The war claimed those poets who would have provided
just that bridge between the past and the new
freedoms won or claimed by those towering mid-Atlantic
High Modernists, Ezra
Pound and T.S.
Eliot - among them Wilfred
Owen, Edward
Thomas, and doubtless others whose names
we shall never know. (Invoking Thomas
Hardy as a bridge between the Victorian
and the Modern eras still leaves us well short
of Pound, and D.H.
Lawrence's little impromptu psalms are too
indebted to Walt
Whitman to be considered representative
of British practice at the time.) This perhaps
condemned the generation immediately following
Pound and Eliot to a greater self-consciousness
of practice that they might have felt with that
missing generation to smooth the transition:
the lost dialogue between Edward Thomas and
W.H.
Auden, for example, is a huge gap in English
letters.
In England, the
most important group to follow Pound and Eliot
were the generation of poets to emerge in the
30s - led by the chimerical 'McSpauday' – W.H.
Auden, Louis
MacNiece, Stephen
Spender and C. Day-Lewis (though the name of the South African Roy
Campbell should also be included here).
Only the first two names, however, are now considered
poets of the greatest significance. British
poetry in the 40s in many ways marks a nadir
in the century; the reasons are complex, but
after the huge advances made by the Auden generation
the poets perhaps felt wedded to a progressive
paradigm, and obliged to push forward for the
sake of it; unfortunately, they were particularly
hampered by poor models - in particular Dylan
Thomas and the American Wallace
Stevens, both poets of genius who nonetheless
often succeed despite their stylistic
excesses - those excesses being, alas, the one
bit that was easy to imitate. The result was
the rather hysterical and affected ‘Apocalyptic’
verse of the likes of J.F.
Hendry and Nicholas Moore, or at best a
kind of vatic rumbling, characterised by the
rhetorically impressive but often affected bluster
of George Barker.
Prior to the emergence of
the Movement poets, fine poems in a
Audenesque style were being written by
Roy
Fuller; the neglected poetry of Lawrence
Durrell shows a number of interesting European
influences. Stevie
Smith is another unclassifiable maverick,
half modernist-surrealist , half light-versifier,
and her popularity still seems undiminished.
The so-called ‘Movement’ poets were
united partly by an exasperation with what they
perceived to be the mannered operaticism of
Dylan Thomas and his epigones; they looked back
to Thomas Hardy, in particular, as a way of
re-embracing a more direct means of expression,
and so re-addressing a general readership. In this school the major poets were Philip
Larkin, Donald
Davie and Elizabeth
Jennings, but we might also include Kingsley
Amis, John
Wain and to some extent the woefully neglected
Cornish poet, Charles
Causley. Thom
Gunn, who began as a kind of hip formalist
before moving slowly towards a more American
open-ended sense of form and cadence, might
be considered a bridge between this group and
the post-Movement, Confessional-influenced poets
of the sixties. The so-called ‘Group’ poets
were a social, not aesthetic grouping, but they
produced two important voices in Martin
Bell and the Australian Peter
Porter.
Irish poetry in the 20thc is dominated
by the figure W.B.
Yeats, whose influence extended (unlike
the equally commanding figure of Hugh
MacDiarmid in Scotland) over the whole of
the British Isles. His example seems to have
been intimidatory; between Yeats and the remarkable
constellation of poets that emerged in Ulster
in the 1970s – a list which would include Seamus
Heaney, Paul
Muldoon, Derek
Mahon and Michael
Longley - perhaps only Patrick
Kavanagh and Louis MacNiece (who we often
think of as a really an Anglo-Irish poet of
Auden’s circle) can be accounted poets of the
first importance, though both James Joyce and
Samuel Beckett also wrote some fine poetry in
their second discipline, and Padraic
Fallon, Austin
Clarke and the Irish Gaelic poet Sean O’Riordain
are all interesting voices.
