View Full Version : I have two questions..please help me.
المتسكع
10-10-2010, 07:46 PM
Hello Brothers and Sisters,
I hope that you are in a good mood. I have two question and will be thankful for your answers.
The first question is:
Who is considered as the master poet of the pessimism poetry ?
The second question is:
and also who is considered as the master poet who wrote in the two great wars?
thanks a lot
OrphanPip
10-10-2010, 08:03 PM
Uh, well I've never thought of pessimistic poetry as a group before. Um, many post-modernist could be considered pessimistic, but that's really a pretty vague categorization that I don't know what to do with.
As for war poetry from the World Wars, you tend not to have war poets from both wars. There's a strong set from WWI, Wilfred Owen probably being one of the most famous in English.
WWII didn't really produce any remarkable war poetry in English, that I can think of at least. There's a lot of good holocaust poetry, but that was written in retrospect after the war.
byquist
10-10-2010, 08:12 PM
Some might see Sylvia Plath as on the pessimistic side, or on the "dark" side, which makes her challenging. I think a lot of people would have liked to have known her and maybe lifted her out of despondency.
المتسكع
10-10-2010, 08:33 PM
First of all, I thank you kindly OrphanPip and byquist for your replies..
I will read deeply about Wilfred Owen and sylvia Plath as you told me. I read about the Owen in brief and i found his life is very hard and miserable. I like this poet from the begining and i will read about him and his work as soon as i find the perfect mood to read.
again, thank you very much
best wishes
Seasider
10-11-2010, 08:41 AM
Keith Douglas 1920- 1944 is classified as a War Poet. He was killed at the Normandy landings (called D Day.)
The pessimist poet of most repute is probably Leopardi, or in a stretch, Du Fu 杜甫. Plath to me seems the poet of mentally unstable hormonal teenagers, but, then again, I do not care for her work much.
Alexander III
10-11-2010, 06:18 PM
Have to agree with JBI, the king of melancholy is Leopardi
As for greatest war poet of the world wars, I would say Sassoon for wwI, for ww2 I am unsure.
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