In 1896, A.E. Housman
(1859-1936) published a poetry collection that might have seemed an unlikely
candidate for one of the most popular books of poetry of all time. And yet it
was, and is. Pocket editions of A Shropshire Lad were carried into
the trenches by British soldiers in World War I. Countless editions were
printed from 1896 to well after Housman’s death, and the book is still
published today. It was widely read not only in England but also Canada,
Australia, the United States, and many other countries.
It is not about war, and yet to speaks to the experience of
war. It is not about the Industrial Revolution, and yet it looks backward to a
time and a place idealized because of what the Industrial Revolution wrought.
Critics generally didn’t like it (and haven’t liked it since), but the reading
public loved it.
Author Peter Parker
explains why, in the recently published Housman Country: Into the Heart of England.
More than another other book of poetry, more than any other novel, A Shropshire Lad is about England, what
it meant, what’s been lost, and what’s endured. It is nostalgic, but it is
nostalgia with a bite, what Parker calls “true nostalgia,” the past you can
recognize but never regain.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Painting: From the Severn
Bridge at Bridgenorth by Henry Parker (1858-1930).
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