In Scotland, the central figure is
Hugh
MacDiarmid (Christopher Murray Grieve),
the most important Scottish poet since Robert
Burns. While MacDiarmid
was unquestionably a poet of immense gifts,
like Burns whether his influence was entirely
beneficial remains to be seen. Robert
Garioch and William
Soutar (although the latter was influenced
by the early lyric MacDiarmid) both rejected
MacDiarmid’s literary Lallans, and deliberately
sought out a Scots tongue that was actually
spoken. Both those voices now seem far more
attractive to the contemporary reader that the
somewhat academic Scots of Sydney
Goodsir Smith, or the Marxist posturing
of other minor poets in MacDiarmid’s coterie.
Another significant poet was Edwin
Muir, who made more sober attempts to synthesise
modern and traditional influences; his somewhat
cold and monochrome verses can have a kind of
heraldic power, but his poetic reading of Kafka's
allegory is wanting that most Kafkaesque of
qualities, humour.
W.S.
Graham began as a florid modernist of the
Dylan Thomas school, but in his later books
found a remarkable personal language of great
metaphysical force, and he has grown and grown
in reputation. The group of poets who emerged
between the 40s and 60s - Norman MacCaig,
George Mackay Brown, Edwin
Morgan, and the Gaelic poets
Sorley
MacLean
and Iain
Crichton
Smith (who also wrote in English) are all
fine writers of equal importance, though MacCaig
became the best known in Scotland through his
adoption by the school syllabus. Their generation
now seems defined by its near-simultaneous culling
in the mid-nineties, leaving Morgan the last
surviving major figure of that group (and in
his irrepressible experimentalism, the perhaps
the least representative).
In Wales, the first
significant poet of the century was David
Jones, an unclassifiable High Modernist
whose influences took in Pound, Arthurian legend,
Blake’s prophetic books, and the neo-Scholastic
Jacques Maritain. Like Ireland and Scotland,
however, Welsh poetry in the 20thc has been
dominated by one figure. The reputation of Dylan
Thomas has fluctuated wildly from decade
to decade, though the rhetorical force of a
poem like “Fern Hill” seems impossible to gainsay.
Alun Lewis is another important poet, but in
the 60s the landscape of Welsh verse is increasingly
dominated by the powerfully austere lyric of
R.S.
Thomas.
By the 60s the picture muddies considerably;
this is partly owing to a series of schisms
that lead, ultimately, to the near-Balkanisation
of the present scene, and partly down the canon-free
muddle that we should precisely expect as we
approach the contemporary. Of the post-Movement poets, two names stand
out: the fatal double-act of Ted
Hughes and Sylvia
Plath, two poets of indisputable greatness
whose noisy biographies nonetheless still continue
to drown out any sober assessment of their work.
But while the mainstream of British poetry can
still be read on a kind of post-Movement timeline,
two other groups reacted to the perceived bourgeois-domestic-subjective
strategies of the Movement in two very different
ways. One
was the group of poets who formed the so-called
Liverpool Scene - a kind British take on the
Beats; much of their output now seems naive
and sentimental - but some of it had great political,
if ephemeral, potency; the group were also highly
adept at cross-breeding poetry with other media,
and effected a genuinely useful popularisation of the art that
re-recruited some of the readership that High
Modernism had alienated. Among the most important
poet-performers in this group were Adrian
Mitchell, Adrian
Henri, Brian
Patten and Jeff
Nuttall, and the most important probably
Roger
McGough,
still one of the most popular poets in
the country. This group was the forerunner of
the vibrant performance poetry scene in the
UK and Ireland.
The other was the strong emergence
of a UK Postmodern avant-garde. Significant
names to emerge in this period were J.H.
Prynne, Andrew Crozier, John Riley, Tom
Raworth and Veronica Forrest-Thomson; besides
their disillusion
with what they saw as a stale and unadventurous
UK mainstream, they were also galvanised by
the publication of Basil
Bunting’s late-Modernist long poem Briggflatts,
through their reading of the US Black Mountain
poets
Charles Olson and Robert
Creeley, and the New York sprezzatura
of Frank
O'Hara and John
Ashbery, as well as a lot of post -Heideggerian
critical theory, European poetry and literary
theory - and proposed a serious and concerted
rejection of the practises of both the Movement
poets, their “mainstream” successors, and the
emerging popularisers.
Further notes on how these various strands have
developed in the last thirty years can be found
on the Contemporary
Poetry in England,
Wales, Scotland and Ireland
page.
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